By Bracey Harris and David K. Li
 Gov. Tate Reeves declared a state of emergency Tuesday, saying a water crisis in Mississippi’s largest city threatens “critical needs” and has no end in sight.
While residents are accustomed to water challenges, the current shortage of safe running water is particularly dangerous, he said.
“The is a very different situation from a boil water notice â which is also a serious situation which the residents of Jackson have become tragically numb to,” Reeves said in a statement.
“Until it is fixed, it means we do not have reliable running water at scale. It means the city cannot produce enough water to reliably flush toilets, fight fire and meet other critical needs.”
President Joe Biden approved an emergency declaration in the state, freeing up federal resources to help manage the crisis.
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said he hopes the emergency will spur various levels of government to address the cityâs deteriorating water treatment infrastructure.
âThe city of Jackson is grateful for the support that we are now receiving from the state,” Lumumba told reporters Tuesday.
“Weâve been going it alone for the better part of two years when it comes to the Jackson water crisis. I have said on multiple occasions that itâs a not a matter of if our system would fail, but a matter of when our system would fail.â
The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency will take the lead in providing bottled water, Reeves said.
“Replacing our largest city’s infrastructure of running water with human distribution is a massively complicated logistical task,” he said. “We need to provide it for up to 180,000 people â for an unknown period of time.”
Lumumba declared a water system emergency Monday evening after flooding from the Pearl River disrupted a major water processing facility.
Lumumba, who didnât set a timeline Tuesday for full restoration, insisted service has been improving in the past 24 hours.
“Itâs steady. Itâs gone up since yesterday … in terms of the number of people with water,” said Lumumba, adding that the best gains came overnight when few were awake and using water. Jackson, a city of 150,000 residents, nearly 83% of them Black, has long been plagued by infrastructure issues that have made clean, reliable water a challenge.
The Environmental Protection Agency issued a lengthy report in 2020, outlining major shortfalls in Jacksonâs water system, which included a failure to replace lead pipes, faulty monitoring equipment and inadequate staffing.
The city is seeking to hire retired employees for part-time work, up to 20 hours a week, so as not to violate terms of their pension packages, Lumumba said.
“The effort is ongoing … to augment our staff,” he said.
The capital city is home to Jackson State University, where the historically Black schoolâs football team is struggling to prepare for its coming season opener because of the water crisis.
The team’s coach, former NFL star Deion Sanders, said the program is in “crisis mode.”
âWe donât have water. Water means we donât have air conditioning. We canât use toilets. We have no water. Therefore, we donât have ice,â Sanders said on his Instagram page. âSo right now, we are operating in crisis mode.â
Sanders, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, said he is trying to place his student-athletes in hotels that have running water, before they hit the road for their game against Florida A&M on Sunday.
The outspoken coach insisted the water crisis wonât stop his team from being âwho we desire to be, and thatâs dominant.â
âThe devil is a lie,â Sanders added. âHe ainât going to get us today.â