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Federal Money For Water And Sewer Systems Floods The Delta, But More Is Needed

Katie Basile
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KYUK

A flood of federal funding is coming to rural Alaska for water and sewer projects, and a big chunk of that is going to the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta.

Lisa Mensah, U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development Undersecretary, arrived in Bethel from Washington D.C. on Tuesday to deliver the news.

“I have the joy of announcing a combined total of $27 million in our water and environmental programs here in rural Alaska,” Mensah said.

Credit Katie Basile / KYUK
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KYUK
USDA-Rural Development Under Secretary Lisa Mensah talks with YKHC CEO/President, Dan Winkelman. Secretary Mensah visited Bethel on August 30, 2016 to announce funding for water and sewer projects in the YK-Delta region.

Let’s break down where that money is going in the Delta:

Eek will get water and sewer lines for the first time.

Toksook Bay will finish hooking up homes to its water and sewer system.

St. Mary’s will expand its waste heat recovery system, saving the community about $10,000 a year in energy costs.

The City of Bethel will get four new water trucks, three new sewer trucks, and rehabilitate its sewage lagoon, which means dredging 30 years of sewage from a tundra pond.

Credit Katie Basile / KYUK
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KYUK
Sebastian Cowboy, St. Mary's city council member, describes his frustration when funding ran out during a water and sewer infrastructure project in his home village. St. Mary's now has running water, but 1,500 homes in the YK Delta region do not.

The Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corporation will continue its program to help operate water and sewer systems across the Delta.

And seven YK Delta communities will assess their water and sewer needs and how to meet them.  

David Beveridge, Project Management Director with the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, says that these projects affect both the quality of life and  health of rural communities.

Credit Katie Basile / KYUK
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KYUK
Ann Capela, Bethel City Manager, discusses funding to design and construct improvements to the sewage lagoon truck dumpsite, and purchase additional sewer trucks in Bethel.

“Studies have shown that there’s a strong relationship between infectious disease and sanitation service in rural Alaska,” Beveridge said.

For example, an infant living in a community with honey buckets in the region is five times more likely to be hospitalized from a lower respiratory infection and 11 times more likely to be hospitalized with pneumonia than an infant in the rest of the United States.  

Running water also means that people wash their hands more often and use fresh water when they do.

After a series of speakers from Alaska and D.C. talked about the various projects, Dan Winkelman, CEO/President of YKHC, ended the gathering with a thank you and a reminder that there’s still a lot of work to do.

Credit Katie Basile / KYUK
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KYUK
Dan Winkelman, YKHC CEO/President, shares a story about the first time his mother-in-law washed dishes with running water in her home in Kwethluk. Some homes in Kwethluk were connected to water and sewer in October 2013.

“Although we have been making progress," Winkelman said, "I think it’s much too slow for a lot of people that are out in the villages. They’re the more remote communities now, so they’re harder to get to. Costs are going to be expensive, but we still need to endure and make sure that we finish getting the people hooked up to water and sewer. Because it does make a difference in the lives of the people.”

Winkelman says that to finish providing running water alone, about 1,500 YK Delta homes would have to be connected.

Anna Rose MacArthur served as KYUK's News Director from 2015-2022.