From Marfa Public Radio:
In West Texas, the multi-billion dollar oil industry is booming, but many people in one of the region’s unincorporated communities still don’t have reliable access to running water.
West Odessa is a community of about 50,000 people located next door to the bigger city of Odessa proper. People have been lured here by cheap land and a lack of regulations.
It’s a place where you might spot a small ranch in the middle of a neighborhood or an equipment yard filled with drilling rigs.
But as more people have moved there, the demand for water – for everything from drinking to household chores – has grown, and local infrastructure hasn’t kept up with the demand.
Now, there’s a grassroots effort underway to try and address that problem.
Driving through her neighborhood, Catarina Tavarez points out large water tanks nestled behind the mobile homes and houses that line the streets. The tanks are where people store the water they have to purchase and then haul back to their homes because they don’t have a reliable source of water.