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Alonzo
07-15-2008, 04:15 PM
To this day, Jerry Kennedy only does laundry when it rains. For the first 54 years of his life, he lived without running water, and rainstorms were the only way he could collect enough water to wash his clothes. But Kennedy isn't from some far-off rural outpost. He was born and raised in the Coal Run neighborhood of Zanesville, Ohio — a former coal-mining center of 25,000 in the eastern part of the state — just a few hundred feet from a municipal water line. Kennedy, now 58, is black. His neighbors, who did not have running water for over 50 years, are also black. On July 10, the U.S. District Court of Ohio awarded them almost $10.9 million, ruling that they had been denied access to public water because of their race.


The decision comes four years after the water started flowing in Coal Run, a black community of some 25 homes in overwhelmingly white Muskingum County, following a lawsuit filed by the Ohio Civil Rights Commission (OCRC) and 67 Coal Run residents. According to the suit, the community had repeatedly requested water service since 1956, the year the city built a water main that ended just short of the neighborhood, and watched as the East Muskingum Water Authority built new water lines and increased county water efforts in surrounding areas while their requests went unanswered. When he built his house in the early 1980s, Kennedy says, his water request was denied. He can't even remember the number of times he asked the city's service director for help only to have nothing happen. Then a house went up next door. A white family moved in, and one day Kennedy saw his new neighbors watering their lawn. "They'd be out there with a hot tub out on the porch," he says, "and I was still going down the road [to the local water treatment plant] with a pickup truck every day." Like many Zanesville area residents, he couldn't drill a well because the surrounding coal mines have contaminated the water, rendering it undrinkable. The mines have been closed for years, but the ground is so full of sulfur that residents say the water runs red. In Coal Run, Kennedy and his black neighbors would either pay to have water hauled in from the treatment plant two miles away or catch the rainwater that ran down their gutters.


 "When I was growing up, I thought that everyone had water hauled in," says Cynthia Hairston, a 47-year-old nurse, who was born in Coal Run. "I had no idea that outside my neighborhood, [running water] was even possible." When she discovered that her white neighbors' request for a water hookup had been approved in 1999, she began agitating for equal rights — talking to other black neighbors, attending city council meetings and lobbying government officials. Then one morning, she woke up to find a severed pig's head in her driveway. "It was very upsetting," she says. "I was very scared." She doesn't know what the pig's head was supposed to mean or who put it there, but is convinced that the act was racially motivated.




The city, county and the Water Authority, for their part, deny any discrimination and say Coal Run's lack of water was due to a lack of demand. Its residents went without water for so long, they argue, mainly because they didn't go through the correct procedures to request it. According to Mark Landes, a Columbus attorney representing Muskingum County, the only official water requests from Coal Run residents came in the form of a 1973 petition and a 2001 public hearing. "No one ever showed up and asked for water," he says, adding that a large part of Muskingum County still doesn't have running water today. Hairston agrees that's true, but claims that those areas are all very rural, whereas Coal Run is a 10-minute drive from the city center — "a stone's throw away." And while Coal Run is not technically within Zanesville's city limits, nor are several surrounding white communities that have had access to the municipal water supply since the line was installed in 1956.




On August 18, 2003, two months after the Ohio Civil Rights Commission issued its report alleging racial discrimination, Muskingum county decided that the residents of Coal Run finally qualified for water. By January 2004, the last pipelines had been laid, but the discrimination trial was already in motion. Resident after resident testified about years of personal conversations held with city and county officials who did nothing to keep their promises to help. Kennedy, Hairston and two other residents stated that in 2001, Muskingum County Commissioner Dorothy Montgomery told them that even their "grandchildren's grandchildren would not have water." Montgomery could not be reached, but Landes says that she denies ever making the comment. 




Last Thursday's verdict represents a sweeping acknowledgement of the Coal Run community's suffering. "This case is a throwback to the type of discrimination everyone thinks is long gone," says John P. Relman, a Washington civil rights attorney who represented the Coal Run residents. Relman calls the case a "landmark" because of the number of individual plaintiffs found to have suffered discrimination at the hands of their own government. "You lift up some rocks and find a couple of pretty ugly things," he says. Kennedy, Hairston and each of the other plaintffs will receive between $15,000 and $300,000 in damages, depending on how long they'd lived in the neighborhood. "This has been a long saga for lots of these people," says G. Michael Payton, the OCRC's executive director. "The humiliation, the feeling of being treated like second-class citizens — that shouldn't happen today. We're supposed to be past that."




Columbus attorney Landes, however, isn't so sanguine about the case's result. "This is a bad day for taxpayers and a bad day for race relations," he says. He believes the plaintiffs had pressed to sue solely for the money and blames "out-of-state lawyers" for coming in and whipping up a "frenzy" that now the residents of Muskingum county will have to fund. Attorneys for the city and county say they plan to appeal.


 Jerry Kennedy, for his part, says he's just glad it's over. "I finally had a peace of mind, it was only fair that the Lord had seen that we got taken care of," he says. The day his water was turned on in 2004, he took three baths. He doesn't have to worry about the water levels in his cistern anymore, but he can't break the habit of washing laundry when it rains. "It's just something I do," he says. "No matter what time of day or night, I get up and I have to do it."

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1822455,00.html

Leslie
07-15-2008, 04:33 PM
And there you have it, folks, 21st century America. :shame:

AnnEsthesia
07-15-2008, 04:34 PM
Wow! That is just so wrong on so many levels.

BoogyMan
07-15-2008, 04:38 PM
And there you have it, folks, 21st century America. :shame:

This ISN'T indicative of 21st century America. It is indicative of SOME of America that should be dealt with swiflty.

Egads Leslie......

Blueneck
07-15-2008, 04:44 PM
I live in Zanesville. Reaction here is mixed. The kid who used to mow my lawn's dad is part of the suit.

It's being appealed. They won't get anything soon, if at all.

There's another suit brewing here in this county over the exact same issue, in Dresden. It's not as much (IMO) racism per se as just government neglect based on who is the least likely to make a fuss. Unfortunately, here in rural Ohio, blacks have traditionally been underepresented both in government and the business community and have little muscle in local politics. It's a "good ol' boy" kinda place in many respects.

Leslie
07-15-2008, 05:03 PM
I live in Zanesville. Reaction here is mixed. The kid who used to mow my lawn's dad is part of the suit.

It's being appealed. They won't get anything soon, if at all.

There's another suit brewing here in this county over the exact same issue, in Dresden. It's not as much (IMO) racism per se as just government neglect based on who is the least likely to make a fuss. Unfortunately, here in rural Ohio, blacks have traditionally been underepresented both in government and the business community and have little muscle in local politics. It's a "good ol' boy" kinda place in many respects.

Thanks for the insight, Blueneck.

Like I said, there ya have it folks, 21st century America.

AlanC
07-15-2008, 05:15 PM
Thanks for the insight, Blueneck.

Like I said, there ya have it folks, 21st century America.

So the people where you live have the same problem too? You need to get out more.


This is not indicative of America in the 21st century.

Blueneck
07-15-2008, 05:19 PM
So the people where you live have the same problem too? You need to get out more.


This is not indicative of America in the 21st century.I think if you put the word "rural" in there, it's pretty close.

Leslie
07-15-2008, 05:25 PM
So the people where you live have the same problem too? You need to get out more.


This is not indicative of America in the 21st century.

Yes, I know some Americans are advised to get out of America if they don't like being treated unequally.

Please don't discriminate against folks in small communities just because they aren't metropolitan, ya know some of those folks send their relatives to war to fight for the rights you enjoy.

AlanC
07-15-2008, 05:28 PM
I think if you put the word "rural" in there, it's pretty close.


Then it should be easy to find another instance anywhere else in the United States where someone has been denied access to water for thrity years because of the color of their skin.


I have never heard of this before. Not even in the old segregated south. But then perhaps I have lived a sheltered life in the west despite the fact that we have had area wars over water rights.

Blueneck
07-15-2008, 06:17 PM
Then it should be easy to find another instance anywhere else in the United States where someone has been denied access to water for thrity years because of the color of their skin.


I have never heard of this before. Not even in the old segregated south. But then perhaps I have lived a sheltered life in the west despite the fact that we have had area wars over water rights.I got stuff to do right now, but I may take you up on that challenge later. I'm curious myself. :bye:

Osborn F. Enready
07-15-2008, 11:07 PM
Welcome to Ohio!

The heart of it ALL.

Blueneck
07-16-2008, 12:49 AM
Then it should be easy to find another instance anywhere else in the United States where someone has been denied access to water for thrity years because of the color of their skin.


I have never heard of this before. Not even in the old segregated south. But then perhaps I have lived a sheltered life in the west despite the fact that we have had area wars over water rights.Okay, so I found one. It's not thirty years but keep in mind I Googled "lawsuits".

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0DE0DA1030F93AA35754C0A9609C8B 63

Stoner
08-04-2008, 09:39 PM
This ISN'T indicative of 21st century America. It is indicative of SOME of America that should be dealt with swiflty.

Egads Leslie......

Correct. And I have some doubts about this story. I'm sure there's a lot more to it.

Osborn F. Enready
08-04-2008, 09:48 PM
I am sure there is a lot more to it also... mostly partisans not willing to give up federal or state funds for the needs of their constitutents because it would hurt their agenda in the state I would bet.

Stoner
08-04-2008, 10:00 PM
I am sure there is a lot more to it also... mostly partisans not willing to give up federal or state funds for the needs of their constitutents because it would hurt their agenda in the state I would bet.

Interesting conspiracy theory. I'm sure the truth is more logical.

Osborn F. Enready
08-04-2008, 10:52 PM
You live in Ohio?

Let me introduce some of my wonderful bi-partisan Ohio political figures.....heres just a few from some of the RECENT scandals....

Noe gets 27 months in federal prison for illegal Bush contributions:
http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060912/BREAKINGNEWS/60912029

Ohio County Raided In Corruption Probe:
http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2008/jul/ohio-county-raided-corruption-probe

The Guide to Coingate and the Need for Campaign Finance Reform:
http://www.commoncause.org/site/pp.asp?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=475691

Corruption Issue Comes to Fore:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/19/AR2006071901714.html

Political corruption isn't limited to Washington Big-Wigs:
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Politics/story?id=1518731

Corruption probe profiles: The people and places involved
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2008/07/corruption_probe_profiles.html


I hate to say it, but the fact is conspiracies happen everyday....

Ohio is a key bi-partisan battleground state, has suffered from decades of gerrymandering and ballot access law infighting....

Blueneck
08-06-2008, 07:58 PM
You live in Ohio?

Let me introduce some of my wonderful bi-partisan Ohio political figures.....heres just a few from some of the RECENT scandals....

Noe gets 27 months in federal prison for illegal Bush contributions:
http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060912/BREAKINGNEWS/60912029

Ohio County Raided In Corruption Probe:
http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2008/jul/ohio-county-raided-corruption-probe

The Guide to Coingate and the Need for Campaign Finance Reform:
http://www.commoncause.org/site/pp.asp?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=475691

Corruption Issue Comes to Fore:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/19/AR2006071901714.html

Political corruption isn't limited to Washington Big-Wigs:
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Politics/story?id=1518731

Corruption probe profiles: The people and places involved
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2008/07/corruption_probe_profiles.html


I hate to say it, but the fact is conspiracies happen everyday....

Ohio is a key bi-partisan battleground state, has suffered from decades of gerrymandering and ballot access law infighting....Yeah, I know. They just started Keno to raise money to get us out of debt. The Republicans are bitching that it's morally wrong, apparently raiding the state treasury wasn't.

Unfortunately it's like that here. Typical small town bullshit. We have many churches but little decency.

Anyway, the county filed an appeal. I really doubt these people will get any money.