According to Tobias Salinger, from the New York Daily News, he writes, “Mays and her husband, who live with their three sons, are paying over $200 per month for the water.” (Flint, Mich., residents paying hundreds of dollars a month for water). This tells us many people struggle buying bottled water due to the high prices and the fact that they’re mostly in poverty. As reported by Jiquanda Johnson, she says, “According to the U.S. Census, 40.1 percent of the city's population is living in poverty. That makes Flint the second most poverty-stricken city in the nation.” (Flint, Detroit among nation's poorest cities). Since this is so, you may be wondering how they do keep paying for the water. Well some argue that because people have donated lots of money to them, so, they actually don’t pay as much as $150 to $200 a month, but if they have been given lots of money from donors from around the country, then why wouldn’t they save the money for fixing the
According to Tobias Salinger, from the New York Daily News, he writes, “Mays and her husband, who live with their three sons, are paying over $200 per month for the water.” (Flint, Mich., residents paying hundreds of dollars a month for water). This tells us many people struggle buying bottled water due to the high prices and the fact that they’re mostly in poverty. As reported by Jiquanda Johnson, she says, “According to the U.S. Census, 40.1 percent of the city's population is living in poverty. That makes Flint the second most poverty-stricken city in the nation.” (Flint, Detroit among nation's poorest cities). Since this is so, you may be wondering how they do keep paying for the water. Well some argue that because people have donated lots of money to them, so, they actually don’t pay as much as $150 to $200 a month, but if they have been given lots of money from donors from around the country, then why wouldn’t they save the money for fixing the