Tribal water rights get a billion-dollar boost from Biden infrastructure plan
Also today: Ukraine has suspended activity on its ports near the Black Sea region, which is a trade nexus for both Ukraine and Russia. The Fed could stick to its interest rate plans despite the conflict.
THOREAU, NEW MEXICO – DECEMBER 16: A water pump is repaired outside of a home on the Navajo Nation on December 16, 2021 in Thoreau, New Mexico. Due to a legacy of poverty, marginalization, and disputed water rights, up to 40 percent of Navajo Nation households don’t have clean running water at home and are forced to rely on weekly and daily visits to water pumps. The problem for the Navajo Nation, a population of over 200,000 and the largest federally-recognized sovereign tribe in the U.S. in land area, is so significant that generations of families have never experienced indoor plumbing. Rising temperatures associated with global warming have worsened drought conditions on their lands over recent decades leading to a worsening of water access. The reservation consists of a 27,000-square-mile area of desert and high plains in New Mexico, southern Utah and Arizona. The Navajo Water Project, a nonprofit from the water advocacy group Dig Deep, has been working on Navajo lands in New Mexico since 2013 funding a mobile water delivery truck and digging and installing water tanks to individual homes. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)