United States. Researchers and municipal authorities reported multiple water-related developments this week: a study found the federal government charges large agricultural water agencies far lower wholesale prices than cities in California, Arizona and Nevada; Waterbury, Connecticut, experienced a major water main break causing widespread outages and prompting distribution centers and prompting emergency repairs across systems; North Adams, Massachusetts, issued a boil water notice after weekend pipe failures on Dec. 14, 2025; New Mexico's Environment Department offered free private well testing near the Hermits Peak–Calf Canyon burn scar after a 2025 geological study. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Christopher Adams and reviewed by editorial team.
Agricultural water agencies receiving federally discounted wholesale water benefited financially from low-cost supplies, lowering their irrigation expenses while critics say the subsidy externalizes costs onto taxpayers.
Residents of Waterbury and North Adams, private well owners near the Hermits Peak–Calf Canyon burn scar, and taxpayers faced water outages, boil-water advisories, contamination risk, and potential cleanup expenses.
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Federal subsidies, regional breaks prompt urgent water actions
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