Study: Latinos more likely to distrust tap water, seek other sources
She spends nearly $50 a month on the water, plus her bus tickets.
The Phoenix resident said she didn’t like the taste of the tap water at her home, which she said has as a “metallic taste.” Numerous studies have found that Latinos’ consumption of tap water is significantly lower than non-Latinos’ consumption in places with predominant or growing Latino populations such as Northern California, Denver, Salt Lake City and Milwaukee.
These studies indicate that many Latinos believe their water is unsafe, don’t like the taste or the odor, or repeat the cultural patterns from their home countries, where tap water isn’t safe to drink.
They relied on bottled water and water-vending machines.
Beamer’s research indicated that 73 percent of the people surveyed said they would drink the tap water if they knew it was safe — even if they didn’t like the taste.
Beamer’s team also did water-quality tests during their home visits in Nogales and found no significant difference between the tap water and the bottled or vended water Latino residents drank, except in cases where they found water stored in reusable containers that weren’t properly cleaned.
RELATED: Pinal County water provider again finds high nitrate levels; some warned not to drink tap water Not only that, Latinos are more likely to live in states with higher water-system violations reported to the Environmental Protection Agency, according to a national sample study led by Vanderbilt University’s economist William Viscusi.
Latinos also spend more money on bottled water.
Beamer said that not drinking tap water increases Latinos’ risk of developing diabetes because they tend to consume sugary drinks instead of water.
This report is part of the “Troubled Water” project produced by the Carnegie-Knight News21 initiative, a national investigative reporting project by top college journalism students and recent graduates from across the country and headquartered at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.