11/06/2023
The Groundwater Foundation Launches Water Well Wish
The Groundwater Foundation is launching its new nationwide grant program, Water Well Wish, which will provide grants to low-income individuals to repair or replace their private water wells at no cost to the recipient. The program will work directly with families across the United States and provide 100% of the funding to repair an existing system or drill a new water well. This will provide families with access to clean water for drinking, cooking, personal hygiene, washing dishes and clothes, and more. Water Well Wish was created to help families in need who
rely on private water wells but cannot afford the upfront cost of drilling a new water well or having their current system repaired. It is estimated that more than 2 million Americans face water insecurity and lack a reliable source of safe, clean water.
Private water wells provide water for an estimated 40
million Americans, largely in rural and underserved areas of the country, and can cost on average between $10,000 to $30,000 to drill and install.
Because private water wells are not funded by public
dollars, their owners are left often with little or no support from local, state, and federal governments. Many water well owners are also unaware of how to properly manage and maintain their systems.
“It’s hard to imagine people in the United States struggling to access water, but it happens every day and in every part of the country,” says NGWA and The Groundwater Foundation CEO Terry S. Morse, CAE, CIC. “Water Well Wish is our attempt to help bridge this divide and provide people with something we all deserve—access to safe, clean water.”
Water Well Wish will be completely funded by corporate and private donations, and through its former entity, the Foundation for Affordable Drinking Water, has already assisted 110 families across the United States in drilling new water wells.
For a family to be eligible, they must own and reside in their home, their income must be below their local poverty level, and they must be denied a low-interest loan through a federal, state, or local government rural water program. “We want to provide people with this very basic need of life,” Morse says. “Life expectancy is reduced by 20 years without access to clean water. If you spend your day worrying about where you’re going to get water, how are you
expected to succeed or focus on anything else?”
The Groundwater Foundation is operated by NGWA.
Go to www.groundwater.org/water-well-wish to learn
more about the Water Well Wish program and watch a feature video with additional information.