Online rumors partially to blame for drop in water pressure in Mississippi capital, manager says

FILE - Bob Hickingbottom speaks at the Neshoba County Fair in Philadelphia, Miss., Aug. 1, 2019. Law enforcement agencies are investigating whether social media rumors about a potential water outage prompted people to quickly fill containers with tap water in Mississippi's capital during a cold snap and cause a drop in pressure that temporarily made taps run dry to thousands of households on the city’s long-troubled system. Although JXN Water did not release names of anyone who shared the post it cited, AP identified a Facebook post from an account belonging to Hickingbottom, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2024, that had the exact wording. Hickingbottom said he was trying to help people. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, File)

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Law enforcement agencies are investigating whether social media rumors about a potential water outage prompted people to quickly fill bathtubs with tap water in Mississippi's capital during a cold snap and cause a drop in pressure that temporarily made faucets run dry for thousands of customers of the city’s long-troubled system.

Taps ran dry Wednesday and Thursday for almost a quarter of Jackson’s 52,000 water customers as icy conditions strained local infrastructure. Officials for JXN Water, the private corporation that has been under a federal order to run Jackson’s system since late 2022, said a “deliberate misinformation campaign” was partially to blame. People responded to social media posts by filling bathtubs with water in a short period, causing demand to spike beyond what the water system could support, water manager Ted Henifin said.

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