The city of Wichita Falls, Texas, along with much of Middle America, has been struggling with drought conditions for several years.

That lack of water led to the recent decision to treat wastewater and send it back to homes for drinking, cooking and bathing. It’s a system some call “toilet-to-tap.”

Mayor Glenn Barham says if Wichita Falls doesn’t make this move, they could be out of water in two years. City managers say, “The vast majority of water that enters a wastewater plant did not come from a toilet. It comes from sinks, and bathtubs and washing machines and dishwashers,”

They claim only about 20 percent will actually come from toilets.

That’s not much solace for many of the people living there.

More popular and trending stories

"I think it's gross," Marissa Oliveras told KERA News.

Kira Smith agrees, “it definitely grosses me out,” she said.

Even while shuddering at the thought, Smith is trying to keep an open mind.

“I’m sure that they would clean it and filter it up to standards. But it’s a mindset kind of thing. You know what I’m talking about?”

Yes, Kira, we do.

Both women say they’ll switch to bottled water the moment the city makes the change.

More here.

About the Author

Keep Reading

One reader is asking the AJC to help her find cottage cheese made by Mayfield. (Ihar Balaikin/Dreamstime/TNS)

Credit: TNS

Featured

Members of the conversion crew take a break as the main scoreboard is lowered to the floor to be worked on as the arena gets ready for the next concert at State Farm Arena, Thursday, October 2, 2025, in Atlanta. The crew was working on creating a stage for the Friday, Oct. 3 Maxwell concert. (Jason Getz/AJC)

Credit: Jason Getz / Jason.Getz@ajc.com