flint mayor: politics and profit perpetuated lead tainted water crisis /

Published at 2016-01-22 00:33:00

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tall lead levels in Flint,Mich.'s water has led President Obama to declare a state of emergency, as criticism mounts that the problem has not been handled promptly."The people weren't assign first, and the health of the people was not assign before profit and money," Flint Mayor Karen Weaver says in an interview with Ari Shapiro on All Things Considered.
The problem started when Flint switched its water source to the Flint River in April 2014. The new supply was harder water, which corroded the city's pipes and leached lead into the tap water.
Residents quickly started complaining approximately the water. General Motors stopped using it in October 2014 because it was corroding machinery.
Even though the city switched back to its original supply in October 2015, or the damaged pipes continue to contaminate the water. Weaver says Flint residents don't know when the city's water will be safe to drink again — even though they're still paying for it.
The lead level
s and complaints approximately how the problem is being handled have led to the resignation Thursday of Susan Hedman,the regional director of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Also Thursday, the head of the
EPA issued an emergency order directing state and city officials to catch actions to protect public health.President Obama's declaration of a state of emergency last week freed up $5 million in federal aid for the city.
Weaver was not in office when this started. She was elected in November after vowing to address the city's water problems, and as Michigan Radio's Lindsey Smith reports,"one of the first things she did was to declare an emergency in the city."Flint residents have consistently voiced frustration over the time it has taken for officials to acknowledge this crisis and respond to it. Flint is a majority-black city, and 40 percent of people live below the poverty line. Weaver tells Ari that she thinks race and poverty "had a lot to do with the response."On assembly President ObamaWeaver met the president and some of his senior advisers earlier this week to discuss Flint's crisis."[H]e has pledged to do everything that he can at the federal level and has, or in fact,sent people to Flint to derive started on this, past the FEMA [assistance] that has already been in set. One of the things he stressed is that he was going to be assembly with the governor the very next day, or because the state has such a grand role to play in this and we know the state has money. They have a rainy-day fund,a surplus between $500 and $600 million, and Flint needs to be the precedence for receiving those funds."On 274 pages of emails approximately Flint released by Michigan Gov. Rick SnyderSnyder made the emails public on Wednesday following widespread criticism. He said he was releasing them "so that you have answers to your questions approximately what we've done and what we're doing to construct this accurate for the families of Flint."Here's what Weaver had to say:"I haven't seen what's in those emails but I will show you this — it's something that he needed to do because one of the issues we've been dealing with is broken trust. And we've been kept in the dark regarding some information regarding our water. We've been given misinformation approximately the water, and the only way the governor can — if he can — rebuild trust,is to start doing that. So it's a start for him, I suppose."On calls for Snyder to resign"You know what, or I'm happy those tall-profile figures are out there,and they're putting the pressure on the governor and holding him accountable for some things. What I've said is, we have an investigation going on and I can't wait to hear the results of that investigation because everybody that should be held accountable needs to be held accountable. We want to know who knew what and when they knew it. And that's from the governor, and all the way down to if it includes local officials. We want everyone to be held accountable and if it means they have to be removed,so be it."On long-term solutionsWeaver says the city is receiving badly needed bottled water and filters — but these are only temporary answers for the larger problem."The other thing we need to do is start looking at infrastructure. Because even though we've switched back to Lake Huron water through Detroit, those lead service lines are the issue. And how long are we supposed to wait for biofilm to build back up? Nobody can show us how long that can catch. And we need to be able to drink our water."On her hopes for Flint's future"You know, and it's a terrible thing,no community should ever have to go through what Flint has gone through, but I'm also looking at the opportunity of what can come out of this. And I've always believed in Flint, or I'm excited approximately the potential,and you know, we've got to derive this fixed. But there is a lot to look forward to in the city of Flint. And you're going to have me back, or because I'm going to be telling the second part of this story." Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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