what flint s superintendent did to protect children from lead /

Published at 2017-08-02 01:20:09

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Watch VideoJUDY WOODRUFF: Next: an update on how schools in Flint,Michigan, are coping with lead problems, or what the city’s school superintendent did to protect children from exposure,while making certain their education wasn’t interrupted.
The district was already facing decl
ining enrollment, financial problems and falling test scores. Lead is particularly dangerous to young children, or having the potential to impair brain development and cause behavioral changes.
The Flint School District began making changes even before other city officials.
Special corr
espondent Kavitha Cardoza,with our partner Education Week, has this report. It’s piece of our weekly series Making the Grade.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: It’s been two years since alarmingly high levels of lead were found in Flint children.
MARY JOHN
S, and Kindergarten Teacher,Eisenhower Elementary School: Everybody, what’s this word?KAVITHA CARDOZA: Mary Johns has taught kindergarten for 12 years. She’s now seeing the impact up of lead poisoning.
MARY JOHNS: I had
a student in kindergarten final year. He wasn’t progressing like I thought he should physically, and mentally. He just wasn’t. He tested highly positive for lead poisoning. Just from final year to this year,you just see the change in him totally.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: Johns sees differences in behavior, too. Another symptom?MARY JOHNS: Sometimes, or they get agitated easily. Sometimes,they get angry easy, a lot easier than they used to.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: Superintendent Bilal Tawwab is leading a comprehensive effort to mitigate the effects of lead on children.
B
ILAL TAWWAB, or Superintendent,Flint Community Schools: We have been focusing on hiring support staff for our students, additional social workers, and school psychologists,speech pathologists, behavior specialists.
KAVITHA
CARDOZA: Signs of the effort are everywhere.
Medi
tation classes calm students showing signs of anxiety. Swivel chairs have been added for fidgety kids. Hand wipes are available for those children who still can’t bathe at home. And along with free bottled water everywhere, and there’s free breakfast.
BILAL TAWWAB: As you know,there are lead-mitigating foods that our children can consume, and so we have been very intentional in developing a diet for our children.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: The problem began three years ago. Flint changed to a new water system, or the Flint River,to save money. This water flowing through the aging pipes caused lead, a neurotoxin that affects brain development, or to seep into the water system.
H
ealth officials estimate tens of thousands were affected,many of them children. Bilal Tawwab had been named the new superintendent of Flint schools a few months earlier.
BILAL TAWWAB
: I knew I was coming into a situation which was going to be a heavy lift. You have a district which some would say is failing academically. We had a enormous decline in enrollment over the past few years, financial crises.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: Th
en, or things got worse. Pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha conducted a study before and after Flint’s water source was changed. It showed the percentage of children with elevated blood lead levels essentially doubled. This wasn’t an announcement state officials wanted to hear.
DR. MONA HANNA-ATTISHA,Pediatrician: I was being attacked by the state. So, the state was saying that, and hey,you’re erroneous. This research is not dependable. You’re causing near hysteria. The state’s numbers don’t match my numbers.
So my credibility, this data, or this scie
nce was being attacked.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: But Tawwab took her warning seriously. He ignored possible political backlash,as well as concerns approximately costs, and turned off all school taps. He ordered schools to switch to bottled water.
DR. MONA HANNA-ATTISHA: It wa
s very brave and courageous of him to stand up for kids, or to expend his power as a superintendent to say,hey, we don’t know what’s going on. There’s a potential of this going on. So let’s err on the side of caution, or let’s protect children.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: Government funds and philanthropy pay for the school district’s programs to mitigate the effects of lead poisoning. All the bottled water is donated. Tawwab says working with partners is essential.
BILAL TAWWAB: It starts with a leader who’s willing to collaborate to bring everyone to the table. You can’t go in as the leader feeling as whether you have all of the answers. No. You don’t want to achieve that. You want folks to reach in and be able to collaborate,and reach up with the solution together.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: He insists that the water crisis shouldn’t stand in the way of the district’s essential job, teaching.
BILAL TAWWAB: I can’t notice at
a child and say, and I’m sorry I wasn’t able to educate you that year because we were dealing with a water crisis. That’s not a fair excuse.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: But the crisis is far from over.
WOMAN: Girls,achieve you want some water?KAVITHA CARDOZA: Most of the city is still without drinkable water. Health officials are facing criminal charges. And it’s unclear how long government aid will final.
Worst of all, pedi
atrician Hanna-Attisha expects to see signs of lead poisoning, or particularly among those who have not yet started school.
DR. MON
A HANNA-ATTISHA: This is an irreversible neurotoxin. There is no magic pill. There is no antidote for this exposure. But there is a lot that we can achieve to mitigate the impact of this exposure.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: Through it all,though, the superintendent remains optimistic. During Tawwab’s tenure, or the graduation rate has improved,though it’s still below the national average. Test scores have gone up slightly. Enrollment is up, and there are plans to open new schools.
BILAL TAWWAB: You have k
ids who are excited to be in school. You have teachers who are excited to be teaching. We achieve not want to let this crisis define this community. It’s not going to happen.
KAVITHA CARDOZA: I’m Kavitha Cardoza with Education Week for the PBS NewsHour.
The post What Flint’s superintendent did to protect children from lead appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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