FLINT Michigan Drinking Water Willfully POISONSED by RepubliKlan Gov. Snyder – Racial Genocide

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor
black_agenda_report.jpg


Ethnic Cleansing:

The Ultimate Environmental Racism


What happened in Flint was not a simple case of environmental racism, but ethnic cleansing by lethal means. The ethnic cleansing of the cities – otherwise known as gentrification – is an existential threat to Black people in the United States. Flint signals that the Black Removers are capable of anything in their quest to create cities that are “non-Black by design.”

by Glen Ford | January 27, 2016 | http://www.blackagendareport.com/ethnic_cleansing_environmental_racism


It is imperative that the atrocity unfolding in Flint, Michigan sharpen the discussion of the true nature of the blitzkrieg that has been launched against Black America – as should have occurred a decade ago when Katrina laid bare the grand scheme to remove and disperse poor Blacks from the inner cities by any means necessary. The poisoning of Flint’s water supply is not simply a lethal by-product of some generalized, endemic white racism in the United States. And, although state and federal authorities surely displayed contempt for the welfare of Flint’s predominantly Black and deeply impoverished population, this was not a crime of indifference. Rather, the poisoning of the 100,000 residents of Flint – like the dispersal of 100,000 Black New Orleanians – is the logical result of a nationwide campaign by organized capital to boost the value of urban real estate through Black removal.

The Republican Governor of Michigan, in the service of corporations and banksters, sought to rid Flint and other Michigan cities of Black and poor people, and deputized his emergency financial managers to act accordingly.

Darnell_Earley.jpg


The slave-bitch negro coon above is named Darnell Earley. He was the so-called 'Emergency Manager' sent to Flint by RepubliKlan governor Snyder to destroy Flint. Look at the photo below and you'll see Earley celebrating Flint's water supply switch to poisonous water with the then also powerless 'white' mayor of Flint who is standing directly to his right. Exhibiting the height of crass cynicism, the water in their plastic toasting cups was clean non-toxic bottled water. They look like a bunch of Nazis celebrating the death of thousands of Jews.


toasting_Flintwater_0.jpg



There is a profound difference between damage that is done through contempt or indifference to the harmed persons’ plight – acts of callous oblivion, such as whites not caring what happens on the Black side of town – and harms that occur as the predictable result of a deliberate course of action, a plan. Polluting industries purposely place their plants in Black neighborhoods because they know African Americans lack the political power to protect themselves from pollution, and that some are desperate for employment despite the risk to their health. This is an example of environmental racism. The industry’s motive is to profit from the operations of the plant. The owner’s aim is not necessarily to harm his Black neighbors, but that is an acceptable (to him) by-product of his business model.

Their purpose is to make life unbearable for the Black poor, to uproot them by creating as hostile an environment as possible.”

The ethnic cleansing of the cities, now sweeping the nation at a dizzying, near-frantic pace [3], is a far higher order of threat than your garden (or landfill) variety of environmental racism. Indeed, it is an existential threat to Black America. Unlike the industrial environmental racists, whose relationship to Black communities is in some ways perversely symbiotic (a place to park their foul facilities near metropolitan centers, and to hire cheap labor), the urban ethnic cleansers want Black people gone – period. Their purpose is to make life unbearable for the Black poor, to uproot them by creating as hostile an environment as possible, in order to clear the way for new, whiter, more affluent populations. The logic of the “marketplace” in racist, capitalist America dictates that the Black presence depresses land and housing values, impeding the artificial inflation of property assets that is the imperative of finance capital. Hegemonic capital – Wall Street – which is in command of both political parties, seeks an urban “renaissance” that is non-Black by design.


That’s why the Obama administration was an eager partner to the bankrupting of Detroit [4] and did nothing to deter the disenfranchisement of half of Michigan’s Black population through installation of emergency financial managers like the one that switched Flint’s water source from lake Huron to the septic Flint River. That’s why emergency managers have trashed Detroit’s schools [5], so that no public institutional basis remains for anchoring the Black presence in the city – a theft of democratic and educational rights that has been perpetrated in Democrat-controlled cities for the past two decades, and is almost always accompanied by gentrification. Activists against police lawlessness now understand the role that cops play in creating a hostile (and often fatal) environment for Blacks in neighborhoods targeted for gentrification by the banks.

“Wall Street seeks an urban ‘renaissance’ that is non-Black by design.”

They trash the schools, they trash public housing, and in Flint, they trashed the water – they are capable of anything to drive out those who would forestall the “renaissance.” And since, as Bruce Dixon reminds us, the capitalists have ensured that the only urban renewal idea allowed in America is Black removal, the ethnic cleansers have had the active support of the Black political (misleadership) class in all their destructive endeavors.

The events of Katrina told us where this leads: mass Black expulsion, to...where? Hitler’s original program for the Jews was expulsion from a German-dominated Europe. We know where that led. Which is why it is so urgent that the Black political conversation be centered on ethnic cleansing, the highest and most dangerous stage of contemporary U.S. environmental racism: the creation of an environment in which Blacks have been made to disappear.





flint_water_tweet.png

flint_hospital_water.jpg



FLINT_WATER_GENOCIDE.png


Download Magazine Above
http://hugefiles.net/zpkgkl8489sm


FLINT_WATER_GENOCIDE_01.png


ct_flint_michigan_water_crisis_20160119.jpg

boone_flint_michigan_water_boy_skin_rash_02.jpg



Sincere Smith (above) , age 2, of Flint, Mich., suffers from a full-body rash his mother blames on bathing in municipal water from the Flint River.

"This boy actually fears the water. It's like kryptonite to him."

http://time.com/4187507/time-flint-water-crisis-cover/


flint_water_crisis_cartoon_cole.jpg


flintwatermeeting_012115_024.jpg


160119070639_flint_michigan_water_crisis_protest.jpg


Flint_water.png


water_terrorism_large.jpg


leadpoison.jpg
 
Last edited:

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor

Flint’s Crisis Is About More Than Water

OldSpeak_Hedges.jpg

by Chris Hedges | February 7, 2016 |www.truthdig.com/report/item/flints_crisis_is_about_more_than_water_20160207/

Best selling author Chris Hedges, the son of a Presbyterian minister, graduated from Colgate University with a BA in English Literature and went on to receive a Master of Divinity from Harvard. Hedges spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent for The New York Times in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He was an early and outspoken critic of the US plan to invade and occupy Iraq and called the press coverage at the time “shameful cheerleading.” In 2002, he won the Pulitzer Prize. In 2003, shortly after the war in Iraq began, Hedges was reprimanded & condemned by The New York Times for his anti Iraq war position and his opposition to U.S. Imperialism. Hedges resigned shortly thereafter and became a senior fellow at the Nation Institute.



What is in the mind of someone who knowingly poisons children and impairs their lives? Why did the politicians, regulators and bureaucrats who knew the water in Flint, Mich., was toxic lie about the danger for months? What does it say about a society that is ruled by, and refuses to punish, those who willfully destroy the lives of children?

The crisis in Flint is far more ominous than lead-contaminated water. It is symptomatic of the collapse of our democracy.


Corporate power is not held accountable for its crimes. Everything is up for sale, including children. Our regulatory agencies—including the federal Environmental Protection Agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality—have been defunded, emasculated and handed over to corporate-friendly stooges. Our corrupt courts are part of a mirage of justice. The role of these government agencies and courts, and of the legislatures, is to sanction abuse rather than halt it.

The primacy of profit throughout the society takes precedence over life itself, including the life of the most vulnerable. This corporate system of power knows no limits. It has no internal restraints. It will sacrifice all of us, including our children, on the altar of corporate greed.

In a functioning judicial system, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and Flint’s former emergency manager, Darnell Earley, along with all the regulatory officials who lied as a city was being sickened,
would be in jail facing trial.


Hannah Arendt in “The Origins of Totalitarianism,” Gitta Sereny in “Into That Darkness,” Omer Bartov in “Murder in Our Midst,” Alexander Solzhenitsyn in “The Gulag Archipelago,” Primo Levi in “The Drowned and the Saved” and Ella Lingens-Reiner in “Prisoners of Fear” argue that the modern instrument of evil is the technocrat, the man or woman whose sole concern is technological and financial efficiency, whose primary measurement of success is self-advancement, even if it means piling up corpses or destroying the lives of children.

“Monsters exist,” Levi noted, “but they are too few in number to be truly dangerous. More dangerous are the common men.” These technocrats have no real ideology, other than the ideology that is in vogue. They want to get ahead, to rise in the structures of power. They know how to make the collective, or the bureaucracy, work on behalf of power. Nothing else is of importance. “The new state did not require holy apostles, fanatic, inspired builders, faithful devout disciples,” Vasily Grossman, in his book “Forever Flowing, wrote of Stalin’s Soviet Union. “The new state did not even require servants—just clerks.”

We churn out millions of these technocrats or clerks in elite universities and business schools. They are trained to serve the system. They do not question its assumptions and structures any more than Nazi bureaucrats questioned the assumptions and structures of the “Final Solution.” They manage the huge financial houses and banks such as Goldman Sachs. They profit from endless war. They orchestrate the fraud on Wall Street. They destroy the ecosystem on behalf of the fossil fuel industry. They are elected to office. They are empty shells of human beings who stripped of their power and wealth are banal and pathetic. They are not sadists. They do not delight in cruelty. They are cogs in the machinery of corporate power.

These technocrats are numb to the most basic of human emotions and devoid of empathy beyond their own tiny inner circle. Michigan state officials, for example, provided bottled water to their employees in Flint for nearly a year while city residents drank the contaminated water, and authorities spent $440,000 to pipe clean water to the local GM plant after factory officials complained that the Flint water was corroding their car parts. That mediocre human beings make such systems function is what makes them dangerous.

The long refusal to make public the poisoning of the children of Flint, who face the prospect of stunted growth, neurological, speech and hearing impairment, reproductive problems and kidney damage, mirrors the slow-motion poisoning and exploitation of the planet by other corporate technocrats. These are not people we want to entrust with our future.

Theodor Adorno warned in his essay “Education After Auschwitz” that if we did not create an educational system that taught us to think morally and trained us how to make moral choices, another Auschwitz would appear on the horizon. Schools must teach more than vocational skills; they must teach values. They must, as Adorno wrote, teach citizens about “the societal play of forces that operates beneath the surface of political forms.” And they must do this “without fear of offending any authorities.”

We live in an age that has eradicated social and cultural consciousness and left us in a rootless, ahistorical, emotionally driven void. Whole populations in our poorest communities are poisoned or, in countries such as Iraq, murdered en masse. But we have no context for measuring human actions and human evil. We find our collective identity in childish nationalist cant and patriotic propaganda that bombards the airwaves, not in the cold reality of our callousness and ruthlessness. We do not know who we are.


“People who blindly slot themselves into the collective already make themselves into something like inert material, extinguish themselves as self-determined beings,”Adorno writes about the technocrat. “With this comes the willingness to treat others as an amorphous mass.”

“The manipulative character—as anyone can confirm in the sources available about those Nazi leaders—is distinguished by a rage for organization, by the inability to have any immediate human experiences at all, by a certain lack of emotion, by an overvalued realism,” Adorno goes on to say in his 1966 essay. “At any cost he wants to conduct supposed, even if delusional, Realpolitik. He does not for one second think or wish that the world were any different than it is, he is obsessed by the desire of doing things [Dinge zut un], indifferent to the content of such action. He makes a cult of action, activity, of so-called efficiency as such which reappears in the advertising image of the active person. If my observations do not deceive me and if several sociological investigations permit generalization, then this type has become much more prevalent today than one would think.”

Humanity as an idea, as the philosopher Alain Finkielkraut has pointed out, is itself mortal. It can be extinguished along with millions of human beings. “Barbarism is not the inheritance of our prehistory,” Finkielkraut reminds us. “It is the companion that dogs our every step.”

“Indeed, one of the most frightening consequences of the Holocaust may well be that rather than serving as a warning to preserve humanity at all cost, it has provided a license to privilege physical survival over moral existence,” writes Omer Bartov in “Mirrors of Destruction.” “This may be one reason, along with the realization that mass murder has continued unabated since 1945, that such men as [Tadeusz] Borowski, [Jean] Améry, Paul Celan, and [Primo] Levi finally decided to put an end to their own lives.”

We have turned our universities into temples dedicated to corporate vocational training. Most graduates of Princeton or Harvard have no more ability to question the operating systems of the corporate state than an inner-city boy or girl who is taught basic functional literacy only so he or she can stock shelves or sell fast food. We all have our place in the great machine of corporate self-immolation. We all are drones. The technical skills vary from intricate and complex to rudimentary. But the commonality is that we lack the capacity to measure our actions against the ideas, outrages and injustices of the past. We have ceased to be moral beings. The devil in Goethe’s “Faust” grasps that the element most essential to the perpetration of evil is the obliteration of memory.

Now it is over. What meaning can one see?
It is as if it had not come to be.
And yet it circulates as if it were.
I should prefer—Eternal Emptiness.

We do not possess the intellectual skills—and this is by design—that permit us to question power, to see ourselves as part of a long human continuum. We have forgotten, or never been taught, that each individual must be seen as an ultimate end if we are to retain any human decency and hope. Once we depersonalize others, once we forget who we are and where we came from, we make evil possible. “Act so that humanity, both in your own person and that of others, be used as an end in itself, and never as a mere means,” Immanuel Kant wrote. If we cannot think morally, if we live devoid of empathy, if our advancement comes at the expense of the other, if we lose touch with the wisdom of the past, we cannot rebel. And if we do not rebel we will sustain a system that will ultimately slay us.




57aa.jpg
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Manslaughter charges possible in Flint water crisis, says top investigator

As a probe begins into the water crisis gripping Flint, Mich., a top investigator announced Tuesday that if officials are found to have been grossly negligent, they could face charges as serious as manslaughter.

“We’re here to investigate what possible crimes there are, anything [from] involuntary manslaughter or death that may have happened to some young person or old person because of this poisoning, to misconduct in office,” said Todd Flood, special counsel for the state attorney general’s office who is in charge of the investigation. “We take this very seriously.”

Since the city switched suppliers in April 2014, corrosive tap water has caused the level of lead in kids’ blood to soar and has sparked fears of permanent neurological damage. In some cases, the water has been so poisoned by lead that it qualified as “toxic waste.”

A spike in Legionnaires’ disease led to 10 deaths during the same time period, although it’s not clear whether the bacterial outbreak was linked to drinking the water, according to Mlive.

Outrage over those deaths and the possible long-term effects of lead poisoning hung over Tuesday’s news conference. Flood was brought in to lead the investigation last month because the Department of the Attorney General is defending Gov. Rick Snyder (R) and various state departments against lawsuits brought by Flint residents.

Flood described a number of possible outcomes of the investigation. He said it could turn out that the crisis was simply a result of “honest mistakes,” the Associated Press reported.

But it could also turn out that city, county or state officials were guilty of a “breach of duty” or “gross negligence,” exposing them to possible criminal or civil actions, he said.

Flood said that the severest possible charge, manslaughter, was “not far-fetched.” He compared charging officials with manslaughter over the water crisis to charging construction workers with the same crime for leaving open manholes unattended, resulting in death.

He said he could also pursue restitution against both private companies and governments on behalf of Flint residents affected by the water crisis, according to the Detroit News.

Flood’s team will consist of nine full-time investigators, including former state and Detroit police officers as well as Andrew Arena, former head of Detroit’s FBI office.

A separate federal investigation also has been launched and will include prosecutors from the U.S. attorney’s office in Detroit as well as the FBI, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Inspector General and the EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division, Reuters reported last week.

The two investigations will try to suss out who is to blame for Flint’s dangerous drinking water.

So far, state and federal officials have been trading blame, often along political party lines.

[Hope — and clean water — remains elusive for the people of Flint]

Last week, the EPA’s acting water chief, Joel Beauvais, told Congress that Michigan — under the leadership of Snyder — had ignored federal advice to treat Flint’s water for corrosive elements, which are believed to have eroded old lead pipes and contaminated drinking water. Beauvais also said the state delayed for months in telling the public about the health risks, according to the AP.

State officials shot back, however, claiming that the EPA did not act urgently enough, either.

Not even city officials are exempt from scorn. Although the city was under the control of a state-appointed emergency manager when it switched from Detroit water to the highly corrosive Flint River, it was the Flint City Council that voted 7-1 on March 25, 2013 to end its contract with Detroit, a decision that opened the door for the later debacle, according to the Detroit Free Press.

Even then, though, Snyder’s office was heavily involved in the decision, the Free Press reported. The morning before the Flint City Council vote, the state’s Democratic treasurer called Snyder’s chief of staff to discuss “Flint water supply alternatives,” according to the Free Press. And the next morning, the treasurer held two more meetings regarding the switch.

Snyder, a tech venture capitalist elected in 2010 on promises to turn around the state’s floundering economy, has accepted some blame for the crisis. He has apologized — calling the crisis a “disaster” and his “Katrina” moment — and promised to fix it. He also has released his emails on the subject.

But Snyder also has claimed that his top aide’s concerns about Flint’s water were “blown off” by Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality, an agency under the direction of a man whom Snyder appointed.

MORE HERE: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2016/02/10/manslaughter-charges-possible-in-flint-water-crisis-says-top-investigator/
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
source: New York Times

00water-web01-master675.jpg

Bottled water at a distribution site in Sebring, Ohio, where tests last year found unsafe amounts of lead in the drinking water.

In Sebring, Ohio, routine laboratory tests last August found unsafe levels of lead in the town’s drinking water after workers stopped adding a chemical to keep lead water pipes from corroding. Five months passed before the city told pregnant women and children not to drink the water, and shut down taps and fountains in schools.

In 2001, after Washington, D.C., changed how it disinfected drinking water, lead in tap water at thousands of homes spiked as much as 20 times the federally approved level. Residents did not find out for three years. When they did, officials ripped out lead water pipes feeding 17,600 homes — and discovered three years later that many of the repairs had only prolonged the contamination.

The crisis in Flint, Mich., where as many as 8,000 children under age 6 were exposed to unsafe levels of lead after a budget-cutting decision to switch drinking-water sources, may be the most serious contamination threat facing the country’s water supplies. But it is hardly the only one.

Unsafe levels of lead have turned up in tap water in city after city in Durham and Greenville, N.C., in 2006; in Columbia, S.C., in 2005; and last July in Jackson, Miss., where officials waited six months to disclose the contamination — as well as in scores of other places in recent years.

Federal officials and many scientists agree that most of the nation’s 53,000 community water systems provide safe drinking water. But such episodes are unsettling reminders of what experts say are holes in the safety net of rules and procedures intended to keep water not just lead-free, but free of all poisons.

The Environmental Protection Agency says streams tapped by water utilities serving a third of the population are not yet covered by clean-water laws that limit levels of toxic pollutants. Even purified water often travels to homes through pipes that are in stunning disrepair, potentially open to disease and pollutants.

Although Congress banned lead water pipes 30 years ago, between 3.3 million and 10 million older ones remain, primed to leach lead into tap water by forces as simple as jostling during repairs or a change in water chemistry.

“We have a lot of threats to the water supply,” said Dr. Jeffrey K. Griffiths, a professor of public health at Tufts University and a former chairman of the E.P.A.’s Drinking Water Committee. “And we have lots of really good professionals in the water industry who see themselves as protecting the public good. But it doesn’t take much for our aging infrastructure or an unprofessional actor to allow that protection to fall apart.”

Both researchers and industry officials say problems extend well beyond lead. Many potentially harmful contaminants have yet to be evaluated, much less regulated. Efforts to address shortcomings often encounter pushback from industries like agriculture and mining that fear cost increases, and from politicians ideologically opposed to regulation.

Rules and science are outdated. The E.P.A.’s trigger level for addressing lead in drinking water — 15 parts per billion — is not based on any health threat; rather, it reflects a calculation that water in at least nine in 10 homes susceptible to lead contamination will fall below that standard.

And while political leaders upbraid the E.P.A. and state regulators for laggard responses to crises in Flint and elsewhere, they have themselves lagged in offering support. Adjusted for inflation, the $100 million annual budget of the E.P.A.’s drinking water office has fallen 15 percent since 2006, and the office has lost more than a tenth of its staff.

States are equally hard hit. In 2013, the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators said federal officials had slashed drinking-water grants, 17 states had cut drinking-water budgets by more than a fifth, and 27 had cut spending on full-time employees. “The cumulative effect of the resource gap has serious implications for states’ ability to protect public health,” the group stated.

As Flint’s water crisis surfaced last fall, Congress was considering the E.P.A.’s effort to clarify its regulatory powers over tributaries and wetlands — the streams that supply water to a third of Americans.

Both houses passed legislation to block a new Clean Water Act regulation, the Waters of the United States rule, that aims to assert authority over those waters, which the Supreme Court had questioned in 2001 and 2006 rulings.

And Senator James M. Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican who is chairman of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, denounced the rule as a federal power grab.

President Obama vetoed that legislation last month, but more than two dozen states have sued to block the rule. Among their arguments: It would hurt business.

An E.P.A. spokeswoman said Friday that the agency hoped to propose strengthened regulation of lead in drinking water in 2017, something the agency’s administrator, Gina McCarthy, said was needed in a speech this month in Flint. She pledged then to start “a national conversation about this country’s water infrastructure” and resources for states.

Ms. McCarthy has also issued a new policy calling for federal regulators to take a more active role in the face of public health crises.

00water-web03-master1050.jpg

A lead water pipe that was removed from a home in Lansing, Mich. Officials there have replaced 13,500 lead lines since 2004.

In 2011, the water authority in Brick Township, N.J., an oceanside settlement of 75,000 people, tested tap water in a small sample of homes for lead, as the E.P.A. requires be done periodically. It discovered two homes in which the level exceeded the agency’s limit of 15 parts per billion, well short of the number that required remedial steps.

But in the next mandated test, three years later, it found that 16 of 34 homes exceeded the limit — one of them by a dozen times. The growing use of road salt in recent winters, it turned out, had raised chloride levels in the river from which Brick drew its water. Undetected, the chloride corroded aged lead pipes running to older homes, leaching lead into tap water.

The town has since added an anti-corrosion agent to its water, but some residents remain wary.

“Why didn’t somebody in the water company realize with all the snow we’ve had in those years that something was going to affect the water?” asked Jeff Brown, 73, whose 1960s-era ranch home was built when lead was allowed in water lines and plumbing. “I hope they’ve learned a lesson.”

The authorities in Brick say the water now meets federal standards. But that is cold comfort to Mr. Brown. “I’m never reassured when they tell you what’s in federal guidelines,” he said. “Who sets the standards?”

Brick is but one example of how lead contamination can elude rules and authorities, potentially for years.

“We need an aggressive program to get rid of lead service lines, starting with an inventory so we know where they are,” said Lynn Thorp, the national campaigns director for Clean Water Action, an advocacy group. “Water systems need to up their game and take this problem more seriously.”

Both scientists and advocates say the rules governing contamination from lead pipes are ridden with loopholes. For example, the E.P.A.’s lead rule requires water systems to test in only a small number of homes with lead pipes — 50 to 100 for large systems — and intervals between testing can stretch to three years.

Water systems use various protocols for tap water tests, and rules allow ordinary homeowners to conduct them unsupervised, raising questions about their consistency. Officials must disclose contamination and take remedial action only if tests show more than 10 percent of sampled homes exceed the standard. Advocates say that lets utilities declare their water safe even if contamination is uncovered.

”Over the last decade we’ve learned that the testing routines did not detect true risk from lead, that there are forms of lead that we’re not testing for and that testing was too infrequent,” said Dr. Griffiths, the former chairman of the E.P.A.’s Drinking Water Committee. “It’s hard to see how the status quo in lead testing for water is adequately serving the public.”

In December, the Drinking Water Committee endorsed recommendations by an advisory group to strengthen the lead rule in several critical areas. The group said water systems should bolster their anti-corrosion efforts and test more often to ensure that they are working. It called for the E.P.A. to set a standard for lead in drinking water based on its effect on people’s health, likely below the current level, and to require water systems to tell homeowners and public-health officials whenever it is exceeded.

Yanna Lambrinidou, who was on the advisory panel, is an adjunct assistant professor of science and technology studies at Virginia Tech, whose experts first disclosed the scope of Flint’s lead problem. She dissented from the group’s recommendations, arguing that they did not go far enough.

A study for the American Water Works Association, she noted, found that samplings of water that had been sitting in lead pipes had unacceptable lead levels in as much as 70.5 percent of water systems.

00water-web02-master1050.jpg

Workers in Lansing, Mich., digging up a lead pipe last month as part of a replacement program. Some residents used to fight the intrusion on their property, said Richard R. Peffley of the local water utility. Since the Flint crisis, he said, “there’s been no resistance.”

The advisory group also urged the E.P.A. to require water systems to eventually replace all lead pipes, but it did not address the main obstacle to that goal: cost. At $5,000 per pipe, by one estimate, that would consume between $16.5 billion and $50 billion — and that is but a fraction of the $384 billion in deferred maintenance the E.P.A. says is needed by 2030 to keep drinking water safe.

Erik D. Olson, head of the health and environment program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said: “You think our roads and bridges aren’t being fixed? The stuff underground is just totally ignored. We’re mostly living off the investment of our parents and grandparents for our drinking water supply.”

Some systems have gone ahead despite the cost. In Lansing, Mich., not 60 miles from Flint, the Board of Water and Light has replaced 13,500 lead lines since 2004, part of a $42 million project that has only 650 pipes to go. Some residents used to fight the intrusion on their property, said Richard R. Peffley, the utility’s general manager.

Since the Flint crisis, he said, “there’s been no resistance.”

A Hidden Problem: Unregulated Chemicals
The biggest hole in the drinking-water safety net may be the least visible: the potential for water to be tainted by substances that scientists and officials have not even studied, much less regulated.

The E.P.A. has compiled a list of 100 potentially risky chemicals and 12 microbes that are known or expected to be found in public water systems, but are not yet regulated. In the last 15 years, it also has required water systems to test for 80 additional contaminants to see whether they merit regulation.

So far, it has decided to place limits on just one, perchlorate, a salt found in rocket propellants and explosives. And what an arduous decision it has been: The E.P.A. began tests for perchlorate in 2001 and resolved to regulate it in 2011, but does not expect to publish its proposed rule until March 2017.

There are thousands of other chemicals, viruses and microbes that scientists like Dr. Griffiths say the agency has not begun to assess. The scientists say they can make educated guesses about the potential for harm, and most are harmless or exist in vanishingly small amounts. But they also admit they can be blindsided.

“We just don’t have enough research to tell us,” said Rebecca D. Klaper, a professor of freshwater science at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. “This suite of 100 things might be in the water, but you have to have methods and standards developed to measure these things. Unless you have a preconceived notion of what you’re looking for, you don’t know what’s there.”

00water-web04-master1050.jpg

Rebecca D. Klaper of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee with a student, Dylan Olson. “You have to have methods and standards” to assess contaminants, she said.

Toledo, Ohio, shut down its drinking water for three days in 2014 after microcystin, an unregulated toxin produced by algae-like bacteria clogging Lake Erie, tainted its supplies. Microcystin and related toxins, which can cause liver damage and have killed animals, have since been added to the list of potentially dangerous contaminants.

Another example: Many water systems draw from rivers loaded with nitrates, the product of fertilizer runoff and sewage overflow. But researchers were long unaware that removing nitrates from finished water can leave behind a toxic byproduct, nitrosamines, the cancer-causing chemical found in cooked bacon.

The soup of contaminants in many water sources holds other possibilities for trouble. The E.P.A.’s latest list of potentially risky substances includes some variants of estrogen, compounds from birth-control pills and other pharmaceuticals that are already linked to sexual changes in fish. Individually, they probably pose little risk to humans. Together, Dr. Klaper said, the risk may or may not be greater.

“How do you look at the long-term impact of these trace chemicals?” she asked. “That’s what we’re trying to wrap our heads around. The research that could determine whether anything is a problem is very complicated.”

Ultimately, water problems in Flint and elsewhere suggest a failing in society’s concept of water, said Henry L. Henderson, the Midwest program director for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“We see safe and sufficient water as a human right,” he said. “It needs to be approached as a public service matter, not a private commercial commodity.”

Cost considerations drove the decision to switch Flint from Lake Huron water to Flint River water, unleashing the lead problems. But water, Mr. Henderson said, has to be more than a matter of the bottom line.

“It doesn’t just come out of the wall,” he said.
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
There should be action taken at the federal level to help fund removal of these lead water pipes. It shouldn't be treated as a state local issue only.
 

D Kline

PROUD BLACK AMERICAN !
Registered
Water has been an issue for years. Water has been the new oil WE are late to waking up.
 

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor

The less than 4 minute video clip below lays bare the stark reality of "The primacy of profit throughout the society takes precedence over life itself" that author Chris Hedges wrote about.

General Motors was more concerned about the poisonous Flint river water destroying the metal engines they were manufacturing than they were about the human beings that were drinking and bathing in that same water. FUCK the human beings, the god damn engines are more valuable that the disposable piece-of-shit humans that live in Flint. That is the mentality of the technocratic corporate managers that run the world's trans-national corporations. It's all about fealty and deference to the corporate state; It's about Me, Myself & I. It's about getting the company stock price to rise by any-means-necessary so that "I" can $$$$$$$$$$ cash in my stock options. This callous disregard for human life in the pursuit of unbridled greed $$$$$$$$ is not new at General Motors. General Motors willfully installed defective ignition switches in automobiles which resulted in hundreds of deaths and serious injuries. The corporate managers knew that people would die; they didn't give a damn, they just wanted their bonus checks, Fuck the stupid consumers that are buying defective cars, let them die, "I" got my $$$$$$$$$$$ check. FUCK Them!!!!


<iframe width="640" height="360" src="" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="true"></iframe>


In October 2014, General Motors recognized the Flint water was corroding its engines. They got permission from the city’s unelected emergency manager—who was appointed by Republican Governor Rick Snyder—to disconnect from Flint’s water and go back to Detroit water. It would be another year before the people of Flint were finally allowed to disconnect from the corrosive Flint River as their water supply and hook up again to the Detroit water system. By then, the Flint River water had corroded the city’s aging pipes, poisoning the drinking water with lead, which can cause permanent developmental delays and neurological impairment, especially in children. We speak with a GM autoworker in Flint about the company’s actions once it realized that Flint’s water was corroding car engines.



WATCH THE FULL LENGTH FLINT VIDEO BELOW
<iframe width="640" height="360" src="" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="true"></iframe>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Bump:

The Long Haul: supporting the future of Flint children





Bumped so that this issue not get Trumped.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
damn shame nobody is focusing on the real culprits...

the developers...
same with katrina..

all you have to do is follow the money....

who is responsible for the development of the cities??

start right there...

and make them feel your presence hard.. stoop allowing to hide behind

politicians and emergency city managers...


untill we uncover those parasites... we willl continue to go in circles..

also its time for us to start thinking of a land of our own...

with its own military force and nukes...!!

cant trust these cacs its the only thing they respect...
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Don't really understand your answer.

its cool I didnt really understand you question in response to my post...

Ill slow it down for you..

Before intergration the fallen god race, owned business in their communities,

and the business owners lived in those communities and being of the business class they had a say on what went on in their communities..

gentrification what this is really all about, would not even be a thought...

they would have to bomb them to get their land...like they did to black wallstreet...aka Tulsa Oklahoma

this is NOT the case with intergration.....intergrated societies makes gentrification a walk in the park for these demonic land crooks aka developers!!
 
Last edited:

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Seems like no matter what whites do they stay in power and the money keeps going to them. It is like when we refer to the white man's world and the reality they created. You are rewarded for becoming more like them.
All this money we spend on fast food and weaves etc. should be moved toward separation.
America gave the Jews 200 billion dollars. That is like reparations to build Israel. The holocaust museum in America cost over 200 million. And for a long time America sends 4 billion dollars a year to Israel. And this is tax payers money.
If this shit had happened in Israel there would be a mass effort from white power countries like America to compensate them and make sure it get corrected fast.
And there will never be any black power in the world unless there is a whole state or at least a city that is totally black. Being given a chance to think and do for self. Might even wake up completely and get total control of ourselves.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Seems like no matter what whites do they stay in power and the money keeps going to them. It is like when we refer to the white man's world and the reality they created. You are rewarded for becoming more like them.
All this money we spend on fast food and weaves etc. should be moved toward separation.
America gave the Jews 200 billion dollars. That is like reparations to build Israel. The holocaust museum in America cost over 200 million. And for a long time America sends 4 billion dollars a year to Israel. And this is tax payers money.
If this shit had happened in Israel there would be a mass effort from white power countries like America to compensate them and make sure it get corrected fast.
And there will never be any black power in the world unless there is a whole state or at least a city that is totally black. Being given a chance to think and do for self. Might even wake up completely and get total control of ourselves.

I see them just tryin to make room for the influx of cac europeans they are going to let

in the country to assist with their dying numbers...too many cacs on drugs, or gay...

but its going to back fire on em....

whenever they(these euro parasites) get this desperate is because they got a clear picture of their future and they are in panic mode.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Nope and intergration makes that notion even more harder to obtain....

next question....

its cool I didnt really understand you question in response to my post...

Ill slow it down for you..

Before intergration the fallen god race, owned business in their communities,

and the business owners lived in those communities and being of the business class they had a say on what went on in their communities..

gentrification what this is really all about, would not even be a thought...

they would have to bomb them to get their land...like they did to black wallstreet...aka Tulsa Oklahoma

this is NOT the case with intergration.....intergrated societies makes gentrification a walk in the park for these demonic land crooks aka developers!!

There was never two water reservoirs. Water was never segregated.

The water fountains were not integrated, the source wasn't.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
There was never two water reservoirs. Water was never segregated.

The water fountains were not integrated, the source wasn't.


are you creating your own argument??

who said anything about reservoirs.....??

This is not just about water either, their food situation is just as fucked up

as the water is....

Its about community empowerment which there was before intergration...

it shouldve never been about civil rights,

it shouldve been about economic rights....!

but you have to be blind, deaf and dumb not to see the real reason why

this is happening..??

and its because flint is over 57 percent "black" and 40 percent poor...
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
There was never two water reservoirs. Water was never segregated.

The water fountains were not integrated, the source wasn't.
It does not matter if the water was segregated or not. At least 40 years ago the C.I.A. had gases that they could throw in a room and it would only attack a certain genetic background. Botha revealed that the other white countries including America were working with his scientist to completely destroy the black race. He stated that he had a mercenary squad of white men infected with certain viruses and they were trained and targeted toward certain black ladies. And he had a mercenary squad of white women infected but were targeted at certain black men.
His scientist worked on biological weapons and germ warfare to release on the black South African population.
This water thing here could be a test.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
It does not matter if the water was segregated or not. At least 40 years ago the C.I.A. had gases that they could throw in a room and it would only attack a certain genetic background. Botha revealed that the other white countries including America were working with his scientist to completely destroy the black race. He stated that he had a mercenary squad of white men infected with certain viruses and they were trained and targeted toward certain black ladies. And he had a mercenary squad of white women infected but were targeted at certain black men.
His scientist worked on biological weapons and germ warfare to release on the black South African population.
This water thing here could be a test.

You do know that Flint. Michigan is not the only area in the US where drinking water is being neglected.
No doubt race has played a part in this, however, as my new attitude will reflect, where were the voters when Governor Snyder was elected and then re-elected.

There are calls for him to step down. LOL! Where were these people on election day.

This is like the outrage over Rahm Emanuel in Chicago. There was a clear choice between Emanuel and Chuy Garcia and the people sat on their asses and didn't vote.

If the argument is that voting doesn't change anything, than shut the fuck up when those in elected office ignore you, because the 18 to 29 year old demographic ain't coming out to vote.
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
You do know that Flint. Michigan is not the only area in the US where drinking water is being neglected.
No doubt race has played a part in this, however, as my new attitude will reflect, where were the voters when Governor Snyder was elected and then re-elected.

There are calls for him to step down. LOL! Where were these people on election day.

This is like the outrage over Rahm Emanuel in Chicago. There was a clear choice between Emanuel and Chuy Garcia and the people sat on their asses and didn't vote.

If the argument is that voting doesn't change anything, than shut the fuck up when those in elected office ignore you, because the 18 to 29 year old demographic ain't coming out to vote.
Governor Snyder and the mayor should have faced some charges for what happened. They lied about the water when they knew it was unsafe.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Governor Snyder and the mayor should have faced some charges for what happened. They lied about the water when they knew it was unsafe.

Good luck.

See what happens when you tell people voting doesn't change anything.

Revolution my ass. Talk is cheap.
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Good luck.

See what happens when you tell people voting doesn't change anything.

Revolution my ass. Talk is cheap.
I can see where you are coming from with the voting. For some reason THE NATION OF ISLAM has gotten involved in things like this also. I can see it as getting involved. I hope you do know that if a town elects a black mayor or black governor. That person has to promote a white reality or they will get rid of him. Elijah Muhammad was right when he said that whites are devils. Separation is the only way for us to recover from the damage that has been done by a white reality and white control.
I might now have the money to build a nation right now but I got to keep trying. I do not even have the money to build a black house right now but I got to keep trying. What I am working on and doing may save the whole world at some time.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I can see where you are coming from with the voting. For some reason THE NATION OF ISLAM has gotten involved in things like this also. I can see it as getting involved. I hope you do know that if a town elects a black mayor or black governor. That person has to promote a white reality or they will get rid of him. Elijah Muhammad was right when he said that whites are devils. Separation is the only way for us to recover from the damage that has been done by a white reality and white control.
I might now have the money to build a nation right now but I got to keep trying. I do not even have the money to build a black house right now but I got to keep trying. What I am working on and doing may save the whole world at some time.

Voting for a "Black" or "white" candidate because of their color is insane. There are "Black" candidates who will do and have done more harm. Conversely, there are "white" candidates that have done good things.

Becoming educated and informed on the issues and then voting is the wise choice.
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Voting for a "Black" or "white" candidate because of their color is insane. There are "Black" candidates who will do and have done more harm. Conversely, there are "white" candidates that have done good things.

Becoming educated and informed on the issues and then voting is the wise choice.
That seems right what you are saying. We just seem to be in 2 different worlds right now. And what you say makes sense. I was taught that whites are devils and that we must separate from them. I have white customers. But that is only because I can use the money they bring me. Other than that I try to distance myself from them. The more money I can make the more I can make the BLACK NATION become a reality.
 

D Kline

PROUD BLACK AMERICAN !
Registered
http://www.theguardian.com/environm...-tests-us-authorities-distorting-flint-crisis

Water authorities across the US are systematically distorting water tests to downplay the amount of lead in samples, risking a dangerous spread of the toxic water crisis that has gripped Flint, documents seen by the Guardian show.

The controversial approach to water testing is so widespread that it occurs in “every major US city east of the Mississippi” according to an anonymous source with extensive knowledge of the lead and copper regulations. “By word of mouth, this has become the thing to do in the water industry. The logical conclusion is that millions of people’s drinking water is potentially unsafe,”he said.

Documents seen by the Guardian show that water boards in cities including Detroit and Philadelphia, as well as the state of Rhode Island, have distorted tests by using methods deemed misleading by the Environment Protection Agency.

There is no suggestion that EPA regulations have been broken, but the agency’s guidelines have been systematically ignored.

The revelation comes as the growing crisis in Flint, Michigan, has prompted an emergency EPA order, the condemnation of Barack Obama and the resignation of a top agency official.

The documents show a pattern of behaviour in addressing public health concerns about water across the US where “gamed” tests help ensure that water utilities don’t breach federal lead and copper rules.

Dr Yanna Lambrinidou, a Virginia Tech academic, has disclosed what she considers to be evidence of deceptive practices by city water authorities after she sat on an EPA taskforce that reviewed federal rules on lead and copper poisoning that have been in place since 1991.

The taskforce ended its work last year, shortly before the full extent of the city of Flint’s problems with smelly, brown water hit the headlines, with Lambrinidou criticising the final report for failing to step up protections to prevent the corrosion of pipes, which leads to lead leaching into water supplies.



Residents of Flint, Michigan, have had to use bottled water after the domestic supply was found to contain high levels of lead. Photograph: Dennis Pajot/Getty Images
The documents were obtained by Lambrinidou under freedom of information laws and direct requests to water authorities.
 

D Kline

PROUD BLACK AMERICAN !
Registered
Hillary Pushes Clean Water for Flint, Voted for Chemically-Polluted Water for the Rest of Us


http://www.ibtimes.com/political-ca...-flint-michigan-voted-against-measure-prevent

VIDEO EXPLAINING INSIDE LINK

When the Democratic presidential contenders meet on Sunday for their debate in Flint, Michigan — where thousands of residents have been poisoned by polluted water — the candidates’ records on clean water policy are likely to be in the spotlight. Hillary Clinton seems eager for that discussion, recently telling NPR: “The idea that you would have a community in the United States of America of nearly 100,000 people who were drinking and bathing in lead-contaminated water infuriates me.”

But despite that rhetoric, the issue of clean water may be politically perilous for the leading Democratic candidate, thanks to her vote against banning a possible carcinogen at the center of one of the largest water pollution scandals in recent history.

Facing reports that a controversial fuel additive was contaminating water supplies across America, Clinton as a senator in 2005 opposed a bipartisan measure to ban the chemical — even though Bill Clinton’s Environmental Protection Agency had first proposed such a prohibition. At roughly the same time, one major company producing the chemical also tried to use provisions in a trade deal backed by Hillary Clinton to force local governments in the United States to let it continue selling the toxic compound.

Clinton’s campaign did not respond to International Business Times’ questions about her vote.

At issue was the chemical known as methyl tertiary butyl ether — or MTBE. Though the compound makes fuel burn cleaner, by the end of the 1990s, scientists began detecting an increasing amount of the potential carcinogen in groundwater supplies. In 2000, a federal study found that drinking water wells in up to 31 states were at risk of MTBE contamination, and by 2003, the compound had contaminated drinking water supplies for more than 15 million Americans, according to data compiled by the Environmental Working Group. Seventeen states ultimately joined together in lawsuits against the major producers of the compound, including ExxonMobil — which became a major Clinton Foundation donor.

Amid the uproar, Washington lawmakers in 2005 proposed an amendment to national energy legislation that would have banned MTBE. By that time, 21 states had passed legislation banning the use of MTBE, including New York.

“When leaked or spilled into the environment, MTBE may cause serious problems of drinking water quality,” Sen. Pete Domenici’s legislation stated in its justification of the phaseout. “In recent years, MTBE has been detected in water sources throughout the United States.”

Breaking with then-Sen. Barack Obama, Clinton joined 14 Republicans and 11 Democrats in voting against the measure to phase out MTBE, which passed the Senate by a vote of 70-26. Critics of the amendment to ban MTBE, like New York Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer, charged it would end up forcing states to use more ethanol.

When Clinton cast her vote against banning MTBE, she was in the midst of a re-election campaign in which she raised more than $74,000 from the oil and gas industry, according to data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics. But her record was not one of unanimous support for that industry.

One month after Clinton voted against the MTBE ban, the Environmental Working Group claimed an EPA draft report had found MTBE to be a “likely” carcinogen, linking it to cancers like leukemia and lymphoma.

A subsequent press release from Clinton’s senate office announced she and her colleagues were requesting additional information about the study. The release noted that MTBE had caused “serious damage to water quality nationwide,” and asserted that “Congress should act to discontinue the use of MTBE.” It also declared Clinton’s opposition to a proposal to give MTBE producers legal immunity from environmental and public health lawsuits.

Though the MTBE ban was not included in the final energy legislation, the new bill did include language discouraging the use of the chemical. Despite expressing concerns about MTBE, Clinton voted against the overall bill, which passed the Senate 74-26.

One Clinton critic says her vote against banning MTBE could be a vulnerability. Last year, Democratic operative Matt Barron cited Clinton’s vote as one of a handful of issues that could cost her in the presidential campaign as she tries to win over voters in rural areas.

Though MTBE was eventually phased out of domestic gasoline supplies over the last decade, the controversy over the additive continues to simmer. In recent months, concerns about MTBE contamination have once again arisen in states such as Kentucky, Connecticut, Massachusetts and New Hampshire
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Who Is to Blame for Flint's Lead Crisis?

A task force commissioned by Governor Rick Snyder finds the Governor and
the state bear the greatest responsibility for the mass poisoning of residents.



lead_large.jpg

Carlos Osorio / Reuters


The Atlantic
David A. Graham
Mar 24, 2016

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, under fire for his handling of the lead-poisoning crisis in Flint, has offered two main defenses: First, he acted as soon as he became aware of the problem. And second, much of the blame for the crisis rests not with him and the state government, but with either local authorities or the U.S. EPA, which he says failed to catch the contamination.

Now both of Snyder’s defenses have taken a hard blow from the panel he himself appointed to investigate the crisis.


What Did the Governor Know About Flint's Water, and When Did He Know It?


The task force the Republican governor appointed delivered its report on Wednesday, a scathing 116-page chronicle of how residents of the state’s seventh-largest city ended up with high levels of lead in their drinking water—as well as contamination by carcinogenic compounds and an outbreak of Legionnaire’s disease. “The Flint water crisis is a story of government failure, intransigence, unpreparedness, delay, inaction, and environmental injustice,” the report declares at the outset.


Primary Culprits


Taken as a whole, the report places the majority of blame on the state government and its executive branch. In particular, the report blames Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality and emergency managers appointed to run Flint by the governor as the primary culprits in the disaster. It notes that Flint was not under the control of elected officials at the time, and confirms it was the city’s emergency manager who made the decision to switch Flint’s water supply. (For why that switch occurred, go here.) And it takes Snyder to task, noting that ultimate responsibility for Michigan’s executive branch rests with him.

Snyder has said that he only learned of the crisis in fall of 2015, at which point he moved quickly to try to fix Flint’s water problems. “It was on October 1, 2015, that I learned that our state experts were wrong. Flint’s water had dangerous levels of lead,” he told Congress last week. “On that day, I took immediate action.” The governor’s account has been questioned by critics who note that his chief of staff was aware of problems as early as July 2015, the same month my colleague Alana Semuels published an in-depth feature on Flint’s water crisis.

The task force report doesn’t outright contradict Snyder's version; it simply argues that his ignorance was a product of his own failures. It states, for example, that “in mid-summer 2015, the Governor and senior staff discussed Flint water issues; lead was apparently part of those discussions.” Snyder says he believed that lead was not a problem, acting on assurances from the Department of Environmental Quality. (Two top DEQ officials have resigned and another was fired over the crisis.)

But that in itself is a failure of gubernatorial leadership, the report concludes:

The Governor’s office continued to rely on incorrect information provided by these departments despite mounting evidence from outside experts and months of citizens’ complaints throughout the Flint water crisis, only changing course in early October 2015 when MDEQ and [Michigan Department of Health and Human Services] finally acknowledged the extent of the problem of lead in the public water supply. The Flint water crisis highlights the risks of over-reliance—in fact, almost exclusive reliance—on a few staff in one or two departments for information on which key decisions are based.

Furthermore, the task force added, “Official state public statements and communications about the Flint water situation have at times been inappropriate and unacceptable.”

The task force also found major shortcomings on EPA’s part, though not on the scale of the state’s errors. Largely, it finds that EPA biggest flaw was not forcing state authorities to take the steps they should already have been taking. The report states the federal environment watchdog “failed to properly exercise its authority prior to January 2016 … was hesitant and slow to insist on proper corrosion control measures in Flint … [and] tolerated MDEQ’s intransigence.”

In addition to the accounting for how the crisis occurred, the task force laid out some solutions. It suggests a toxic-exposure registry for everyone of all ages living in Flint between the February 2014 switch in water source that caused the contamination and the present. It recommends bureaucratic changes, many of which boil down to improving accountability and communication, and it says the governor’s office must become less “defensive.” Members also called for an overhaul of the state’s emergency-manager law, which was enacted in 2012. It replaced a previous, similar law, which voters had overturned at the ballot box, but Snyder championed and signed its replacement. The report suggests alternatives might be a better fit.

None of the recommendations is especially surprising or revelatory—the slate is generally straightforward and simple. One might wish to believe the Flint crisis represents an unusual and catastrophic failing, when in fact the crisis appears, in this account, simply to represent the banality of an awful environmental injustice.


SOURCE: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/03/flint-task-force-rick-snyder-blame/475182/


.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Michigan charges three officials
with felonies in Flint water crisis


upload_2016-4-20_19-31-2.png
Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette announces criminal charges against two
state regulators and a Flint employee in connection with the city's water crisis

Los Angeles Times

April 20, 2016
Matt PearceContact Reporter


The long-running water crisis in Flint, Mich., became a criminal case Wednesday as state investigators alleged that a conspiracy among government officials had allowed the town’s water to be poisoned with toxic lead.

Two Michigan state environmental employees and the city of Flint’s water quality manager were charged with felonies on suspicion of falsifying reports and misleading regulators in a crisis that has shaken the administration of Republican Gov. Rick Snyder and brought calls for his resignation.


State Atty. Gen. Bill Schuette, who will lead the state’s investigation, gave no motive at a news conference Wednesday. But he promised “there will be more to come” and refused to rule out charges against anyone, including the governor.

“There are no targets, and nobody is ruled out,” said Schuette, a possible gubernatorial contender in 2018, who said he would follow the facts wherever they lead — or “in this case, wherever the emails take us.”


Snyder, who has blamed “a handful of bureaucrats” lacking “common sense” for the water crisis, said the “deeply troubling” criminal charges would take matters “to a whole new level” if proved true.

“We’ve been fully cooperating with this investigation and will continue to do so,” Synder said.

Flint’s problems began in 2014, when the financially troubled city — which was then being overseen by a series of Snyder-appointed emergency managers — switched its water source to the Flint River to save money.

But after the switch, regulators failed to treat the Flint River water with anti-corrosives, and lead began seeping out of residents’ old pipes and fixtures.

The new criminal charges accuse water officials not only of breaking environmental laws but falsifying tests in 2015 that would have shown rising levels of lead, which can be particularly harmful to young children’s development.

Michael Glasgow


Flint water quality supervisor Michael Glasgow was charged with willful neglect of duty, a misdemeanor, for failing in his role as operator of the Flint Water Treatment Plant. Glasgow was also charged with felony evidence tampering related to information to be included in a lead and copper test report.

Less than two weeks before Flint’s water switch, Glasgow complained to state regulators in an email that the city’s water plant was not ready, but “I have people above me making plans to distribute water ASAP.”​

“I need time to adequately train additional staff and to update our monitoring plans before I will feel we are ready,” Glasgow wrote, according to the Flint Journal. “I will reiterate this to management above me, but they seem to have their own agenda.”
Michael Prysby, a district water engineer for the state environmental agency, was reportedly the recipient of Glasgow’s email.​


Michael Prysby

Prysby was charged with felony misconduct for authorizing a permit for the Flint Water Treatment Plant, despite knowing the plant would not be able to provide clean and safe drinking water, according to court documents.​

Prysby, along with Stephen Busch, a district water supervisor for the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, were charged with felony tampering and conspiracy charges on suspicion of manipulating lead and copper monitoring reports in 2015 to make lead levels seem lower than they really were.​

Both were also charged with violating monitoring requirements of the state water act by telling residents to “pre-flush” their taps for five minutes the night before lead testing — a practice that would have shown lower signs of lead.

Prysby and Busch face additional charges of failing to collect the required water samples and even removing test results from a safety report.

The two state officials pleaded not guilty at a Wednesday arraignment, the Detroit News reported, and Glasgow could not be reached for comment.


SOURCE: http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-flint-water-crisis-charges-20160420-story.html

.
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered


You should always put a filter on your water, don't trust no politician to bring you safe drinking water.

This guy spraying rat poison on food was the emergency city manager for Flint.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Michigan attorney general charges 6 state employees in Flint water crisis

Another six Michigan state employees have joined the growing list of officials facing criminal charges over the Flint water crisis. On Friday morning, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette filed charges including misconduct in office, willful neglect of duty, and various conspiracy counts against three employees from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, and three from the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, The Associated Press reported.

This marks the second round of charges Schuette has filed in connection to Flint's lead-contaminated water scandal. In April, two Michigan Department of Environmental Quality employees and one City of Flint official were hit with felony charges, including official misconduct and tampering with evidence.

Flint has been dealing with its drinking water being contaminated with dangerous levels of lead since 2014, when the local government, under a state-appointed emergency manager, switched the city's water sources. Becca Stanek


http://theweek.com/speedreads/63987...-charges-6-state-employees-flint-water-crisis

.
 

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor
Emergency managers charged over Flint's lead-tainted water, Face 20 year jail terms





Darnell_Earley.jpg


The slave-bitch negro coon above is named Darnell Earley. He was the so-called 'Emergency Manager' sent to Flint by RepubliKlan governor Snyder to destroy Flint. Look at the photo below and you'll see Earley celebrating Flint's water supply switch to poisonous water with the then also powerless 'white' mayor of Flint who is standing directly to his right. Exhibiting the height of crass cynicism, the water in their plastic toasting cups was clean non-toxic bottled water. They look like a bunch of Nazis celebrating the death of thousands of Jews.


toasting_Flintwater_0.jpg





New-York-Times-Logo.png

Two Former Flint Emergency Managers Charged Over Tainted Water

by MONICA DAVEY and MITCH SMITH | DEC. 20, 2016

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/20/us/flint-water-charges.html

FLINT, Mich. — A criminal investigation into this city’s water crisis reached into the top ranks of supervision over Flint on Tuesday as Michigan officials announced felony charges against two former state-appointed emergency managers, accusing them of fixating on saving money rather than on the safety of residents.

The managers, who were appointed by Gov. Rick Snyder to lead Flint out of fiscal distress, were charged over their roles in the public health crisis prompted by the city’s switch to a new water source, as well as the delays in responding to residents’ complaints as they suffered the devastating effects.

Announcing the charges at a banquet center not far from the Flint River, Bill Schuette, the state’s attorney general, described “a fixation on finances and balance sheets” as at the root of what happened in Flint, where the water has been tied to the lead poisoning of children and the deaths of 12 people from Legionnaires’ disease.

“All too prevalent in this Flint water investigation was a priority on balance sheets and finances rather than health and safety of the citizens of Flint,” said Mr. Schuette, a Republican who is seen as a possible candidate for governor in 2018.

Charges of false pretenses, conspiracy to commit false pretenses, misconduct in office and willful neglect of duty lodged against the former managers, Darnell Earley and Gerald Ambrose, were lauded by Flint leaders, some of whom said they had feared that blame for the city’s contaminated water might ultimately be pinned only on low-level workers.

The claims also reopened a longstanding debate in Michigan over the state’s emergency management provision, reviving questions about whether the system removes power and control over local issues from those residents who come under state oversight.

For years, governors here have appointed emergency managers as a way to efficiently cut debts and restore financial stability in the most troubled cities. But residents of some majority-black Michigan cities, including Flint, argue that the intense state-assigned oversight disenfranchises voters, shifts control from mostly Democratic cities to the state’s Republican-held capital and risks favoring financial discipline over public health.

Mayor Karen Weaver said that she was thankful Flint was now getting this level of “accountability,” but that the entire episode revealed a fundamental flaw of state-ordered oversight in any city. “That’s what was missing when we had an emergency manager,” Ms. Weaver said. “Our voice was taken.”

She said she saw the charges as an indication that the investigation may reach still higher.

The state criminal investigation into Flint’s water crisis, opened in January, previously had led to charges against one employee of Flint’s water plant and eight state officials, including a state epidemiologist and the former leader of Michigan’s municipal drinking water office.

Of those nine, two have accepted plea deals. The rest are awaiting trial, and some have sought the dismissal of the charges against them.

On Tuesday, two additional Flint officials were also charged with crimes. Howard Croft, a former director of the city’s Public Works Department, and Daugherty Johnson, a former utilities director for the department, were accused of false pretenses and conspiracy to commit false pretenses.

Mr. Earley oversaw Flint as its emergency manager from late 2013 until early 2015 and went on to oversee the Detroit schools system from January 2015 until earlier this year. Mr. Ambrose worked as a finance director under Flint’s emergency managers and then was appointed in 2015 to become the emergency manager. The state charges allege that they used a false story to secure an unusual bond deal so Flint could take part in a regional water pipeline plan.

Since it was in financial distress, Mr. Schuette said, Flint was not permitted to borrow money unless it could prove a significant emergency. To get a state waiver, the city claimed it needed the money for an emergency cleanup of a retention pond. But Mr. Schuette said the money was actually intended for the long-term water project.

Mr. Schuette said they also agreed, as part of that project, to switch temporarily to Flint River water, even though they knew the city’s treatment plant was not ready to handle the treatment necessary to prevent contamination.

In the end, officials failed to properly treat the new water with chemicals that would prevent materials from corroding and leaching metals like lead.

In the months that followed, Flint residents complained that their tap water had puzzling, murky colors and vile smells, and that they were feeling ill or suddenly suffering from rashes. But officials discounted or overlooked a growing body of evidence that something was wrong with the water, emails and testimony have suggested.

Mr. Ambrose is also accused of obstructing efforts by the local health department to investigate the deadly Legionnaires’ disease outbreak.

If convicted of all charges, Mr. Earley and Mr. Ambrose could face up to 46 years in prison, and Mr. Croft and Mr. Johnson could face up to 40 years. Edwar Zeineh, a lawyer for Mr. Johnson, said his client maintained his innocence, and was a worker’s worker who had retired from the city and “serviced the citizens to the best of his ability throughout his career.” Lawyers for the other three men could not be reached.

About 20 states have systems of state oversight for fiscally troubled municipalities and other local government entities, but Michigan’s system has drawn particular scrutiny. Eight Michigan cities and five school districts are currently considered to be in a financial emergency, which in some cases results in the appointment of an emergency manager. Two emergency managers are in place in the state, both for school districts.

During Governor Snyder’s tenure, several cities, including Flint, Detroit, Benton Harbor, Pontiac and Hamtramck, have had emergency managers in place.

In 2011, when Mr. Snyder, a Republican, took office, he and the Legislature agreed to grant more sweeping powers to emergency managers, but opponents succeeded in repealing the law in a statewide referendum a year later. Mr. Snyder and lawmakers swiftly passed another law, which allowed more options for cities and schools in fiscal distress — including emergency managers.

Flint, a Democratic stronghold of just under 100,000 residents, was wrestling with dire budget conditions in 2011, when Mr. Snyder appointed an emergency manager. Nine years earlier, another Republican governor, John Engler, had taken the same action here, appointing a manager who stayed in place for two years.

Some critics of the emergency manager provision in this state said the charges here should be seen as a broad warning about the dangers of the policy. Representative Dan Kildee, a Democrat who represents Flint in Congress, said they were “an indictment against the administration’s failed emergency manager law that contributed to this crisis.”

Melissa Mays, a Flint resident and activist on the city’s water crisis, said it was a significant step that the state-appointed managers would be held to account. “The biggest thing for us is to see the emergency managers on there because for the longest time we were told they were untouchable.”

Still, Ms. Mays said, all these months later, residents do not trust the drinking water. Lead levels in Flint’s water have improved over the last year, officials say, as they have worked to solve the city’s problem. But residents are still being advised not to drink tap water unless they have a water filter. And many residents say they are uncomfortable drinking anything but bottled water anymore. Officials had told them that the water was safe when it was not, they say, so why should they believe it is safe now?

Mr. Schuette was noncommital on suggestions that the investigation might lead to higher levels of state government, given that the managers were put in place by the state. But the investigation is not over, he said.

Anna Heaton, a spokeswoman for Mr. Snyder, said in a statement that the charges were “serious accusations that should be moved through the legal process as soon as possible” and that Mr. Snyder would continue trying to assist Flint. She did not respond to questions about the emergency manager law.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to helping the people of Flint recover,” Ms. Heaton said, “which is evident in the support the state has provided regarding water quality and resources, educational improvements, expansion of health care and economic development.”


21FLINT-master768.jpg

Darnell Earley, a former emergency manager in Flint, Mich., during a congressional hearing in Washington in March. Mr. Earley and another former emergency manager, Gerald Ambrose, were charged in an investigation into Flint’s water.



 
Last edited:
Top