Flint is a disaster zone. And Michigan and federal officials made it that way.
a staggering and widespread amount of lead poisoning and lead exposure to citizens since switching from Detroit’s Lake Huron-based water system to an interim system based in the polluted Flint River. As many as five percent of all children in the city suffered from elevated levels of lead in their blood and an unknown number more people were exposed to high levels of lead in drinking water, showers, and food preparation.
soon after Flint was hooked up to the new source, residents found out the true costs of Kurtz’s decision. Flint River water sucked. Almost immediately, residents began complaining about the foul taste and smell of the water and the orange-brown tint. Formal complaints ensued, and Flint drinking water was found to be in violation of five non-lead-related National Primary Drinking Water Regulations in less than a year. These include multiple coliform (think E. coli and its cousins) and trihalomethane violations. Coliform bacteria incubate most strongly in animal and human feces and are a good indicator of the amount of poop in drinking water. Trihalomethanes—including good old chloroform—are usually byproducts of chlorine treatment to make water drinkable. The presence of both above acceptable levels indicates that something was really, really wrong with the water even absent the whole lead poisoning thing. This was an environmental crisis in itself
Flint officials also made two key terrible water treatment decisions. After switching to the Flint River, they inexplicably decided not to treat the water with orthophosphate, a chemical that the Lead and Copper Rule (LCR) mandates is necessary for all major bodies of drinking water. Orthophosphate keeps water from corroding lead pipes in older water and sewage systems and leeching lead particulate into the water. This decision was made despite then-Emergency Manager Darnell Earley’s (Kurtz’s successor) attestation to the EPA that Flint was prepared to properly treat the water and would be doing so.
Also, in order to treat the organic pollutants in the water, the City of Flint began adding ferric chloride. Ferric chloride has the opposite effect of orthophosphate and can increase water’s corrosive effects on lead pipes.Even after independent researchers verified multiple times that children were suffering from elevated lead levels, officials still denied that a problem even existed. DEQ spokesman Brad Wurfel stated in July 2015 that “anyone who is concerned about lead in the drinking water in Flint can relax. There is no broad problem right now that we’ve seen with lead in the drinking water in Flint.”
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/0...28Daily+Kos%29
For Repugs, BlackLivesDontMattter

Reply With Quote

