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In this March 2014 photo by MLive, Flint officials gather to celebrate
upgrades to the city water plant in advance of the transition
to drinking water supplied by the Flint River.
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Not to downplay the culpability of Gov. Rick Snyder or
his administration for the Flint water crisis, but the innocuous beginnings of
the drinking water project that went horribly wrong encompassed a simple
transition, a temporary move, that had nothing to do with partisan politics or heartless
ideology.
In fact, prior reporting shows that the switch to Flint
River water was marked by consensus and community pride.
That was the point made Sunday night when Lt. Gov. Brian
Calley posted online an MLive (Flint Journal) story published just before the transition was
completed.
Here is Calley’s Facebook post:
This article is from March 2014 and provides some context
from the beginning. Obviously, huge mistakes were made later. Many have asked
why the switch was made originally.
This quote from the article sums up why an interim source
happened in the first place:
"The city has bought its water from Detroit, but
that contract was terminated when Flint signed on to purchase 18 million
gallons of raw water per day from the Karegnondi Water Authority.
The under-construction pipeline will bring raw Lake Huron
water to Flint and Genesee County when it is complete by the end of 2016.
People in the city will drink Flint River water until the
pipeline is complete. Detroit Water and Sewerage Department Director said
it would stop selling water to Flint and Genesee County on April 17, 2014.”
No rancor. No warnings of a public health disaster. And
no political divisions over the decision. What’s more, at a March 12, 2014, ceremony,
the Flint public works director and a top union official praised the move
because of the autonomy it would demonstrate and the jobs that would be
created.
"This is an important day for us as we
break ground on this new project in the city of Flint," Mayor Dayne
Walling said at the time. "The river is an invaluable asset."
It should also be mentioned that the relatively high cost
of Detroit drinking water has served as a contentious issue for many years
throughout the northern suburbs and other far-flung areas such as Flint and
Genesee County. Macomb and Oakland counties have discussed creating their own
water authority, similar to Karegonian, for decades.
Cost-cutting moves by an emergency manager or pressure
from the state to shape up fiscally were not the driving force that led to this
turn in the road.
About a year of preparations preceded the idea of drawing
water from the river on an interim basis.
“The Flint River hadn't been an option, city officials
previously said, because upgrades to Flint's water plant would be too
expensive, the river didn't provide enough capacity to serve Flint residents'
water needs and the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality would not
allow it,” MLive reported in January 2014.
But the city decided to pursue water storage procedures,
water plant upgrades and other costs that reached the $4 million mark.
Clearly, a series of tragic errors were made in the 18
months after the water switch which allowed high levels of lead into the drinking
water. That led to bureaucratic arrogance, foot-dragging, an apparent cover up
and possibly some criminal negligence.
As seems to be the case in so many tragedies, the
children, who are most impacted by lead poisoning, will pay the highest price.
One sentence from that March 2014 news story about proud
officials commemorating their improved water plant now stands stark as a bitter
irony:
“The hope is to also bring school children out to the plant to have
educational tours.”

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