The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Nights out

The best of what’s on

- BY MURRAY SCOUGALL

It was a pivotal moment in Anthony Baxter’s You’ve Been Trumped documentar­y.

The water supply to the property of Michael Forbes, the farmer who refused to sell his Aberdeensh­ire home to make way for Donald Trump’s controvers­ial golf course, was cut off.

In the acclaimed Scots documentar­y maker’s latest film, Flint, which receives its world premiere at the Glasgow Film Festival tonight, water is again a central theme.

Flint is a town in Michigan where the water was poisoned in 2015 when the supply was switched from a lake to the local river in a cost-cutting measure.

The switch triggered toxic levels of lead to seep from the pipes and residents began to fall ill.

“When the switch happened, it disturbed the lead in the pipes and led to people being poisoned to toxic waste levels,” explained Anthony.

“The residents were like the people of Grenfell, in as much as they had been complainin­g to people in authority for a long time because they feared for their safety – but nothing was done.

“A paediatric­ian found an increase in lead levels in the blood of local children since the water supply was changed.

“It made me wonder how often children in Scotland are tested for lead poisoning.

“Here, there is still an old lead piping infrastruc­ture and we have to ask if that’s the way we should be living in the 21st Century. Should there be testing to check if there’s lead in people’s blood?

“One of the people we will follow in the film, Jaylan, is suspended from school and has behavioura­l issues.

“Sometimes it’s hard to know what is causing these issues, but there’s no doubt that school results in Flint have plunged since this all began.”

In Scotland, lead service pipes were made illegal in 1969, but any home built before that date could still have lead pipework.

Lead in drinking water can be harmful if it builds up in the body, especially in babies and children, whose developmen­t can be affected.

In November last year, Suneeta Rathore, a mum living in Kircudbrig­ht, discovered the levels of lead in her

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