Houston Chronicle

Michigan governor plans $195M for Flint

Funds will be used to replace lead pipes, reimburse water bills

- By David Eggert

LANSING, Mich. — Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder on Wednesday proposed spending hundreds of millions more dollars to address Flint’s water crisis from lead contaminat­ion and to update pipes there and across the state — a plan that lawmakers from both parties generally welcomed as moving in the right direction with the proper priorities.

Snyder’s plan would direct $195 million more toward the Flint emergency and $165 million for statewide infrastruc­ture needs, at least a portion of which could replace lead and copper water lines elsewhere. He said $25 million of the Flint funding would replace 5,000 known old lead lines running from city streets to houses, calling it a “seed investment” until the state has a better handle on just how many of the pipes there are.

The Republican governor cited aging infrastruc­ture as a pressing priority, alongwith restructur­ing the troubled Detroit school district and addressing skyrocketi­ng specialty medicine costs.

“These areas merit special attention,” Snyder said in a departure from his typically rosier focus on traditiona­l budget spending. “These are issues that we need to take head-on, in a positive, constructi­ve way, with solutions.” Beyond ‘stopgap’

Snyder has apologized for his administra­tion’s role in the disastrous lead contaminat­ion of Flint’s water supply but was met with a few dozen protesters who could be heard chanting throughout his nearly hourlong presentati­on to GOP-controlled legislativ­e budget committees.

His proposal Wednesday drew mostly positive reactions from lawmakers who will consider the legislatio­n in the coming months and likely approve a plan in early June.

House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Al Pscholka, a Stevensvil­le Republican, said he was happy to see a more intermedia­te- to long-term plan for Flint beyond the “stopgap” measures previously approved unanimousl­y by the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e.

The governor and legislator­s have already directed more than $37 million toward the disaster, including funds for bottled water, filters, testing, health care and other services.

Flint is under a state of emergency until government authoritie­s and independen­t experts declare the water safe to drink again without filters, which officials have said could happen in the spring. The additional money for Flint also includes $30 million to help residents with two years of water bills, dating to when the water source was switched to the Flint River in 2014 and improperly treated without anti-corrosion chemicals.

Senate Minority Leader Jim Ananich, a Flint Democrat, said Snyder’s priorities for Flint “seem to match the areas we have been stressing for some time — health, education and infrastruc­ture.” The challenge now, he said, “is to make sure that the state delivers.” Spending, not saving

Democrats still say Snyder’s plan is short of what is needed to fully reimburse the water portion of people’s water/sewer bills, and city officials want more to replace old pipes. Snyder said his recommende­d amount for pipe replacemen­t is a starting point and could grow once a full analysis is done and all the undergroun­d service lines are found in the city of nearly 100,000 people.

Flint’s water troubles, concerns about other aging water infrastruc­ture and the Detroit school district’s dire financial outlook — it needs a $720 million infusion of cash over a decade to avoid bankruptcy, according to Snyder aides — overshadow­ed a onetime budget surplus and more nuts-and-bolts budget details this year, such as funding for education, municipali­ties and workforce developmen­t.

Snyder, a former accountant who has been keen to fatten the state’s savings account, called for shifting $165 million he had planned for the rainy day fund to a new Michigan Infrastruc­ture Fund. A commission he announced in his recent State of the State address would recommend howto prioritize the money.

When a legislator asked about the potential for more federal aid for Flint — Congress is debating the issue — Snyder said, “We could use more help from Washington,” but he later declined to specify howmuch.

The U.S. Houseon Wednesday approved legislatio­n to clarify the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s authority to notify the public about danger from lead in their drinking water — the first action by Congress to respond to the water crisis in Flint.

The bill, approved 416-2, would direct the EPA to notify residents and health department­s if theamount of lead found in a public water system requires action, in the absence of notificati­on by the state.

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