The Day

Flint water crisis prompts call for more oversight

EPA, state officials played a role in catastroph­e

- By BRADY DENNIS

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency must strengthen its oversight of state drinking water programs to avoid a repeat of what happened in Flint, Mich., where a slow federal reaction meant residents were exposed to lead-tainted water for far too long, an agency watchdog said in a report Thursday.

“While oversight authority is vital, its absence can contribute to a catastroph­ic situation,” EPA Inspector General Arthur Elkins said in releasing the findings, which found that “while Flint residents were being exposed to lead in drinking water, the federal response was delayed, in part, because the EPA did not establish clear roles and responsibi­lities, risk assessment procedures, effective communicat­ion and proactive oversight tools.”

The EPA was not alone in its failure to address the crisis that crippled a city of nearly 100,000 residents, including exposing thousands of young children to lead. In particular, state officials failed to implement proper treatments after Flint switched drinking water sources in early 2014, and for months ignored warnings from local residents about the deteriorat­ing water quality.

But the EPA’s inspector general found that federal government deserved significan­t blame for not more quickly using its enforcemen­t authority to make sure that state and local officials were complying with the Safe Drinking Water Act, as well as with federal rules that mandate testing for lead.

For decades, Flint paid Detroit to have its water piped in from Lake Huron, with anti-corrosion chemicals added along the way. But in early 2014, with the city under the control of a state-appointed emergency manager, officials switched to Flint River water in an ill-fated effort to save money.

State officials failed to ensure proper corrosion-control treatment of the new water source. That failure allowed rust, iron and lead to leach from aging pipes and wind up in residents’ homes. The ensuing catastroph­e exposed thousands of children to high levels of lead, which can cause long-term physical damage and mental impairment.

The crisis also obliterate­d residents’ trust in government. For more than a year, residents and local activists complained of problems with the water, insisting it was causing rashes and other health problems. An EPA employee also warned superiors of potential contaminat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States