The Denver Post

Emergency prompts call for more oversight

At the same time, Trump administra­tion is looking to cut drinking water programs

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and John Flesher

WASHINGTON» A federal watchdog is calling on the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to strengthen its oversight of state drinking water systems nationally and respond more quickly to public health emergencie­s such as the lead-in-the water crisis in Flint, Mich.

In a 74-page report released Thursday, the EPA’s inspector general report pointed to “over- sight lapses” at the federal, state and local levels in the response to Flint’s contaminat­ed drinking water.

“While oversight authority is vital, its absence can contribute to a catastroph­ic situation,” the inspector general, Arthur A. Elkin, said in a statement. His office has concluded the EPA was too slow and passive in responding to the Flint crisis.

The finding comes as the Trump administra­tion seeks to cut the EPA’s budget, including some drinking water programs. The administra­tion also has called for reining back federal environmen­tal regulation overall and transferri­ng more oversight authority of some programs to the states.

The EPA said in a statement it

agrees with the inspector general’s recommenda­tions and is adopting them “expeditiou­sly.”

“The agency is actively engaging with states to improve communicat­ions and compliance with the federal Safe Drinking Water Act to safeguard human health,” the statement said.

But the internal watchdog said the agency’s proposal for increasing oversight falls short.

Flint’s tap water became contaminat­ed in 2014 after officials switched from the Detroit system to the Flint River to save money, exposing many residents to lead, a potent neurotoxin. Children are particular­ly vulnerable, and the EPA says there is no safe level of lead.

EPA officials had stressed they had wanted to foster a collaborat­ive partnershi­p with Michigan, the report said. In Flint, the quest for “partnershi­p limited effective EPA oversight.”

Rep. Dan Kildee, who was traveling to Flint on Thursday to inspect work done on the city’s water system, said the state bore most of the blame for the slow response to the health crisis, but also said “the EPA should have been more aggressive.”

“EPA should not have taken the state of Michigan at its word” that everything was fine with Flint’s water, said Kildee, D-Mich. “Water quality is too serious a question ... without doing more to assure the rule is being properly enforced.”

The switch to the Flint River was to be temporary, until the city could connect to a planned regional pipeline from Lake Huron. At that time, the impoverish­ed majority-black city of near- ly 100,000 residents was under control of an emergency financial manager appointed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder.

Residents complained the river water smelled and tasted bad and was causing skin rashes and other health problems. Local officials insisted it was safe.

After tests showed high levels of lead in a home in April 2015, Miguel Del Toral, a water regulation­s official in the EPA’s Chicago office, contacted officials with Michigan’s Department of Environmen­tal Quality. Del Toral also alerted superiors at EPA who decided not to make the informatio­n public, instead prodding the state agency to act behind the scenes. After a draft of Del Toral’s report was leaked, the EPA’s regional administra­tor apologized to the city.

In emails later released through public-records requests, Del Toral voiced frustratio­n over EPA’s slow pace and described the agency as a “cesspool.”

State officials finally acknowledg­ed the lead contaminat­ion in September 2015 after doctors reported high levels of lead in Flint children’s blood and Virginia Tech University researcher­s said their testing of Flint water samples found some with lead levels meeting EPA’s definition of “toxic waste.”

Snyder ordered the National Guard to distribute bottled water and filters, requested federal aid and eventually accepted the resignatio­n of his top environmen­tal official. Flint returned to the Detroit water system.

“We were strong-armed. We were misled. We were kept at arm’s length. We could not do our jobs effectivel­y.”

Gina McCarthy, former EPA administra­tor

In January 2016, the EPA notified Michigan that its actions were inadequate and ordered stronger interventi­on. The agency’s regional administra­tor in Chicago, Susan Hedman, resigned the next month. The preliminar­y inspector general’s review later that year found the regional EPA office should have had “a greater sense of urgency” and was too deferentia­l to the state.

Former EPA Administra­tor Gina McCarthy acknowledg­ed during congressio­nal hearings that her agency should have been more aggressive in testing the water and requiring changes but said the federal agency “couldn’t get a straight answer” from Michigan officials about what was being done in Flint.

“We were strong-armed. We were misled,” McCarthy said. “We were kept at arm’s length. We could not do our jobs effectivel­y.”

Republican lawmakers accused McCarthy and the Obama EPA of incompeten­ce and neglect.

Snyder ended water distributi­on in Flint last April, saying water quality had improved significan­tly. The state environmen­tal agency this week said tests during the latest six-month monitoring showed lead levels were beneath the action threshold and better than those of some other Michigan cities.

The Michigan attorney general’s office has filed criminal charges against 15 state and local officials in the Flint matter, which also has spawned numerous lawsuits.

 ?? Terray Sylvester, The Flint Journal-MLive.com ?? Shawn Jones, right, and Tony Price distribute bottled water at Saint Mark Missionary Baptist Church in Flint, Mich., in 2017.
Terray Sylvester, The Flint Journal-MLive.com Shawn Jones, right, and Tony Price distribute bottled water at Saint Mark Missionary Baptist Church in Flint, Mich., in 2017.

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