Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Former governor is charged with neglect of duty in Flint water crisis

- By David Eggert and Ed White The Associated Press

LANSING, MICH. » Former Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder was charged Wednesday with two counts of willful neglect of duty stemming from an investigat­ion of the Flint water crisis.

The charges, shown in an online court record, are misdemeano­rs punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

The indictment filed by the Attorney General’s Office is groundbrea­king: No governor or former governor in Michigan’s 184-year history had been charged with crimes related to his time in that office, according to the state archivist.

Besides Snyder, a Republican who served until 2019, charges are expected against other people, including former officials who served as state health director, Michigan’s chief medical executive, Snyder’s communicat­ions chief and a senior adviser.

Flint was in chronic financial trouble in 2014 when a Snyderappo­inted manager who was running the majority Black city carried out a money-saving decision to use the Flint River for water while a regional pipeline from Lake Huron was under constructi­on. The corrosive water, however, wasn’t treated properly and released lead from old plumbing into homes in one of the worst man-made environmen­tal disasters in U.S. history.

Despite desperate pleas from residents holding jugs of discolored, skunky water, the Snyder administra­tion took no significan­t action until a doctor reported elevated lead levels in children about 18 months later.

“I’m sorry and I will fix it,” Snyder promised during his 2016 State of the State speech.

Authoritie­s counted at least 90 cases of Legionnair­es’ disease in Genesee County, including 12 deaths. Some experts found there wasn’t enough chlorine in the water treatment system to control legionella bacteria, which can trigger a severe form of pneumonia when spread through misting and cooling systems.

The disaster made Flint a national symbol of government derelictio­n, with residents forced to line up for bottled water and parents fearing their children had suffered permanent harm. Lead can damage the brain and nervous system and cause learning and behavior problems. The crisis was highlighte­d as an example of environmen­tal injustice and racism.

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