Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

$600M OK’d in Flint water deal

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LANSING, Mich. — Michigan legislator­s on Wednesday finalized a plan to borrow $ 600 million to finance the state’s proposed settlement with the residents of Flint, whose water was contaminat­ed with elevated levels of the neurotoxin lead.

The legislatio­n received House approval on 105- 3 and 104-4 votes and will be signed by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. It would authorize a loan from a state economic developmen­t fund, costing more than $1 billion to repay over 30 years — $35 million annually. The legal settlement is believed to be the state government’s largest ever, pending approval from a federal judge.

Other defendants contributi­ng to the $641 million deal include the city of Flint and McLaren Flint Hospital, which each will pay $20 million, and Rowe Profession­al Services Co., an environmen­tal consulting company that will pay $1.25 million.

Flint switched its drinking water source in 2014 from Detroit’s system to the Flint River in a moneysavin­g move while under supervisio­n of a state manager following Republican then-Gov. Rick Snyder’s declaratio­n of a financial emergency. City workers followed state environmen­tal officials’ advice not to use anti-corrosive additives. Without those treatments, water from the river scraped lead from aging pipes and fixtures, contaminat­ing tap water.

Elevated levels of lead were detected in children, and at least 12 people died in a Legionnair­es’ disease outbreak that experts suspected was linked to the improperly treated water.

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