Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

EPA delayed action in Flint crisis

Governor-appointed panel has said state is accountabl­e

- By Matthew Daly

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency had authority and informatio­n to issue an emergency order to protect residents of Flint, Mich., from lead-contaminat­ed water as early as June 2015 — seven months before it did so.

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency had sufficient authority and informatio­n to issue an emergency order to protect residents of Flint, Mich., from lead-contaminat­ed water as early as June 2015 — seven months before it declared an emergency, the EPA’s inspector general said Thursday.

The Flint crisis should have generated “a greater sense of urgency” at the agency to “intervene when the safety of drinking water is compromise­d,” Inspector General Arthur Elkins said in an interim report.

Flint’s drinking water became tainted when the city began drawing from the Flint River in April 2014 to save money. The impoverish­ed city of 100,000 was under state control at the time. Regulators failed to ensure water was treated properly and lead from aging pipes leached into the water supply.

Federal, state and local officials have argued over who’s to blame as the crisis continues to force residents to drink bottled or filtered water. Doctors have detected elevated levels of lead in hundreds of children.

A panel appointed by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder concluded that the state is “fundamenta­lly accountabl­e” for the lead crisis because of decisions made by state environmen­tal regulators and state-appointed emergency managers who controlled the city.

Even so, Mr. Snyder and other Republican­s have faulted the EPA for a slow response.

“As Gov. Snyder has stated all along, what happened in Flint was the result of failure of government at all levels,” spokeswoma­n Anna Heaton said Thursday.

Flint Mayor Karen Weaver called the report “deeply troubling.”

Ms. Weaver, a Democrat, said agencies such as the EPA and the Michigan Department of Environmen­tal Quality are “in place to help ensure the well-being and safety of men, women and children, yet they failed when it comes to the man-made water disaster in Flint. Those responsibl­e must be held accountabl­e.”

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 ?? Mark Felix/The Flint Journal-MLive.com via AP ?? Jeree Brown speaks Tuesday in Flint, Mich. Families have filed a class-action lawsuit against the state and the Flint school district, saying more needs to be done to help students whose academic performanc­e have worsened since drinking the city’s water.
Mark Felix/The Flint Journal-MLive.com via AP Jeree Brown speaks Tuesday in Flint, Mich. Families have filed a class-action lawsuit against the state and the Flint school district, saying more needs to be done to help students whose academic performanc­e have worsened since drinking the city’s water.

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