In
Flint, Sanders says water crisis should serve as wake-up call
Send a link to a friend
[February 26, 2016]
By John Whitesides
FLINT, Mich. (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders told residents of Flint, Michigan,
on Thursday their "horrific" water contamination crisis should be a
wake-up call about the country's crumbling infrastructure and required
an emergency response.
|
"If there is any silver lining out of this tragedy, it is my hope
that the American people will look at Flint and say, 'never again,'"
Sanders said on his first campaign visit to the city, where a
cost-saving decision to switch the water supply has led to a public
health crisis from lead contamination.
"We are looking at children being poisoned - if that is not an
emergency, I just don't know what an emergency is," Sanders, a U.S.
senator from Vermont, told about 300 people jammed into a Flint
church for a meeting that at times featured a freewheeling exchange
with shouting residents.
Sanders, who has made his call for a $1 trillion investment in U.S.
infrastructure a key part of his campaign agenda, said Flint's water
crisis illustrated the need for a long-term commitment to rebuilding
dilapidated water systems across the country.
 "While Flint may be the canary in the coal mine, there are a lot of
other canaries all around the country. The truth is our
infrastructure is collapsing," Sanders said. "I hope that out of the
tragedy will come fundamental changes."
Sanders' Democratic campaign rival, Hillary Clinton, visited the
predominantly black city weeks ago and frequently highlights the
crisis as an example of racial inequity as the two candidates vie
for African-American support.
Sanders has called for the resignation of Michigan Governor Rick
Snyder, a Republican, and met recently with some Flint activists
during a visit to Michigan. He told the Flint crowd that hearing
their stories of suffering was "horrific."
[to top of second column] |

"Clearly this is part of a long-term trend of starving communities
of color," he said.
The crisis was triggered when a city manager installed by Snyder
switched the city's water supply from Lake Michigan to the nearby
Flint River. The change corroded Flint's aging pipes and released
lead and other toxins into the water supply.
President Barack Obama declared a state of emergency in Flint in
January, authorizing federal emergency management officials to
coordinate relief efforts. Lawmakers in Congress have wrestled with
the size of a federal funding package to replace aging pipes.
Sanders and Clinton will return to Flint on March 6 for their next
nationally televised debate ahead of the Michigan primary on March
8.
(Editing by Tom Brown)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |