Obama
sips Flint water, urges children be tested for lead
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[May 05, 2016]
By Timothy Gardner
FLINT, Mich. (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama sipped filtered water in Flint, Michigan, on Wednesday and assured
angry residents that their children would be fine in the long term
despite the "complete screw-up" that contaminated their drinking water
with lead.
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Obama made the trip to the mostly African-American community to
demonstrate that the water there was safe even as he predicted it
would take more than two years to replace the city's aging pipes.
Flint, with a population of about 100,000, was under control of a
state-appointed emergency manager in 2014 when it switched its water
source from Detroit's municipal system to the Flint River to save
money. The city switched back in October.
The river water was more corrosive than the Detroit system and
caused more lead to leach from its aging pipes. Lead can be toxic,
and children are especially vulnerable.
"This was a man made disaster. This was avoidable. This was
preventable," Obama told a crowd at a local high school. "Flint's
recovery is everybody's responsibility, and I'm going to make sure
that responsibility is met."
The president urged parents to ensure their children were tested for
lead and said residents should run their taps frequently to flush
out remaining pollutants.
DRINKS THE WATER
After coughing repeatedly during his remarks, he asked for a glass
of water, and drank it in front of the crowd. Earlier he sipped from
a glass of filtered Flint water during a meeting with regulators.
The White House had said that it did not know if the president would
drink filtered Flint water.
Obama said the crisis had resulted from government officials at all
levels not paying attention. Questions linger over whether
environmental regulators could have acted more urgently to help the
city, where more than 40 percent of its residents live in poverty.
Susan Hedman, the EPA's Midwest chief and an Obama appointee,
resigned in February amid concern that she had not acted quickly on
a June 2015 memo from agency scientist Miguel Del Toral that said
tests showed high lead levels in water from Flint homes.
Last month, lawyers representing residents of Flint filed a $220.2
million damages claim alleging that negligence on the part of the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had contributed to dangerous
lead levels in the city's water.
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Three Michigan state and local officials were criminally charged in
April in an investigation into lead levels in Flint's water, and the
state attorney general said there would be more charges.
Many residents have blamed Michigan's Republican governor, Rick
Snyder, who was greeted by boos from the crowd. "You didn't create
this problem, government failed you," Snyder said.
Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker and Flint native Michael Moore
disputed Obama's assurances about the quality of the water. "A
number of experts are still saying this water is not safe. It’s
still going through the same corroded lead pipes," he said on CNN,
describing Obama's visit as "too little, too late."
Obama, going off his prepared remarks, told members of the community
that their anger was understandable, but he urged them not to let
their children believe they would be hurt for life.
"You should be angry, but channel that anger. You should be hurt,
but don't sink into despair," he said. "Do not somehow communicate
to our children here in this city that they're going to be saddled
with problems for the rest of their lives. Because they will not.
They’ll do just fine."
The EPA, whose budget has been squeezed by Congress, acknowledges
there are issues with its lead and copper rule that need to be
addressed to prevent similar crises in other cities. The agency has
said it would propose changes to the rule early next year.
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason and Eric Walsh; Editing by
Leslie Adler, Toni Reinhold)
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