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Filtered Flint water is fine but will people believe it?

June 26, 2016 by Andrew Heller 10 Comments

50028504_214652a272_bA new federal report says the certified filters distributed throughout Flint work better than expected and everyone – including children and pregnant women – can now safely drink the water.

Which is something, I suppose.

column photo suitBut it’s nearly July, 2016, a full six months since the water situation exploded into the local and national consciousness. (Let’s not forget it’s been much longer, however, since the poisoning actually began.)

Shouldn’t this report have come – let’s be kind – just a wee bit sooner? The answer, in case you’re not aware, is (excuse me, I’m going to shout) “DAMN STRAIGHT IT SHOULD HAVE!”

So we know this much: The astonishing slow-roll response to one of the nation’s biggest, most pervasive health crises ever continues. Maple syrup has nothing on the state and federal government, which continue to have a curious definition of the word “emergency.” It’s as if they think it’s fun to live out of 10-ounce water bottles.

Several things should be noted:

  • The EPA/CDC report doesn’t mean that unfiltered water in the city is safe to drink. In our short-attention span world, that point needs to be emphasized. Many, I’m sure, caught only a snatch of a TV news report or glanced at a headline and assumed the all-clear for all Flint water had been issued. Presumably, people who live in Flint day-to-day and drink the stuff will note the distinction but others across the state and nation may not. If so, that’s not good. Prior to this announcement, you could already feel the urgency toward Flint’s plight ebbing. Note to world: This report means little. Flint is still in trouble. Please continue to help.
  • A lot of people in Flint may never hear about the report. Society has changed. We don’t all read the same newspaper or faithfully watch or listen to the news anymore. So a lot of people in Flint simply don’t hear about what’s going on with the water crisis. Word of mouth is probably the leading source of information in Flint these days. There has to be a better way but no one has come up with one yet, short of going door to door.
  • Not everyone has or uses a filter. While 124,000 filters and double that number of replacement cartridges have been distributed in Flint to date, according to the Free Press, at least 2,300 homes still don’t have one. That’s a lot of people and a lot of kids. Why those homes don’t have one is anyone’s guess. It’s been six months, people. If mail can reach every house everyday, surely we can figure out a way to get filters to everyone, yes? I’ll say it again: Where’s the urgency?
  • Filter cartridges need to be replaced regularly. This may go without saying, which is why it needs to be said over and over again. In the best of circumstances, people forget to change their filters. I do it. You do it. People in Flint will do it. New filters aren’t always handy or easy to install either, which is why relying on filters is a stop-gap at best.
  • The lead pipes still have to be changed. As Mayor Weaver pointed out, it’s nice the filters work but replacing the pipes is still the only solution that people will ever trust, and there’s been 269 straight days of state inaction on that front, according to Eclectablog. (No hurry, guys. Finish your lattes and scones.)

In the end, trust, in fact, may end up being the biggest challenge of all in this crisis. Filtered water is now safe. And someday – at the current pace I’m estimating around 2050 – unfiltered water straight out of the tap will be safe as well.

But how are you going to get people to believe it?

Note: The Free Press included this helpful bit of info in its story on the EPA/CDC report: Flint residents interested in getting filters, cartridges or help in installing them can contact 2-1-1 in Flint or visit the following locations — the Genesee County Land Bank at 2320 Pierson St., Antioch Missionary Baptist Church at 1083  E. Stewart Ave., West Court Street Church of God at 2920 W. Court St., Dort Federal Event Center at 3501 Lapeer Rd., or the Genesee County Land Bank at Eastown Bowl Bowling Alley, 3001 S. Dort Highway.   

Image credit: Jon Rawlinson

Filed Under: All Columns, Flint Columns Tagged With: Andrew Heller, andrewheller.com, crisis, flint, flint water, report

Comments

  1. TheOldMan says

    June 26, 2016 at 12:12 pm

    I have lived in this County and City all of my life Andy,and never before have we seen something like what has happened>>we have a Corrupt Govenour,who said in a local News Byte recently,and I quote”The Pipes Seem to be Healing”…Really??!!..How does the treatment of.. 100 year old pipes with reapplying of Phosphates Heal??..It’si like he waved a wond and Magically this rusted,busted infrastructure is all better now!!..I am just not buying it>>Does not Pass the Stink test to me>>I was one of the Fortunate to have HABITAT FOR HUMANITY,came to my home,and installed a good reverse RO Filter ,and yes it will interesting how much it will cost to change filters..In the end all we can do is hope and pray we get the Funds to cut out all the cities Pipes,and replace them,,or allow us to drop our own wells for our needs..I won’t be here to see it fixed,,but I pray for all the younger folks coming up…

    Reply
  2. Tim C says

    June 26, 2016 at 12:20 pm

    Helpful and informative as usual, Andy. Thank you. I don’t care if the Gov personally installs stainless steal pipes to and in my house, I will never drink water again that isn’t filtered. And by the way, all the chemicals people have been ingesting from those plastic bottles will be Flint’s next crisis. Not to mention plastic scattered everywhere in the soil. GM poisoned us first; now we’re poisoning ourselves.

    Reply
  3. TheOldMan says

    June 26, 2016 at 12:35 pm

    I have lived in this County and City all of my life Andy,and never before have we seen something like what has happened>>we have a Corrupt Govenor,who said in a local News Byte recently,and I quote”The Pipes Seem to be Healing”…Really??!!..How does the treatment of.. 100 year old pipes with reapplying of Phosphates Heal??..It’si like he waved a wond and Magically this rusted,busted infrastructure is all better now!!.How Many Water Main breaks,and Boil water alerts will it take to wake people up?

    As for these Reports coming out.I am just not buying it,and we can’t be Blamed>>It Just Does not Pass the Stink test to me>>I was one of the Fortunate to have HABITAT FOR HUMANITY,came to my home,and installed a good reverse RO Filter ,and yes it will interesting how much it will cost to change filters..In the end all we can do is hope and pray we get the Funds to cut out all the cities Pipes,and replace them.I won’t be here to see it fixed,,but I pray for all the younger folks coming up…Also all of the Ciites across the Country where this is going to happen if we don’t invest now….

    Reply
  4. Loren M says

    June 26, 2016 at 12:47 pm

    Not everyone in Flint had high lead levels in their water to begin with.

    Reply
    • Gene A says

      June 26, 2016 at 5:17 pm

      Right. Because seven people were not poisoned the article is irrelevant ?

      Reply
      • Loren M says

        June 27, 2016 at 9:16 am

        I live in Flint and have followed the situation since before the KWA was formed. In no way am I defending the mistakes made in not treating the corrosive Flint River water. My worst problem was when one location on the west side had high THM bacteria and they added chlorine which made my water on the east side smell and taste bad.
        The discolored water photos popularly shown are questionable, that is a normal occurrence if a water main breaks, when they flush the hydrants or even if there is a major fire nearby usually solved almost instantly by running the faucet and flushing a toilet. If your water always looks that way it’s likely your own lines.

        Reply
  5. John S. Downing says

    June 26, 2016 at 6:25 pm

    My daughter’s PhD research was studying the social aftermath of a water crisis in Walkerton, Ontario. Never heard of “Walkerton”, you say? Americans can be so parochial. Sigh.

    Any way … 10-years after an e-coli oops which sickened much of the town and killed more than a few … locals were still refusing to drink municipal water.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walkerton_E._coli_outbreak
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/inside-walkerton-canada-s-worst-ever-e-coli-contamination-1.887200
    http://www.waterandhealth.org/drinkingwater/fiveyears.html
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19180129
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2000/06/ecol-j01.html
    https://www.peelregion.ca/pw/waterstory/pdf/walkerton-tragedy.pdf

    Reply
  6. Keith Spaulding says

    June 27, 2016 at 9:35 am

    Another facet of this whole disaster is noteworthy: A while a go (at the beginning of this fiasco), the government told the people of Flint that the unsafe water was, indeed, safe. Is it any surprise the government’s credibility has taken an earned free-fall?

    Reply
    • Loren M says

      July 2, 2016 at 9:40 am

      I agree they mislead (pun) people, even though the water was safe at several locations tested the fact it wasn’t at others meant there is no way you could know the lead levels wouldn’t increase everywhere without constant testing.
      It was completely irresponsible, they should have errored on the side of caution but instead they errored on the side of not creating a costly health scare. Not everyone in Flint is lead poisoned, many don’t drink tap water anyway.

      Reply
  7. Keith Spaulding says

    June 27, 2016 at 9:35 am

    *ago

    Reply

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