A city is forever changed, and so is residents’ relationship with their water. The betrayal of trust by the institutions meant to protect Flint’s residents has made some of them extra cautious as they look to keep themselves and their community safe.
by Anna Clark and Sarahbeth Maney, ProPublica
Flint, Michigan, is less than 70 miles from the Great Lakes, the most abundant fresh water on the face of the planet. It’s laced with creeks and a broad river that bears its name. Yet in 2014, Flint’s drinking water became a threat — not because of scarcity, or a natural disaster, or even a familiar tale of corporate pollution.
Ten years ago this spring, public officials made catastrophic changes in the city’s water source and treatment, then used testing practices that hid dangers. As problems emerged, they failed to appropriately change course. Residents raised repeated concerns about the color, odor and taste of the water but struggled to get a sufficiently serious response, especially from state and federal authorities.

It didn’t help that the distressed city was under the authority of state-appointed emergency managers, an unusually expansive oversight system that residents decried. For a crucial period of about 3 1/2 years, local decision-making was not accountable to voters. The result: excess exposure to toxic lead, bacteria and a disinfection byproduct in Flint’s drinking water. An outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease sickened 90 people and killed 12. (The toll is likely higher, as Frontline documented.) The water, now drawn from the Flint River, wasn’t treated with corrosion control — a violation of federal law — so the pipes deteriorated more every day.
At one point, saying the water damaged its machinery, a General Motors plant switched to another community’s system. Flint’s emergency manager and other officials still insisted that nothing was seriously wrong with the water. But if the water was harming machines, many wondered, what was it doing to people?
Recent Posts
Let’s Stop Using the Fuels of the Past
May 2, 2025
Take Action Now Trump isn’t reviving the coal industry to help people in places like West Virginia. But protecting federal clean energy…
Freedom Flotilla Attacked Off The Coast Of Malta
May 2, 2025
Take Action Now The drone strike appears to have deliberately targeted the ship’s generator, leaving the crew without power and placing the vessel at…
“Deprivation By Design”: Israel Intensifies Mass Killing Campaign In Gaza With Starvation And Daily Strikes
May 1, 2025
Take Action Now The scale of killing in Gaza is almost impossible to track as the Israeli military bombs and starves Palestinian civilians with…
The Tech Companies Fighting To Sell Your Data
May 1, 2025
Take Action Now Companies accused of exposing consumers to fraud and trickery want Trump to let them freely buy and sell your personal information.……