Monday, January 25, 2016

I have no doubt the investigation of MICHIGAN laws will be through by the Michigan State Attorney General and his teams.

It is Michigan laws that caused this.

The emergency manager laws removed all authority except for one person. The emergency manager completely disregarded federal standards. The Michigan emergency mangers cannot operate outside the law because it is favorable for their balance sheets.  

The people of Flint have an emergency circumstance and people are making choices between two adverse choices. 

The people of Flint are losing the base of their economy and people are being forced to make choices between two unreasonable choices. There are now health issues that have not existed before.

This is just unbelievable. I can't believe Americans have to live with contaminated water in their homes. 

The Snyder administration has been evasive during this entire episode of money before people. They sold a pipe so the people of Flint could not return to their old water supply! Where are the arrest warrants. This is obvious stuff. There is no need for an investigation, the facts are all over the news and in Michigan newspapers.

IT IS EASY TO SAY "DON'T BATH IN THE WATER," BUT THERE IS NO CHOICE THAT PROVIDES THAT REALITY TO THE PEOPLE OF FLINT. 

Excuse me. Some investigation is better than none? Really?

May 14, 2015
By Ron Fonger  

Flint, MI -- Genesee County(click here) is offering the city of Flint $3.9 million for a 9-mile section of the existing water pipeline to Lake Huron. Emergency manager Darnell Earley has notified the City Council of the pending deal.
County Drain Commissioner Jeff Wright said Wednesday, May 14, that the proposed purchase is designed to put the old pipeline section to good use and to provide the city with cash for an asset that otherwise will serve no purpose....

January 23, 2016

Detroit -- The head of a Flint hospital (click here) that found Legionnaires' disease bacteria in its water system more than a year ago said he and experts suspected the Flint River was a likely source of the contaminant.
Don Kooy, president of McLaren hospital, said he was surprised that Michigan and local health agencies didn't inform the public about a Legionnaires' outbreak in Genesee County in 2014-15 until just a few weeks ago.
The outbreak occurred while Flint residents were repeatedly complaining about dirty tap water coming from the river -- a crisis that ultimately caused exposure to lead and other health problems....

In Flint, Michigan, (click here) health clinics are crowded with worried parents getting their children tested for lead poisoning -- but the high demand has backed up the process. Adriana Diaz reports.