The EPA's Hush-Hush Response to the Flint Water Crisis
Officials with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for months knew about the poisoning of the Flint water supply and, rather than raise alarm and stop residents from drinking the lead-tainted water, took a backseat on the matter.
The Detroit News reported late Tuesday that federal officials began making inquiries in February and the region’s top EPA official, Susan Hedman, confirmed to the newspaper this week that as early as April the agency knew about the lack of corrosion controls in the water system.
According to the reporting:
Federal officials for months engaged in a bureaucratic, behind-the-scenes “battle” with Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) “over whether Flint needed to use chemical treatments to keep lead lines and plumbing connections from leaching into drinking water,” the paper reports. Hedman argued that it was not the “role” of the federal agency to regulate local water operations.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT