FLINT, Michigan — Phillip Wadsworth served 22 years as a pilot in the Air Force, reaching the rank of major after tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. When it came time to retire, he took his family to his hometown of Flint. It’s a decision he regrets every day, and one that has imperilled not only his family’s health, but his job, his home, and his finances.
“I’ve been all over the world, I never expected to see anything like this,” he said Sunday afternoon as National Guardsmen loaded cases of water bottles into his car and his wife wiped tears from her eyes.
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They had just returned from getting their blood tested for lead, and the outcome was distressing, especially for their daughter Whitney, 10, sitting in the back seat.
The results, resting on the dashboard, were bound in folders emblazoned with a 1-800 number for what he dubbed “predatory attorneys” — those who lure people in with free blood tests and then offer to take their case for 40 percent of whatever money they win in court. The Wadsworths knew better than to take the deal, but were sure others would sign.
Whitney’s school, Scott Elementary, was recently shut down — one of more than 20 schools closed by the city in the past decade — and she now travels to neighboring Burton to attend classes. Families of students there are still trying to get the school tested for lead.
Now Wadsworth is worried about his job as a private pilot, given the high-medical bar for his profession, and he and his wife feel trapped in their home after sinking so much of their money into it. Who would want to buy a house in Flint? They’re considering just abandoning it and moving elsewhere.
“We rebuilt their country,” Wadsworth said of Iraq and Afghanistan, “and we can’t build our own.”
Flint’s water crisis has been put in center of the national spotlight ahead of Tuesday’s Michigan primary. But residents and officials, grateful for the attention and outpouring of support, are expecting to be forgotten once the candidates and the media they attract move on to other places with other tragedies and other needs.
Democratic Presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton pledged to help Flint in a debate here Sunday night, which was added specially to the Democratic debate calendar to call attention to the water crisis.
“I’m really sorry that we have to be the example for the entire country, but the entire country needs to look and see what happened in Flint,” Mayor Karen Weaver told MSNBC. Still, she knows the attention won’t last. “It goes away. That’s why we have to seize this opportunity right now, because there’s only a window of time where certain things are going to be available. It’s important for us to move quickly.”
Even under the best circumstances, it could take a year to replace corroded lead pipes in Flint. But it will take even longer to restore residents’ trust.
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Downtown, someone has plastered large wanted posters for Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, who is blamed for switching Flint’s water to a dangerous source in order to save money. “Arrest Snyder” the poster declares, for “poisoning the people of Flint.”
Both Clinton and Sanders have called on Snyder to resign, and some here privately say they hope for a worse fate than even prison for the governor.
Snyder responded to the criticism by saying he will be here long after Clinton and Sanders head out of town. “In a few days, political candidates will be leaving Flint and Michigan,” he said on Twitter. “They will not be staying to help solve the crisis, but I am committed to the people of Flint.”
The candidates insisted otherwise. “I will be with Flint all the way through this crisis,” Clinton pledged during the debate. Sanders added: “At a certain point, the TV cameras and CNN is going to disappear, and then people are going to be left struggling in order to live in a safe and healthy community.”









