Criticized for his handling of a water crisis that has exposed residents of a city of nearly 100,000 people to lead poisoning, Michigan’s governor on Tuesday apologized to the citizens of Flint and pledged to fix the problem.
“Your families face a crisis — a crisis you did not create and could not have prevented,” Snyder said in his State of the State address Tuesday.
“To you, the people of Flint, I say tonight as I have before: I am sorry and I will fix it,” Snyder said. “Government failed you.”
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Snyder has been criticized for his handling of the crisis. Earlier on Tuesday, protesters near the capitol building repeated calls that he resign.
President Barack Obama on Tuesday met with Flint Mayor Karen Weaver, the same day that the Environmental Protection Agency said officials acted too slowly to address the crisis and that it was hampered by “resistance at the state and local levels to work with us.”
The debacle in Flint began after the governor-appointed emergency manager in 2013 inked a deal to stop buying water from Detroit in order to save money.
Water from the Flint River was used, but tests later showed it wasn’t properly treated and caused old pipes to corrode, allowing lead to leach into the water, officials said.
Lead poisoning can cause mental and physical development problems. A first batch of 2,200 tests showed that at least 43 children had elevated levels of lead in their blood.
Protesters in the state capital of Lansing ahead of the speech Tuesday placed the blame squarely on Snyder, and said the town’s appointed emergency manager put the budget over the health of the town’s children.
“They pumped poison into our homes, we fed it to our children, we were promised it was safe,” said Melissa Mays, a Flint resident and founder of the group “Water You Fighting For?”
“The state failed us. They lied.”
RELATED: A timeline of the Flint water crisis








