When doctors detected lead in 1-year-old Sophia Rodriguez Waid’s blood, her family did everything they could to fix the situation, spending months living with friends and relatives and scarce dollars remodeling their home in Flint, Michigan.
But the amount of the toxin in the little girl’s blood only got higher — and the worried parents say local officials threatened to call child protective services on them.
It wasn’t until the family moved in with a relative who wasn’t on Flint’s water system that Sophia’s blood began returning to normal, the first evidence the family had that the service line under the street — and not their home — was the culprit.
Now, with Sophia facing an uncertain future, her parents are filing a lawsuit against the city and a raft of government officials they say lied to Flint’s residents and put children like her in harm’s way.
“It’s a crying shame they had to put all these children through this,” Luke Waid told NBC News on Monday. “It’s heartbreaking because my daughter doesn’t have a voice of her own.”
Waid and fiancee Michelle Rodriguez had Sophia, their first child, in July 2014. At 6 months old, she was tested for lead and the results were normal.
But at her 1-year followup, the levels were high and doctors told Waid, a welder, how to find and get rid of lead in their home, he said.
He said he didn’t suspect the water because he’d had it tested when he bought the house and it was fine.
But that test was done when Flint was buying water from Detroit. Just three months before Sophia’s alarming blood test, the city had started using water from the Flint River to save money.
The new water was more corrosive, and under the city streets, it began eating away at 25,000 lead service lines, eventually leaching the heavy metal into the drinking water.
“We changed our whole life. We remodeled our home and lived in hotels and with family for months,” Waid said.
But Waid and Rodriguez were still living in Flint, and the couple says Sophia’s lead level didn’t decrease. It went up, hitting 14 mg/dl, well above the 5 mg/dl level that the CDC says requires public health action.
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“They threatened us with child protective services if it didn’t go down,” Waid said.
They moved to Rodriguez’s sister’s house, which had its own well, and Sophia’s levels began dropping, he said.









