The leading candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination had harsh words for Michigan officials and a humane message for residents of Flint nearly two years after the predominately poor, black town began complaining of unusable tap water.
“This is an emergency,” said former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, lingering over the fate of Flint’s most vulnerable population, its 9,000 children under the age of 6. “Every day that goes by,” she said, to rising cheers from the audience, “is another lost day in a child’s life.”
Since early January, the American factory town has been under a state of emergency, searching for short-term fixes and long-term answers to a man-made lead crisis. But despite national attention, including an MSNBC town hall hosted by Rachel Maddow, the heart of the problem has not been fixed.
Hundreds, if not thousands, of miles of lead-corroded plumbing and service lines vein the city, unseen and actually safe if the water flowing through them is properly treated. But Flint’s water was not, the state now acknowledges. As a result, when the city switched its water supply to the more corrosive Flint River, the pipes started to bleed metal, exposing an entire city to a neurotoxin capable of causing permanent brain damage.
But none of those lead pipes have been replaced yet.
“If Michigan won’t do it, there have to be ways that we can move and then make them pay for it and hold them accountable,” Clinton said, calling for not only new pipes but a promise of long-term care for Flint’s children and other residents.








