2020
DOI: 10.1002/wat2.1420
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The Flint water crisis

Abstract: The Flint water crisis is one of the most significant environmental contamination events in recent American history. In April 2014, the city of Flint, Michigan, while under the control of an emergency manager appointed by the governor, switched its drinking water supply from Lake Huron water treated and distributed by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department to the Flint River. Failure to treat the water properly at the Flint Water Treatment Plant led to a variety of problems with water quality and public hea… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…The Flint, Michigan water crisis deserves special mention here. Starting in 2014, lead leached from pipes in the Flint drinking water systems, exposing an estimated 98,000 residents to elevated levels of lead, Escherichia coli , and Legionella bacteria (Butler, Scammell, & Benson, 2016; Pauli, 2020). In brief, failure to treat the water properly, given the piping system and age of infrastructure, led to a variety of problems with water quality and public health (Pauli, 2020).…”
Section: Exposing Six Myths Of Household Water Insecuritymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The Flint, Michigan water crisis deserves special mention here. Starting in 2014, lead leached from pipes in the Flint drinking water systems, exposing an estimated 98,000 residents to elevated levels of lead, Escherichia coli , and Legionella bacteria (Butler, Scammell, & Benson, 2016; Pauli, 2020). In brief, failure to treat the water properly, given the piping system and age of infrastructure, led to a variety of problems with water quality and public health (Pauli, 2020).…”
Section: Exposing Six Myths Of Household Water Insecuritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Starting in 2014, lead leached from pipes in the Flint drinking water systems, exposing an estimated 98,000 residents to elevated levels of lead, Escherichia coli , and Legionella bacteria (Butler, Scammell, & Benson, 2016; Pauli, 2020). In brief, failure to treat the water properly, given the piping system and age of infrastructure, led to a variety of problems with water quality and public health (Pauli, 2020). As Pulido, Kohl, and Cotton (2016) argues, the decisions leading to contaminated drinking water were set in motion by austerity measures cast by an underfinanced and debt‐leveraged municipal government, in which water provision to low‐income and racialized communities of Flint was explicitly devalued and subordinated to the goals of fiscal solvency.…”
Section: Exposing Six Myths Of Household Water Insecuritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars have recently corrected several “myths” about water insecurity in the global North (Meehan et al , 2020 ), specifically the myth that the global North does not have water or sanitation inequities. In the United States, there are multiple examples of WASH inequities, often arguably driven by institutional racism (e.g., Pauli, 2020 ; 2019). Research also indicates that there is tension between First Nations and governmental organizations regarding water management (Eichelberger, 2010 ; Simms et al , 2016 ).…”
Section: A Note On Wash Marginalization In Higher Income Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, audits of state and federal data indicate underreporting of such violations (US GAO, 2011) and broader concerns about accuracy, reliability and consistency in data management ( Josset et al, 2019;Beecher et al, 2020). Underreporting of regulatory violations underestimates water quality threats in the US (Fedinick et al, 2017;Allaire et al, 2018;Pauli, 2020…”
Section: Water Quality (Safe and Clean)mentioning
confidence: 99%