Thursday, April 25, 2024

Water Insecurity: U.S. Update. Flint, MI. Flint residents grapple with water crisis a decade later: ‘If we had the energy left, we’d cry’




America's dirty divide

Flint residents grapple with water crisis a decade later: ‘If we had the energy left, we’d cry’

Years after the emergency, the Michigan city is yet to replace all lead pipes and affected families are still awaiting justice

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OSF (America's dirty divide)About this content
Thu 25 Apr 2024
Earlier this month, Brittany Thomas received a call that her 11-year-old daughter Janiyah had experienced a seizure at school.
“She’d been seizure-free for about two years now,” said Thomas, a resident of Flint, Michigan. “And they just came back.”
The call took Thomas back to April 2014, when, to save money, the City of Flint switched to a water source that exposed more than 100,000 residents – including up to 12,000 children – to elevated levels of lead and bacteria. Thomas’s family drank bottled water at the time, but they cooked with and bathed in the tap water.
Soon after the switch, Thomas and her two children developed rashes on their skin. Then the children began experiencing frequent seizures that sent them in and out of the hospital. Blood tests revealed they had lead poisoning.
“I didn’t know how to feel,” she said. “I’ve been depressed, I’ve been frustrated, stressed out – can’t catch a break.”
Studies later showed that after officials changed Flint’s water supply from Lake Huron to the Flint River, the percentage of children with elevated levels of lead levels in their blood doubled – and in some parts of the city, tripled. The switch also exposed residents to the bacteria that causes legionnaires’ disease, leading to as many as 115 deaths.

Despite an outcry from the predominantly African American community, officials at every level of government were slow to respond. It was nearly two years before Barack Obama, then president, declared a state of emergency in Flint. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission, a state-established body, concluded that the poor governmental response to the Flint crisis was a “result of systemic racism”.
Now, a decade after the crisis began, kids are still sick, the city is not done replacing lead pipes and families like Thomas’s are still awaiting justice.
“The people of Flint will never trust that water again,” said Pastor Alfred Harris of Concerned Pastors for Social Action. Harris was part of a group of pastors who organized protests and water-filter giveaways, met with lawmakers to urge them to stop sourcing water from the Flint River and sued, along with other groups, the city and state in 2016.

“Flint was a poor community and majority people of color,” Harris said. “If it had been in another community – a majority white or more affluent community – I think actions would have been taken much sooner.”

There is no safe level of lead exposure. The neurotoxin harms nearly all of the body’s functions, is linked to premature births and miscarriages and has been shown to cause learning and behavior problems, among other ailments, in children.


In 2020, the state of Michigan agreed to a $600m settlement with Flint residents. Eighty per cent of that sum would go to children who, like Thomas’s kids, were under 18 when they were exposed to Flint River water, and a district court is now reviewing residents’ claims.

Settlement funds can’t come soon enough for claimants like Thomas, who said she lost her job as a result of needing to respond to her kids’ health problems. “They haven’t told us anything,” she said. “They keep giving us different dates … but nobody hasn’t seen nothing.”
‘It’s like an open sore
A Flint resident for most of her life, Eileen Hayes moved into her townhome in 1996. When lead contaminated her water, she started losing her hair.
“Losing hair on the top of your head changes not only how you can wear your hair, but it changes your self-esteem, how you see yourself, and of course that impacts how you carry yourself,” she said.

Hayes continues to buy her own bottled water, years after the state stopped supplying it. “It would have to be a massive change that would make me stop using bottled water,” she said.

In 2017, as part of a settlement with Flint residents, officials agreed to replace thousands of lead pipes in the city within three years.

Hayes, like many residents, received conflicting information about whether her service lines were checked. “I can’t put the issue behind me until we fix the pipes,” Hayes wrote in a 2023 declaration. “The unfinished program is like an open sore to me.”
Last month, a judge held the city in contempt of court for failing to comply with the settlement. “It is apparent that the City has failed to abide by the Court’s orders in several respects,” the order read. “And that it has no good reason for its failures.”




Funding Resource Report Updates New Postings & 60-Day Deadlines: April 24th, 2024

 

New Postings & 60-Day Deadlines

 

 

Funding Resource Report Updates

New Postings & 60-Day Deadlines: April 24th, 2024

Resource Report Updates are provided nationally from FEMA Interagency Recovery Coordination (IRC) Resource Identification staff. Reports may include information on potential grants, loans, technical assistance, & organization profiles. 

Resource Reports for Reference (download & share, please don't publish). Each report includes National & State, Local, Territory, Tribe (SLTT) Locality-Specific opportunities.

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Resource reports and associated communications are not final policy interpretations nor guarantees of funding and do not constitute an endorsement by FEMA for any specific program or entity.

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Updates

FEMA Announces $117 Million for Emergency Food & Shelter Program to Fight Hunger, Homelessness | FEMA.gov

160+ Applications Submitted to “Internet for All” Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program | NTIA.gov

EPA $20 billion in green bank grants for clean energy projects | PBS NewsHour

IBHS ranks hurricane coast states on building code adoption, enforcement | Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety

How Oysters Help Fight Climate Change | Esquire.com

Rural Decentralized Water Systems Grant Program | USDA Rural Development

Drinking Water Grants | US EPA / Water Technical Assistance Request Form | US EPA

Get Local Small Business Assistance - enter zip code | SBA

Survey on Excessive Heat in Schools | NEA

Tell us how Weather Disasters affect your personal finances | NPR

Texas: Houston, Harris County get two-year extension to distribute Hurricane Harvey relief funding | Houston Public Media

New Hampshire: Seacoast cities, towns to get FEMA funds to fix January storm damage

Vermont: FEMA awards over $22 million to VT for July storms and flooding recovery costs | Vermont Business Magazine

Hawai'i: Civil Air Patrol Seeks Funding To Continue Its Mission | Honolulu Civil Beat

Florida: Fort Myers to build affordable housing | winknews.com

California: Insurers must give discounts for Wildfire Mitigation | MSN

California: Federal Disaster Declaration for February storms | Los Angeles Times

U.S. Virgin Islands: FEMA commits $384 million to rebuild educational facilities on the islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas | FEMA.gov

Georgia: President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda Supports Flood Reduction Infrastructure Project in Historic Savannah Community | FEMA.gov

Events & Dates of Interest

Grant & Resource Links

BRIC Direct Technical Assistance | FEMA.gov / BRIC Request Form

Build America Buy America | U.S. Department of Commerce

CDBG-DR Active Disaster Grants | HUD Exchange

Center for Disaster Philanthropy | Grantmaking Process

Climate Adaptation Planning / Planning Guides | FEMA.gov

Cybersecurity Technical Assistance & Workshop Request Form | CISA.gov

Department of the Interior (DOI) Funding Opportunities | Grants.gov

Disaster Recovery & Resilience Resource Library | FEMA.gov

Disaster Recovery Resources | FEMA.gov

Disaster Relief & Recovery Services | American Red Cross

Economic Development Administration | Funding Opportunities

EPA's Role in Disaster Recovery | US EPA

Faith-Based Communities, Orgs, & Insts - Resources for Leaders | DHS.gov

Guidebook to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law | Build.gov | The White House

Hazard Mitigation Plan Status | FEMA.gov

HHS Funding Opportunities | Grants.gov

HUD Disaster Resources

Local Infrastructure Hub: BIL Funding Opportunities Search / Resources

National Trust for Historic Preservation: savingplaces.org | Grant Programs

Neighborhood Revitalization | Habitat for Humanity / Impact

NOAA.gov | Funding Opportunities

Rural Development - USDA.gov | Programs

Small Business Administration | Grants

Water Technical Assistance Request Form | US EPA

DRL Link for MAX.gov Users

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Greetings colleagues,

As new funding programs and resources are posted, updates via this bulletin will be sent weekly on Wednesdays by approximately 3:30 pm Eastern time. You are encouraged to review associated documents for any resource of interest. Please utilize the contact information for details direct from the experts on each listing.

Potential funding resources are identified for general informational purposes and are compiled or provided with publicly obtainable information. This is not a complete roster of all available programs. Please view this communication and linked reports only as a starting point for individual research. The user should always directly consult the provider of a potential resource for current program information and to verify the applicability of a particular program.

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The Resource Reports provided in this communication were exported from the FEMA Disaster Resource Library (DRL). The FEMA Office of Assessment and Technology (OAT) manages and maintains the DRL. The Disaster Resource Library in MAX-TRAX is an online repository of resources useful in planning for and recovering from a disaster. It is accessible to federal employees and approved non-federal stakeholders. Information can be searched, filtered, and reported.

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