Michigan sues Flint after council refuses to OK water deal
LANSING, Mich. — The state of Michigan sued Flint Wednesday, alleging that the city council’s refusal to approve a broadly backed deal to buy water long term from a Detroit-area system is endangering public health in the wake of a crisis that has largely been blamed on the state itself.
The Department of Environmental Quality had threatened legal action if the council did not approve Mayor Karen Weaver’s recommendation or propose a reasonable alternative by Monday. The council instead OK’d a short-term extension of its contract with the Detroit authority.
“Ensuring that the residents of Flint have drinking water that meets public health standards is our primary concern,” DEQ Director Heidi Grether told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “The city council’s inaction does not give us security that that is going to be the case.”
State and federal officials do not want Flint to change water sources a third time after a fateful 2014 switch resulted in lead contamination while the city was under state management. The federal lawsuit says Flint has no other currently available water source and is at risk of incurring $1.8 million in extra costs over the next three months. It seeks an order barring Flint from switching again and requiring it to enter the 30-year contract to comply with federal and state laws.


