Tests show significant improvement in Flint, Mich. water quality

Virginia Tech researchers said 45 percent of Flint, Mich., homes had no detectable lead levels in July, compared to 37 percent in March and 9 percent a year ago.

The Flint River in Flint, Mich. Virginia Tech researchers who exposed the lead-tainted water problem in Flint, said Thursday, Aug. 11, 2016, the city's water quality has greatly improved, based on tests at more than 160 homes.

(AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

August 11, 2016

Virginia Tech researchers who exposed the lead problem in Flint, Mich., gave an upbeat opinion of the city's water quality Thursday after finding no detectable levels of the toxin in nearly half of 162 homes tested in July.

Marc Edwards still urged residents to drink only filtered tap water or bottled water while the system heals itself. But at the same time, he said "the wind is kind of at our back" as long as the water continues to be treated with phosphates to reduce corrosion, a critical step that was missing when Flint used the Flint River for 18 months.

"This is nearing the end of the beginning of the end of the public health disaster response," said Edwards, an expert in environmental engineering. "Flint water now looks like it's entering a range that's considered normal for other U.S. cities."

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Edwards and other researchers spoke at a news conference in Blacksburg, Va. He's credited with blowing the whistle a year ago on high levels of lead in Flint's drinking water, although it took several more weeks for Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and federal regulators to finally acknowledge that the city of roughly 100,000 residents had a disaster.

While waiting for a pipeline to be built to Lake Huron, Flint drew water from the Flint River but didn't treat it for corrosion. As a result, a protective coating inside pipes broke down, releasing lead from old pipes and fixtures. Flint now gets water from a Detroit regional system.

Edwards and his team have taken water samples from 162 randomly selected homes since August 2015. The researchers said 45 percent of homes had no detectable lead levels in July, compared to 37 percent in March and 9 percent a year ago.

"Things are dramatically better now," Edwards said.

It's not clear when state and federal regulators will declare that unfiltered tap water is safe to drink. On July 29, Governor Snyder reported more encouraging results from separate water tests conducted by the state at more than 160 Flint homes. More than 93 percent were at or below the federal threshold, although no level of lead exposure is considered safe.

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Even low levels of lead in blood can affect the ability to pay attention and performance in school, according to the government.

The governor welcomed the new findings by the Virginia Tech team.

"Statements from independent experts will reassure residents who may have lost some trust in government," Snyder said.

In June, The Christian Science Monitor reported that Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette sued Veolia North America, an engineering firm hired by the city to examine its water after it had switched to the Flint River, and the Texas-based firm Lockwood Andrews and Newnam (LAN) saying the firms hired by the city before and after it switched its water to the Flint River in April 2014 caused the water crisis to “occur, continue and worsen.”

“There’s no way that Veolia can rewrite history and say they didn’t know and had no reason to know about lead in people’s homes,” Mr. Hall, an environmental and water law expert who teaches at Wayne State University, said at a press conference Wednesday at the University of Michigan-Flint.The suit follows criminal charges filed in April against two state officials and a city employee, a public apology by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, and a report by an independent panel appointed by the governor that called the crisis an “environmental injustice.”

But beyond the headlines, many residents remained angry, noting that officials had failed to address their concerns about the water’s taste and smell for months. The governmentonly began taking action last fall, after Virginia Tech professor Marc Edwards found dangerously high lead levels in the city’s water.