The real responsibility lies with the Republican dominated legislature which in 2011, after the 2010 election of Republican Rick Snyder as Governor, replaced a much less draconian law that allowed the Governor to intercede when a city fell into financial crisis. The old law had rarely been invoked since it was passed in 1988. However after the newer, more authoritarian law was passed, several cities were virtually taken over by the Governor appointing an 'emergency manager' and a 'board of directors' who legally replaced the elected officials of the city, including the mayor and the city council. Flint was one of those cites. Now these 'emergency managers' were given authority to sell city assets, cancel contracts, renegotiate labor agreements with city employees, etc.
For example, when the Governor took over the City of Detroit, a proposal was made to liquidate the Detroit Institute of Arts, one of the largest and most famous art museums in the US. The idea was to sell the various works of art to private individuals and/or corporations and to close the museum down. It was this potential 'theft' of what's really art that belonged to the people of Detroit, the state and in fact, the entire country, that prompted, in part, a petition being put on the 2012 ballot, which passed overwhelmingly, repealing this new law. However the Governor went back to his Republican legislator and got an almost identical law passed. The only real difference, and this is what the courts had questioned, was that the a city's elected officials would remain in place, but were reduced in authority to an advisory role but at least kept the semblance that the citizens of the city were still having a say in its operation, but the Emergency Manager and his 'board', for all intents and purposes, was still in control. As for the Detroit Institute of Arts, when Detroit was negotiating its final bankruptcy agreement it was decided to establish a non-profit corporation to which the assets of the museum were transferred and which was chartered to hold them in the name of the people of Detroit and the state.
This is the situation today in Flint where the Emergency Manager decided to stop using water purchased from the Detroit Metropolitan Water System and start taking water from the Flint River, which has been deem so polluted that 20 some years ago, General Motors, the largest employer in the city, stopped using Flint River water due to its corrosive nature even when used for strictly industrial uses. In fact, the lack of a good water supply is part of what led GM to close many of it's manufacturing facilities in the Flint area over the last 15- 20 years.
John R. Baker, P.E.
Product 'Evangelist'
Product Engineering Software
Siemens PLM Software Inc.
Digital Factory
Cypress, CA
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