Still trying to point the finger of blame, either at something or away from something.
I know what you're getting at. Based on what we know right now, it seems to me that this WAS an engineering mistake.
Facts: Was the plant designed right?
No, in the sense that there was no additional corrosion control system(s) added before the changeover. This is the result of Mike Prysby, engineer from the MDEQ (who I believe is a PE, but not 100% sure on that) recommending that no additional corrosion control was necessary, because he (willfully or otherwise) misinterpreted the law requiring corrosion control.
Did a person operate it correctly?
This is a gray area... To me it seems that Glasgow was put in a very difficult situation. He was apparently under great pressure to make the Flint plant ready to pump water, but was not given the resources required to do so, both in staff and equipment. The chain of emails seems to make it clear that Glasgow was aware the plant was not ready, and the decision to switch to the Flint plant full time as early as they did was one that he disagreed with. It's not clear to me if he could have refused to turn the valve and forced everyone to listen to him. If he did actually have that power, than he succumbed to political pressure in allowing the plant to operate full time, and bears more responsibility than I'm giving him here.
Did a super government agency become involved?
Does the MDEQ count? If so, than yes. The MDEQ was involved every step of the way, from the planning stages on.
Was it really an engineering mistake?
Yes. Prysby is an engineer, and his decision to recommend that additional corrosion control was not necessary seems to me to be the root-cause of root-causes so to speak.
I am referencing common sense, not a TJTY report. You seem to be lost in the phoney numbers and don't understand the big picture. There is no way that one can build a new asset (approximately $300M) and compete economically against a paid off asset. The Detroit infrastructure is paid off. For Detroit, selling water was like printing money, a golden goose business opportunity.
I'd agree completely that a financed asset is always going to cost more than a wholly owned asset- when the wholly owned asset is trading its commodity at the market rate
That simply was not happening. You yourself brought up, earlier in the thread, that Flint's water rate was well above the level it should have been relative to MHI. DWSD was gouging the residents of Flint. That right there is the primary flaw in your logic- if DWSD was charging Flint a fair market rate, the entire plan for the KWA completely falls apart. That simply was not happening. Period. There's no arguing it. Flint was using 10% of the DWSD supply and paying 20% of the revenue.
Only one aspect of economic development is water supply. There is no way that selling only water will provide economic development. And very few businesses these days use large volumes of water.
That's a gross generalization that is most certainly not true. Power generation, agriculture, manufacturing, and numerous other industries need water in large quantities. I work in the manufacturing sector, this is an issue I know intimately. If anything, industrial water usage per product dollar is on the rise. The drive to reduce the use of aromatic compounds in industry, for example the change from solvent-borne to water-borne paints in automotive and other coatings applications, makes water availability and quality more important than it used to be. I am typing this post while I'm sitting at a job site monitoring the install of a brand-new paint shop (in Michigan, relocated from Washington state) that will use water-borne paint. A big chunk of the $150 million budget of this project is the installation of a shiny new water treatment plant on site, owned and operated by the plant. You can't tell me that water in high quantities isn't important to bringing industries back here.
There is no way that an authority such as the KWA has the financial clout (major authorities such as the port authority of NY/NJ do have the resources) to compete with a larger player such as a State in economic development. The resources given away by an authority are not free either. Free water given to company X has to be paid for by someone else.
I would agree. But the existence of the KWA allows government agencies that DO have sway in economic development to pitch the area. It's not the only selling point for bringing businesses to the area, but it is a selling point nonetheless.
It is scandalous to charge the poor community of Flint a higher cost water and turn around and give away water to make economic development in other areas of the county.
So it's scandalous for the KWA to charge Flint an above-market rate (which they're not as far as I can tell) but it's ok for the DWSD to charge them an above market rate? Uhh.... ok.
Given the opportunity, a monopoly (like the KWA) will also charge whatever the market will bear. That is why public service commissions were created years ago; a mechanism to set the rates charged by monopolies. To rein in the cost that monopoly's will try to charge.
The existence of the KWA breaks a monopoly- previously held by the DWSD/GLWA. There is nothing stopping Flint from changing back to the GLWA as a water source in the future, if the new competition from the KWA forces the GLWA to actually sell at the market rate.
Regarding jobs in Michigan, that ship has already sailed. The jobs are not coming back. Most people fail to realize that when businesses are relocated, the relocated business are generally automated with new equipment. When business are relocated, fewer jobs are created at the new locations.
'Fraid not. Is Michigan going to be 'the' hub of automotive manufacturing that it once was? Doubtful. But the state is slowly recovering. You don't live or work here, stick to talking about what you know about.
If you want to see a job creator, go down to your local school. Jobs are created through the education of the public, not with some two bit economic development scam. Mr. Wright comes to town, just like in the music man, a big scam.
You can't fund an education system with money you don't have. How do you pump money into a community? You create jobs.
No doubt that Flint (and most of the rest of southeast Michigan) is in a rough spot economically. Your opinion seems to be that the response from the residents and government of this area to this economic situation should be "Oh, the jobs are gone, guess we should just give up". Does the KWA guarantee that 10 years from now eastern Michigan will be a towering powerhouse of industry? Of course not. But to sit and watch your community die, while doing nothing, is not an option.