Appearing live on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Snyder said decision-makers at
the state’s Department of Environmental Quality “were not being given
the right information by the quote-unquote experts.”
“There were major failures here,” the governor said. “And if you look at it, it was people being much too technical, not having the culture of asking the common-sense questions, and then the tone of how things were done. So there are a number of failures there that, these people, this was a terrible tragedy that these people worked for me, and that’s why it was important to accept responsibility. And my focus is on fixing this problem and I’ve been focused on that very diligently since last October.”
“What is so frustrating and
makes you so angry about this situation is you have a handful of
quote-unquote experts that were career civil service people that made
terrible decisions, in my view,” Snyder said.
The second-term governor blamed bureaucracy for the public health failure.
“That’s part of the problem
here,” Snyder said. “We actually had outside experts raising the
question that people in two of our departments didn’t see the issue.
They actually came back and said, ‘We don’t agree with them. We believe we’re OK with respect to lead.’
“These are career civil
servants. They had strong science, medical backgrounds in terms of their
research. But as a practical matter, when you look at it today and you
look at their conclusions, I wouldn’t call them experts anymore.”
For the last year and half, some children in Flint have tested
positive for lead in their blood, but Snyder said it wasn’t until the
end of September 2015 that he learned information about the safety of
the water was inaccurate.“There were major failures here,” the governor said. “And if you look at it, it was people being much too technical, not having the culture of asking the common-sense questions, and then the tone of how things were done. So there are a number of failures there that, these people, this was a terrible tragedy that these people worked for me, and that’s why it was important to accept responsibility. And my focus is on fixing this problem and I’ve been focused on that very diligently since last October.”
Anchor Mika Brzezinski asked the governor about a New York Times editorial that wonders if the Michigan state government would have responded more quickly if impoverished Flint were rich and mostly white.
“Is this a case of environmental racism?” asked Brzezinski, reading from the editorial.
“Absolutely not,” said Snyder, noting a number of public programs that his administration has pushed. “Flint is a place I’ve been devoted to helping.”
Earlier this week, Snyder released 274 pages of emails
from 2014 and 2015 that show the debate over the blame for the
contamination crisis. Snyder said he hoped turning over all his emails
would offer some transparency about how the disaster evolved.
But the Detroit Free Press reports that a
state legislator and former Flint City Council member allege Snyder has
misled the public by not releasing all the emails about the water
crisis, including one sent by the representative a year ago saying “the
city of Flint stands on the precipice of civil unrest” over the lack of
clean drinking water.
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