Contributor(s):Author: The Staff of Bridge Magazine The most valuable and illuminating account yet of the Flint water crisis.
It took more than a year for the truth to finally, painfully emerge - that Flint, Mich.
, residents had been drinking lead-poisoned water despite months of complaints about foul smells, discoloration and, worse, ill children.
Based on the award-winning journalism of Bridge Magazine, Poison on Tap provides a riveting, authoritative, in-depth account of the government blunders, mendacity and arrogance that produced the water crisis in Flint: - How state-appointed emergency managers put cost-cutting ahead of public safety.
- How state experts misinterpreted basic safeguards, while federal regulators dithered for months about warning the public.
- How a governor missed the many red flags.
And how a series of heroes refused to accept the pat dismissals of government agencies, needling and fighting until their voices were heard.
Poison on Tap is a compelling case study in how government at all levels can go very wrong - and yet shows the power of the human spirit to overcome.
Sometimes truth is stranger and scarier than fiction-such is the case with the Flint Water Crisis.
Bridge Magazine staff painstakingly document one of the most significant cases of environmental injustice in U.
history.
-Marc Edwards, Virginia Tech professor whose work helped prove that the regulators were wrong.
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Flint |