The ongoing crisis has left the city without safe drinking water for over two years, but the state claims water deliveries are too much to ask.
Our outdated infrastructure will fall apart if we don't invest in repairing it — that's just physics.
In their hasty scramble to blame the Flint water crisis on anything — anything at all — other than the regime of Emergency Managers and phony corporate “privatization” that Reason has been promoting for years in Michigan, Reason writers are forming a circular firing squad.
The water crisis in Flint, Michigan is the perfect case for why our country needs more funding for infrastructure, not less.
To date, over 25,000 children in Flint, Michigan, have been exposed to lead contamination from the city’s water supply. How did the water get that way?
New emails reveal that top advisers knew about problems with Flint water as far back as 2014, reinvigorating calls that 'the Governor must resign'
Residents and advocacy organizations are seeking outside intervention, and a complete overhaul of the state government
Senate Democrats said Wednesday they will push to address the water crisis in Flint, Michigan as part of a bipartisan energy bill being debated in the Senate.
While the state government mobilizes a massive response to the water crisis in Flint, handing out bottled water and filters to residents affected by lead-contaminated tap water, undocumented residents here feel left out.