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Part Two: Flint water crisis a turning point for Green movement

Part 2 of a series

You don’t have to look very far for events redefining the environmental movement – in terms of who works for advocacy groups and who they work for. Just go back to 2014.

In April of that year the city of Flint, Mich., switched its source of drinking water from the Detroit River to the Flint River.  Soon residents were complaining about the water, saying it was discolored and smelled.  And the media seized on the crisis.

The news on one TV station blared: “Families in Flint file a federal lawsuit over the city’s water crisis -- they claim the water made them sick.”

As the crisis unfolded, thousands of residents were exposed to chemicals. And children tested positive for lead poisoning, a condition that can cause developmental delays and seizures.

But it took months for mainstream environmental groups to confront the issues in Flint.  They were involved in projects like cleaning up beaches and keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes.  They didn’t pay much attention to drinking water.

Part 1: Environmental groups slow to reach out to minorities

The Flint-headquartered Mott Foundation was a prime example, says Jumana Vasi, who funded Great Lakes environmental work there.

"The foundation when I was there primarily funded mainstream environmental organizations, and they worked on sort of traditional environmental issues: water, land, air," she says. "Focusing on the environmental laws, like the Clean Water Act or the Clean Air Act.”

Jumana Vasi
Credit Elizabeth Miller / Ideastream
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Ideastream
Jumana Vasi

Vasi, who left her job at Mott in June, sees Flint as a turning point for these mainstream groups. “Drinking water infrastructure was very invisible for a very long time until the Flint drinking water crisis happened, but that is Great Lakes water flowing through the City of Flint, flowing through Detroit, Milwaukee, Cleveland."

And as Flint pushed groups to look outward and evaluate the issues they supported, another moment in 2014 forced them to look inward.

Just a couple of months after the Flint water switch, a group called Green 2.0 released a report detailing the staff diversity of environmental organizations.

The news was bad.

The University of Michigan’s Dr. Dorceta Taylor surveyed nearly 300 organizations and found that people of color made up about 16 percent of staffers.  That’s less than half of the nationwide percentage of people of color.

And the organizations' stats were even worse for executives and board members.

To Joel Brammeier, president of the Alliance for the Great Lakes, “it was a real wake-up call to many folks in the environmental community that there’s a real gap here.”

Brammeier’s organization, which works on a wide range of issues, has since started an equity analysis, hiring a consultant to ensure it's serving everyone in the Great Lakes region.

For other environmental organizations, the National Wildlife Federation’s Simone Lightfoot says funders can provide that push.

“What I’ve seen most effective, most immediately is when funders demand a change,” Lightfoot says. “When a funder says, “You are not getting your check this time until I see diversity among your staff,' you’d be amazed at how many people get hired overnight -- overnight!”

Back in Flint, there’s been a lot of legal fallout – 15 people face criminal charges for their roles in the water crisis.

Jeffrey Grayer and his company WT Stevens are helping to replace 18,000 lead and galvanized steel pipes across the city. 

On this day, his crew is stationed in front of a house on a Flint street.  A big piece of machinery sits in the front yard as workers dig under the street to replace pipes for two homes.

Jeffrey Grayer
Jeffrey Grayer

But the pipes aren’t the only thing on his mind when it comes to Flint’s future.

“My hope in terms of the future is a drastic change, a turnaround,” Grayer says. “The pipes and the water crisis is one thing -- the poverty-stricken area and the lack of education is an entirely other discussion and conversation.”

But there’s still a question of whether the environmental movement is comfortable with that conversation and ready to change its focus.

Copyright 2017 Great Lakes Today. To see more, visit Great Lakes Today.

Reporter/producer Elizabeth Miller joined ideastream after a stint at NPR headquarters in Washington D.C., where she served as an intern on the National Desk, pitching stories about everything from a gentrified Brooklyn deli to an app for lost dogs. Before that, she covered weekend news at WAKR in Akron and interned at WCBE, a Columbus NPR affiliate. Elizabeth grew up in Columbus before moving north to attend Baldwin Wallace, where she graduated with a degree in broadcasting and mass communications.
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