FLINT, Mich. — Newly hired outside engineers have been given a month to find Flint’s underground lead water pipes, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder said Wednesday, saying he wants service line replacements to begin promptly but not so quickly that it causes other problems.
The governor, facing pressure from Flint Mayor Karen Weaver and national civil rights leaders for quicker action, said his ultimate goal is to replace the old pipes, but the state-funded study is needed to locate them and prioritize which ones to remove first. Weaver announced Wednesday that the city intends to begin replacing pipes next week and called on lawmakers to quickly approve $25 million in spending that Snyder proposed in his budget presentation last week.
“I do have some concerns about how fast you do it,” Snyder said during a news conference at Rowe Professional Services, the Flint company retained Tuesday to do the analysis, which will include the replacement of 30 service lines by mid-March. “But we’re talking a very short timeline to start having some pipes replaced in the community.”
He cited concerns from Virginia Tech professor Marc Edwards, who helped expose the lead problem and is now assisting both the city and state, that partial pipe replacements in Washington, D.C., had actually boosted lead contamination. The information showing which homes have risky pipes is also difficult to retrieve, stored on tens of thousands of index cards.