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Detroit public schools shut off drinking water because of ‘elevated levels’ of lead, copper

DMorgan

You niggas is EXCOMMUNICADO!!!
Less than a week before classes are scheduled to resume, Detroit’s city school district announced Wednesday that drinking water will be shut off for all its schools because of concerns over above-normal levels of lead and copper.

The decision comes after tests of various water sources at 16 out of 24 schools showed elevated amounts of the potentially toxic heavy metals, according to a statement from Detroit Public Schools Community District Superintendent Nikolai Vitti to local media. With the goal of ensuring the safety of students and employees, Vitti said he began testing everything from sinks to water fountains at all 106 of the district’s schools last year, the Detroit Free Press reported.

“Although we have no evidence that there are elevated levels of copper or lead in our other schools where we are awaiting test results, out of an abundance of caution and concern for the safety of our students and employees, I am turning off all drinking water in our schools until a deeper and broader analysis can be conducted to determine the long-term solutions for all schools,” Vitti said in the statement.

On Tuesday, water at the 16 schools was shut off and bottled water was being provided until water coolers can arrive, Vitti said, according to the Free Press. The district now has 34 total schools with contaminated water in the district, as 18 other schools already had their water shut off.

The remaining schools will have their water turned off this week, Vitti said, according to Detroit News. Staff and families were made aware of the decision Tuesday via automated phone calls, Detroit News reported.

Mia Jones, whose child attends Cass Technical High School, one of the schools affected, told WJBK that the situation should have been handled before it got this bad.

“These are high-achieving students, and not just because this is Cass, all Detroit public schools,” Jones said. “They deserve to be able to drink the water.”

Water quality has been an ongoing challenge for cities in Michigan, becoming the focus of national attention in 2014 with the Flint water crisis. In Flint, Mich., thousands were exposed to water that had high levels of lead and other pollutants.

Even small amounts of lead can cause serious health problems, and children under the age of 6 are especially vulnerable, according to the Mayo Clinic. Beyond learning and behavior problems, lead exposure can impact physical development, and in some cases, be fatal.

Drinking water with high levels of copper can also have adverse health consequences, including vomiting, diarrhea, stomach cramps and nausea. Copper toxicity has been associated with liver and kidney failure.

“I haven’t made this decision based on the Flint situation,” Vitti told WJBK. “I’m making this decision because I feel like it’s the best decision for children.”

Water professionals said the issue in Detroit schools isn’t the water per se but aging school infrastructure, namely old plumbing. Lead and copper can enter drinking water when service pipes containing the metals corrode, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

In a joint statement, the Great Lakes Water Authority and the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department assured residents and customers in the area that “they are not affected by the lead and copper issues that the Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) is experiencing.”

The statement touted the hourly testing of water at treatment plants and noted that water distributed to any school district building does not go through “lead service lines.”

“The drinking water is of unquestionable quality,” the statement said.

Chrystal Wilson, a school district spokesperson, told Detroit News that Vitti had asked Mayor Mike Duggan and Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder on Wednesday to convene a special task force to solve the water quality issue.

Until it is determined that the water is safe for drinking, schools will be provided with bottled water from the Great Lakes Water Authority, Detroit News reported. The school district serves more than 47,000 students, according to its website.

“The water will be turned off in all the schools until we find a solution for all schools,” Wilson said.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...levels-of-lead-copper/?utm_term=.9adbfacbc6d4
 
Detriot desperately needs money, yet giant companies are still saying they need tax breaks in order to help Detriot. Some how they keep getting them with not strings attached. Until things change, not much in Detriot will change.
 
Detriot desperately needs money, yet giant companies are still saying they need tax breaks in order to help Detriot. Some how they keep getting them with not strings attached. Until things change, not much in Detriot will change.

Detroit is thriving right now. Everyone always thinks this but aint never been in the city.

The Public Schools is a whole other issue tho
 
Detroit is thriving right now. Everyone always thinks this but aint never been in the city.

The Public Schools is a whole other issue tho
Whos thriving and what do you consider thriving? Because if pubic schools are crumbling and theres no money to fix it, it sound more like individual people with money are thriving while the city still mostly suffers.
Ford just bought that old train station from that wealthy family, now they're saying they need a like 250mill tax break from Detriot in order to cut the cost fixing a building they own because its going to cost a lot. They'll probably get it too and it will help them and not the city as usual.
 
Whos thriving and what do you consider thriving? Because if pubic schools are crumbling and theres no money to fix it, it sound more like individual people with money are thriving while the city still mostly suffers.
Ford just bought that old train station from that wealthy family, now they're saying they need a like 250mill tax break from Detriot in order to cut the cost fixing a building they own because its going to cost a lot. They'll probably get it too and it will help them and not the city as usual.

Cities don't give away tax breaks for nothing in return. The mayor or city council people are getting something. You right it may not help the city over all but some type of quid pro quo is definitely happening.

I know Detroit is different but states and city government have money to fix the shit they want to usually has nothing to do with them actually not having the money.

Same shit happened in DC with the Nationals. City schools all fucked up, city talking that we broke shit when comes to shit for public schools. Yet they somehow came up with a few hundred million to get that Nationals baseball stadium built and nothing for the schools. They have money for what they want to have money for.
 
This is America...education and the general condition of it's people is not a priority.

Education is not even on the list truthfully.

The government could legally today shut down every public school in the country. There is not one line in the constitution or any state constitution that says that we the people have a right to be provided with an education.

The government provides basic reading, writing and counting education to public school students just so they can provide big business workers who can at the very least read, write and count. That is the reason we even have public schools.
 
I'm angry as hell about this.......for as long as I can remember you got money for fixing up downtown area but no money for other parts of the city

That's how they first started development on the riverfront back in the late 80's. When the S&L's tanked and the housing market crashed they kept stories in the news about how Detroit was failing, rolling blackouts, Devil's Night, vacant lots in neighborhoods being turned to urban gardens etc in order to drive property values down to next to nothing. That's when the money came in to buy up and redevelop the riverfront and parts of downtown. When Coleman Young lost to Dennis Archer he kept that shit going and got the wheels in motion to spread it to the rest of downtown, all while neglecting development in the neighborhoods.

The thing with downtown is that's where they wanted jobs centered, and that's where they wanted white dollars to come. That's why whole neighborhoods downtown were bought, razed, and turned into brownstones and shit.
 
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The government provides basic reading, writing and counting education to public school students just so they can provide big business workers who can at the very least read, write and count. That is the reason we even have public schools.
i tell people this all the time...

every time a big factory or warehouse pops up they do mass hiring for entry level positions that all u need is a high school diploma for....

then they make the requirements to graduate lower....

then they argue over how little they can pay these people allowed by law...

so they pay people the bare minimum, then they make sure you just smart enough to work, but not smart enough for anything else....

helluva hustle
 
Cities don't give away tax breaks for nothing in return. The mayor or city council people are getting something. You right it may not help the city over all but some type of quid pro quo is definitely happening.

I know Detroit is different but states and city government have money to fix the shit they want to usually has nothing to do with them actually not having the money.

Same shit happened in DC with the Nationals. City schools all fucked up, city talking that we broke shit when comes to shit for public schools. Yet they somehow came up with a few hundred million to get that Nationals baseball stadium built and nothing for the schools. They have money for what they want to have money for.
They do so all the time tho, thats the problem & people are trying to stop it. Here are some cliff from this story.
https://jalopnik.com/ford-has-17-billion-but-says-it-needs-tax-breaks-to-re-1828369102

The question of whether government bodies should provide lucrative tax subsidies to large corporations has received a lot of attention in Detroit, which has doled out millions of dollars worth of incentives in recent years for development projects even as it endured the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Proponents tout tax incentives as a way to compete with other cities in an endless battle to produce new jobs—but the process usually leads to tortured cost-benefit analyses that may take years to scrutinize whether they’ve produced a net-benefit. Critics of the incentives are more concise: either corporations can pay the costs themselves, or at the very least provide some substantive benefits to the community in return.

A separate spokesperson told Jalopnik that Ford is working with the city for a renaissance zone, which includes a waiver of income and most city property taxes, as well as various other incentives.

“Any time a wealthy corporation asks for hundreds of millions in public money—while our schools are underfunded and our roads crumble—the public has a right to demand to know what it’s getting in return,” said Rashida Tlaib, in a statement to Jalopnik.

Tlaib has long been a fiery presence in the city and helped lead the effort to pass a ballot initiative in 2016 that would require corporations to commit to legally-binding agreements to provide benefits in return for public tax incentives.

A milder version of the ordinance Tlaib helped try to pass was ultimately approved by voters in 2016, and requires community benefits agreements for developments of $75 million or more and receiving $1 million or more in public incentives. It’s almost certain there’ll be a push for Ford to enact a so-called community benefits agreement.

Ford’s massive real estate play could dramatically reshape the face of the encompassing area, a historically working class neighborhood called Corktown, and rapidly accelerate the gentrification of Detroit’s greater downtown.

The scope of the project is why Tlaib thinks a community benefits agreement is necessary. She said an agreement with Ford should spell out specific requirements for hiring local Detroiters, for example.

“Not vague, speculative promises about economic growth and jobs, but specific, contractually-enforceable commitments to local hiring and community investment,” Tlaib said. “Enforceable community benefits agreements are a critical tool for making sure Detroit’s redevelopment is equitable and just.”
 
Pretty much, that whats always happens. YET they still get giant tax breaks on their word they'll bring jobs without having to prove weather they do or not (even tho they dont). John Oliver did a story on this, shit is sad smh
 
Pretty much, that whats always happens. YET they still get giant tax breaks on their word they'll bring jobs without having to prove weather they do or not (even tho they dont). John Oliver did a story on this, shit is sad smh


Like Lester Freeman said on The Wire "Follow the money".

Shouldn't be surprised if you find out they got really nice spread out over time campaign donations or some nice vacation trips.
 
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