NOVA investigates the water disaster in Flint and unravels a disturing truth about the vulnerablilities of water systems across the country.
Water. Turn on the faucet and it’s always there. Without it we perish. But how safe is our tap water? "Poisoned Water" investigates how the water disaster in Flint, Michigan, has brought to light a disturbing truth about the vulnerabilities of water systems across the country.
Narrated by Joe Morton, this eye-opening new one-hour documentary investigates exactly what went wrong in Flint.
From the delicate intricacies of water chemistry to the biology of lead poisoning to the engineering challenge of replacing a ravaged water system, NOVA uses the lens of science to peer into the complex crisis ... and to explore what it means for our nation’s infrastructure.
April 25, 2014. In a money-saving maneuver, the city of Flint, Michigan — under the authority of a state appointed emergency manager — switched its municipal water supply from Lake Huron to the Flint River.
Unbeknownst to the city officials at the time, this switch would trigger a chemical chain reaction with devastating results: thousands of children exposed to lead poisoning, and very likely two outbreaks of Legionnaire’s Disease, claiming twelve lives.
“The water crisis in Flint has affected hundreds of thousands of people, and we now know that many cities around the country are vulnerable,” said Paula S. Apsell, Senior Executive Producer, NOVA. “If we’re going to tackle these problems, we have to understand why they’re happening. 'Poisoned Water' explains the science — the chemistry, biology and engineering — that lies at the heart of this story.”
Guided by the nation’s leading water experts and with intimate access to the families most affected by the crisis, "Poisoned Water" unfolds like a detective story.
The first trickle of trouble came in the form of discolored water, then an increase in reports of rashes and boils. Worried citizens complained; officials insisted the water was fine.
Flint mom LeeAnne Walters was among the first to suspect something was seriously wrong, spurred on by the living experiment she had in her own home: her twin boys. One of them wasn’t growing properly.
Unwilling to accept the city’s response that the water was drinkable, Walters took matters into her own hands, contacting an independent research team from Virginia Tech, headed by chemical engineer Marc Edwards.
Testing the tap water in Walters’ home, Edwards was stunned by the results: not only was there lead in the water, but the levels were so high that the water flowing from her home’s faucets qualified as hazardous waste.
The film follows the trail of evidence as Edwards and his Virginia Tech team, including civil engineer Siddhartha Roy, leapt into action, investigating exactly what had gone wrong when the local authorities switched the city water supply.
To solve the mystery, the researchers would need to unravel the complex chemistry that played out in the water pipes running beneath Flint’s streets and inside its residents’ homes.
The crisis in Flint, a poverty-stricken and predominantly African American community, is just one striking example of how science intersects with social justice.
Edwards had seen this kind of chemical disaster before. On NOVA, he and EPA environmental engineer Elin Betanzo recount the story of the water contamination crisis that unfolded in Washington, D.C., in the early 2000s.
There, the water authority switched the chemicals used to kill bacteria in the water supply. What they didn’t realize was that the new water chemistry would strip the protective coating inside the pipes, corroding the metal, leaching lead into the water system and exposing thousands of people to lead poisoning — including, it is suspected, members of Congress.
As Edwards and other water engineers explain, both the D.C. and the Flint crises could have been avoided if authorities had carefully managed the water chemistry.
NOVA reveals the discovery that the Flint water authority failed to add a key chemical, called a “corrosion inhibitor,” which can help pipes build up that healthy scale to protect them from corroding. Without it, drinking the water from Flint pipes was like “drinking through a lead painted straw.”
When Edwards heard from Walters in 2015, he had a strong suspicion that, just like in D.C. over a decade earlier, the water utility was hiding something. But because of his experience with D.C. water crisis, he was undeterred; he had a plan ... He and his team coordinated their own widespread testing of Flint’s water.
When they analyzed the results, Edwards’s suspicions were confirmed. It was undeniable. Flint’s municipal water system was contaminated with lead, exposing thousands of children to the risk of lifelong intellectual deficits and behavioral problems.
However, as the film exposes, the disaster didn’t stop there. At the lab bench of Dr. Amy Pruden, we see how the unique Flint water chemistry had one last deadly secret: the corroded iron in the pipes reacted with the chlorine in the water, making the chlorine unavailable to disinfect the water.
The result was the growth of Legionella, the bacteria responsible for Legionnaire’s disease. Indeed, there had been two outbreaks of Legionnaire’s disease in Flint, but they were not reported until well after they occurred. Twelve people died.
In Flint, the city has switched back to Detroit water after enormous public pressure, but the damage to the pipes has been done. A residential pipe replacement project has begun as part of the solution.
The job will not be easy, it will not be cheap and it will not be quick.
What’s more — overhauling Flint’s failing water infrastructure is only a microcosm of the gargantuan task of fixing America’s drinking water infrastructure, something to which the American Society of Civil Engineers gives a grade of a “D.”
Meanwhile, fearful Flint residents are still living off bottled water. With their trust of the government as corroded as the pipes themselves, some have resigned themselves to it for a lifetime.
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Credits:
A NOVA production by Bluespark Collaborative, LLC for WGBH Boston. Produced and directed by Llewellyn Smith. Co-produced by Kelly Thomson. Executive producer is Julia Cort. Senior executive producer for NOVA is Paula S. Apsell.