Michigan restores pay to 6 in Flint water case

FLINT, Mich. -- The Michigan has restored the pay of six suspended state employees who are charged with crimes related to Flint's crisis with lead-tainted water, as efforts move forward to replace old waterlines in the city.

The Flint Journal, citing information obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, said the pay of those workers totals about $500,000 per year. The newspaper and The Detroit News reported the update on the suspended employees, who also will get help from the state in defending themselves.

Michigan Department of Environmental Quality employees Stephen Busch, Michael Prysby, Adam Rosenthal and Patrick Cook as well as Department of Health and Human Services employees Nancy Peeler and Robert Scott were suspended without pay earlier this year when the various charges against them were announced.

"Given the uncertainty of the timeliness of the resolution of these cases, combined with the unique nature of this situation," the directors of the department decided to continue the suspensions but restore pay, the departments said Thursday in a joint statement.

The statement said the two agencies "are providing support for legal counsel and will continue to monitor the legal proceedings and evaluate next steps as appropriate."

The Michigan attorney general's office has charged nine current or former public officials in its investigation, which is ongoing.

Meanwhile, Flint is moving forward on an effort to replace old lead and galvanized steel waterlines. A kickoff for the latest phase of the Fast Start program took place Friday. Mayor Karen Weaver said it will result in the replacement of service lines at 200 to 250 homes.

Contractors will be out in neighborhoods to seek permission for the work from residents, Weaver said, and Wayne State University students will be testing the water in homes before and after the pipes are replaced as part of a study funded by the National Institutes of Health.

"This testing will help residents learn if their water becomes safer to use after their service lines are replaced," Shawn McElmurry, an associate professor at Wayne State University who is overseeing the study, said in a statement.

He added that those conducting the study will receive sections of the replaced pipe from the contractors to determine their condition.

Weaver's office said the next phase of the replacement program that started in March will cover 5,000 additional homes this fall.

The project has replaced lines at 33 homes and $2 million from the state is paying for it. Over 18 months, lead leached from old pipes into Flint's water supply when the city used water from the Flint River. The water wasn't treated for corrosiveness.

Tests later found elevated lead levels in some children. Residents also complained of skin rashes. The city has since returned to Detroit's water system.

A Section on 08/20/2016

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