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Tag: Flint Water Crisis

  • Healey rips EPA for delays in lead removal funding

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    BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey is renewing calls for the Trump administration to release federal funding to remove underground lead pipes from drinking water systems after months of delays.

    Healey blasted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for continuing to hold back the money from Massachusetts and other states. She said the delays have forced the state to discontinue its lead line replacement program that provides zero-interest loans to communities to identify and remove contamination.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • ‘We the Poisoned’: Flint water scandal uncovered in explosive new book

    ‘We the Poisoned’: Flint water scandal uncovered in explosive new book

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    click to enlarge

    Courtesy of Jordan Chariton

    Investigative reporter Jordan Chariton with his new book, We the Poisoned: Exposing the Flint Water Cover-Up and the Poisoning of 100,000 Americans.

    A decade after the Flint water crisis began, a new book chronicles the devastating impact on the city’s residents and how local and state officials covered up the disaster.

    We the Poisoned: Exposing the Flint Water Crisis Cover-Up and the Poisoning of 100,000 Americans was released Tuesday, and the 296-page book by investigative reporter Jordan Chariton features new bombshells that raise serious questions about the handling of the health disaster.

    The book also demonstrates that the catastrophic impact of the poisoned water continues today, even after local and national reporters have virtually stopped covering the crisis.

    Chariton calls the Flint water disaster “the biggest government cover-up this century.”

    One of the biggest revelations is that state officials, including then-Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, knew that the water was tainted long before alerting residents. The book also features exclusively obtained, confidential testimony from Snyder, who claimed under oath that he couldn’t recall details of the crisis and contradicted his congressional testimony.

    Chariton, an independent investigative reporter, also alleges in the book that Snyder lied about not knowing about the deadly Legionnaires’ outbreak.

    The book also explores Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s controversial decision to “shitcan” the criminal investigation involving city and state officials accused of covering up the crisis.

    Chariton, a frequent critic of corporate media, also casts blame on local news outlets for repeatedly failing to adequately cover the crisis. He writes that reporters often regurgitated local and state officials’ false claims while ignoring evidence that the water was poisoned.

    Chariton is a former producer for Fox News and MSNBC, and says he visited Flint 21 times; interviewed countless residents, and local and state officials; and combed through tens of thousands of records to write the book. At the time, he was writing news stories about Flint’s water for The Guardian, The Intercept, Vice, and Metro Times.

    “I didn’t even think about writing a book until about two years ago,” Chariton tells Metro Times. “I was getting frustrated because I had written several major stories about the cover-up. But it wasn’t really getting the reach that I wanted. I got so much information, and frankly I believe bombshell after bombshell of blatant corruption, so I thought the best way to tell this was through a book.”

    Chariton says the book is more than a retelling of a catastrophe.

    “I believe the book outlines very meticulously a pretty sinister conspiracy between public officials, Wall Street banks, and the state government,” he says. “I believe it really reveals in a timeline format the biggest cover-up this century. I don’t mean to be dramatic. I don’t know anything else that has killed so many people.”

    Chariton also scoffs at the state’s official claim that only 12 people have died as a result of the poisoned water.

    “It is unknowable how many people died from this because it has caused so many different health problems, from kidney and liver failure to cancer, which is surging right now in Flint. Legionnaires’ deaths could be in the hundreds,” he says.

    As he knocked on doors to interview residents, Chariton said he began to notice an unusual number of deaths of people in their 50s and 60s.

    The book, he says, is bigger than Flint.

    “In the broader psyche of America, when you think of a government coverup, a lot of older people think Watergate,” he says. “But I believe the Flint water cover-up makes Watergate look like child’s play. I say that because Watergate was a bunch of numbskulls screwing around. It didn’t kill anyone. Whereas with this, you have government officials, as it’s detailed in the book, knowing the water is unsafe while telling residents the water is safe. You have a governor who is aware the water is unsafe but is not taking action.”

    One of the still-unraveling tragedies, Chariton says, is the children who have been impacted from lead poisoning. Lead is highly toxic to the brain, nervous system, and other organs, especially in infants and young children. Even at low levels, lead is linked to reduced IQ, ADHD, irreversible brain damage, classroom problems, and even criminality and poverty. Lead can also cause headaches, hearing loss, and hyperactive behavior.

    There is no safe level of lead, and even a small amount can cause irreversible damage, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    Despite the government-caused disaster, residents are not getting the help they need because there’s no access to free medical care, Chariton says.

    “There definitely is a lost generation,” Chariton says. “There are people dying slowly without the necessary health care because they can’t afford it. It’s really jarring. I saw people I’ve met in 2016, and I saw them two years later, and they looked like they had aged 10 years.”

    Chariton cautions that the failure to hold anyone accountable for Flint sends a dangerous message.

    “If the people who are responsible for this get away with this, it’s the playbook for everywhere else,” Chariton says.

    The forward to the book is written by Erin Brockovich, an American legal clerk and environmental activist who became famous for her role in building a case against the Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) of California in 1993.

    “Maybe we got comfortable, maybe we became complacent, or maybe we bought into the illusion that some Superman was out there about to fly in and save us all,” Brockovich writes in the forward. “But now we are seeing that there is no wizard coming to our rescue. In reality, it’s up to us to find our courage, to use our hearts, and to think for ourselves.”

    The Flint water crisis began when the city, while under state emergency management, switched its drinking water supply to the Flint River to save money in 2014. The decision created one of the nation’s worst public health disasters in decades, contaminating drinking water with dangerous levels of lead.

    State officials ignored signs of serious health hazards in the predominantly Black city and failed to implement corrosion-control treatments, causing lead, iron, and rust to leach from aging pipes into the water supply.

    In 2018, Chariton launched Status Coup, an on-the-ground, investigative journalism company on YouTube. It has nearly 200,000 subscribers.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Why the election may slow plans to replace lead pipes

    Why the election may slow plans to replace lead pipes

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    With the Environmental Protection Agency’s latest — and strictest — plan to minimize the risk of Americans drinking lead-contaminated water on the horizon, the debate over whether the rules go too far or not nearly far enough is reaching a tipping point.

    Although lead was banned from new water service lines in 1986, it’s estimated that more than 9 million such lines still carry drinking water to homes and businesses throughout the country. Under the EPA’s Lead and Copper Rule Improvements proposal, water utilities would be required to replace all lead-containing lines within 10 years.

    The proposal from the Biden administration builds on different rules put out in the waning days of the Trump term that allowed up to 30 years for service line replacement, triggered only when lead levels test higher than 15 parts per billion. The new proposal, which would largely supplant the Trump rules, calls for stricter monitoring, enhanced public education, and the 10-year pipe replacement mandate regardless of lead levels.

    An October deadline looms for the new rules to be adopted; otherwise, enforcement of the less-stringent Trump administration rules will begin. And complicating matters more: November’s election results could shake up whose rules the nation must follow.

    While many cities and states have begun to replace their lead pipes, some utilities and officials say the 10-year time frame is unfeasible and too expensive. They say it would be difficult for water utilities to follow the rules while dealing with new EPA limits on five PFAS contaminants, known as “forever chemicals,” and failing pipes, among other issues.

    “Nobody will tell you that having lead in contact with water is a great idea,” said Steve Via, director of federal relations for the American Water Works Association, the country’s largest nonprofit water utility industry group. “The question becomes: How urgent a matter is it, and at what pace does it need to be done?”

    Already, 15 Republican state attorneys general have argued that the proposed rules infringe on states’ rights and chase “speculative” benefits. On the other side, 14 Democratic attorneys general said that the EPA should find more ways to ensure pipes are quickly replaced in low-income areas.

    To be sure, no amount of lead is considered safe to consume. Lead is a neurotoxin known to cause irreversible long-term organ damage, lower IQs, higher risk for miscarriage, asthma, cardiovascular disease, impotence, and elevated blood pressure.

    Public health advocates say societal costs — in health care, social services, and lost productivity — far outweigh the cost of replacement. They say corrosion controls that have limited lead exposure can and do fail, pointing to human and systemic errors that prompted the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, where thousands of people were exposed to high lead levels in their drinking water.

    “That’s the whole thing about lead pipes: They unexpectedly release lead into drinking water,” said Roya Alkafaji, who manages an initiative focused on reducing lead exposure from water with the Environmental Defense Fund, a national advocacy group. “I don’t think kicking the can down the road is the solution.”

    According to a 2023 analysis by Ronnie Levin, an instructor at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the benefit of replacing lead pipes outweighs the costs by a 35:1 ratio.

    Using the EPA’s estimated $335 million annual costs from the Trump rules, which include water sampling, corrosion control treatments, inventorying and replacement of lead service lines, and educational outreach, Levin’s analysis shows that $9 billion in annual health care costs could be avoided. An additional $2 billion in spending — through upgraded infrastructure and reduced corrosion damage to appliances — could be saved. The broad spectrum of health-related costs has historically been ignored in analyzing the actual costs of leaving lead service lines in place, said Levin, a former EPA scientist.

    Estimates of the cost to replace the nation’s lead pipes range from $46 billion to more than $90 billion, far higher than the $15 billion set aside in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. The Biden administration has framed those funds as a down payment, 49% of which will be grants or principal forgiveness loans allocated on the basis of the estimated number of lead pipes per state. Other funding programs can also be tapped.

    Replacement costs vary widely by location, with average costs ranging from the EPA’s 2019 estimate of $4,700 per service line to $12,500 from Via’s utilities trade group.

    Carolyn Berndt, legislative director for sustainability at the National League of Cities, said funding challenges could render the EPA’s 10-year timeline unrealistic. While her organization is encouraging local leaders to secure as much funding as possible, what’s available won’t be enough to cover replacement costs for some localities — especially low-income areas, which often have older infrastructure and more lead pipes.

    Some direct costs could fall to property owners, such as replacing the lines connecting their water meters to their homes. And people could face indirect costs if utilities increase customer rates to offset the expense.

    Still, some communities, such as Olathe, Kansas, are finding ways to move forward with a patchwork of funding. Out of 37,000 service lines there, 266 galvanized pipes were found serving downtown properties, where many of the city’s most vulnerable residents live. The coating for galvanized pipes typically contains lead.

    Workers will replace the lines at no cost to property owners in the city of 147,000 people outside Kansas City, said Megan Spence, who is overseeing the city project. It is expected to cost around $2.3 million, paid for with a loan from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and about $1.2 million in federal infrastructure funding. About $500,000 for lawn restoration is included.

    “We’re really looking at this as an opportunity and another way to protect public health,” said Spence. “There shouldn’t be any lead lines in any drinking water distribution systems.”

    Elsewhere, some Republicans, such as Indiana state Sen. Eric Koch, are leading the charge to replace the pipes despite historical pushback in conservative states against federal mandates. He said lawmakers should consider the harm — and long-term costs — caused by delaying the cleanup of lead from drinking water.

    In March, Indiana’s Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb signed a unanimously approved bill, which Koch authored, designed to lower costs for replacing customer-owned lead service lines. Under the law, landlords are required to enroll in a state-approved program to have their lead pipes removed at no cost by their water utility or pay for replacement themselves.

    Koch said estimates for replacing customer-owned service lines are around $8,000, though the cost could be significantly higher for some properties. But by starting the work now, Koch said, utilities can avoid price inflation and ultimately remove pipes more cost efficiently.

    Meanwhile, time is running out to publish the Biden administration’s proposed rules in the Federal Register. Water utilities will be required to comply with the Trump rules as of Oct. 16 unless the EPA publishes the newer rules before then, said Erik Olson, a senior strategic director of the National Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group. It remains unknown what the June 28 Supreme Court ruling on agency rulemaking, known as the “Chevron deference” decision, will mean for either set of rules.

    A deadline is also looming for the 60-day “look-back” period under the Congressional Review Act, during which a regulation can be repealed. If control of Congress or the White House flips with the November election, the Biden administration’s rules could be repealed under an emboldened Congress even before the January swearing in of new officeholders.

    “Depending on how the election goes, it could become a hot issue,” said Tom Neltner, national director of the advocacy organization Unleaded Kids.

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

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    Sandy West, KFF Health News

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  • The EPA says lead in Flint’s water is at acceptable levels. Residents still have concerns about its safety.

    The EPA says lead in Flint’s water is at acceptable levels. Residents still have concerns about its safety.

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    The Environmental Protection Agency says lead in the water in Flint, Michigan, is lower than federal safety limits specify. It’s been a decade since the city, attempting to save millions of dollars, inadvertently exposed more than 100,000 people, including vulnerable children, to lead seeping from aging pipes — and many residents still don’t trust what’s coming out of their faucets and showers.

    Melissa Mays, who has become an advocate in the city and was a lead plaintiff in a class action suit over the exposure, says little has changed in the city since 2014. That’s when the economically troubled city disconnected its water supply from Detroit’s system and began drawing from the Flint River. 

    The corrosive chemicals used to decontaminate the river water sent lead from the city’s pipes into residents’ faucets. The number of children with dangerous levels of lead in their blood doubled. The water system also may have played a role in some cases in a deadly outbreak of Legionnaire’s disease.

    Mays, who had previously taken just a daily multivitamin and toted a gallon of tap water to the gym for her daily workout, now takes 15 prescribed pills per day. 

    We’re trying to be civil, and yet no one’s in jail. The pipes aren’t replaced; the yards aren’t fixed,” she said. “We don’t have health care.”

    And the city’s children have faced the risk of lifelong health effects. “It’s pretty stunning that to this day, we continue to use the bodies of our kids as detectors of environmental contamination,” said pediatrician Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, whose work spurred official action on the crisis. 

    The results of children’s blood tests by the summer of 2015 were a red flag for Hanna-Attisha, who released her findings that September. The city switched its water source back to Detroit’s system less than a month later, but by then exposure was widespread. Hanna-Attisha estimates as many as 14,000 children were affected. Lead is a neurotoxin that’s especially harmful to children, who may suffer developmental delays, lasting behavioral problems and lower IQs as a result


    Pediatrician on lessons from Flint water crisis: “Flint has opened our eyes”

    09:31

    The federal government declared an emergency for Flint in January 2016. Six months later, tests revealed lead levels in Flint’s water had returned to what’s considered acceptable under federal standards.

    Hanna-Attisha said the ongoing work to replace the pipes has the potential to release more lead from them, and wouldn’t describe Flint’s water as “safe.”

    On its site, the EPA still recommends the use of lead filters in Flint as a precaution, because a lot of pipes that have not yet been replaced.

    “Understanding the inadequacy of our drinking water rules, I cannot say ‘safe,’ I can say it’s in compliance with rules. But those rules are not fully protective, especially of our children,” said Hanna-Attisha, who is the associate dean for public health at Michigan State University’s College of Human Medicine.

    The community has established the Flint Registry, which helps track and understand the scope of the crisis. Hanna-Attisha said it has more than 20,000 registrants and has helped connect people with services and programs for support more than 30,000 times.

    “As a pediatrician, we know what lead does. It’s damning. It is a potent, irreversible neurotoxin. There is no safe level. It erodes cognition, it twists behavior,” she said.”It can alter the life course of a child. And worse, it can alter the life course of a population of children.”

    The parent of one of the children who was exposed described the crisis as “some sort of pandemic.” James Proulx joined a class action lawsuit after his 8-year-old daughter was exposed. When he found out she had lead in her blood, he was worried.

    There’s learning disabilities that go along with it. So I thought, you know, she’s going to be up for a tough future,” he said.

    As “Little Miss Flint,” pageant winner Mari Copeny earned national recognition at just 8 years old for drawing attention to the issue, first helping distribute bottled water and later her own brand of water filters. 

    “We still don’t have clean water. Isn’t that so crazy? Isn’t that so crazy? … They, the people in charge, don’t care. They literally don’t care. Because if they cared, our pipes would have been fixed. We would have been had clean, safe drinking water,” she said. “There is no reason as to why we should still have bad toxic drinking water. And like, where is our clean water? We’ve been fighting for so long since 2014. Yet no clean water, no pipe dream fixed.”


    “Little Miss Flint” Mari Copeny reflects on tackling water crisis since 8 years old

    09:20

    Now nearly 17, Copeny doesn’t anticipate an end to the work.

    “It’s not just Flint that has a water crisis. America has a water crisis. And my filters, they’re all over. They’re all over because everybody deserves clean drinking water. Nobody deserves to have toxic water,” she said. “Everybody says clean water. It’s a basic human need. It’s what we need to live and survive.”

    Resident Nate Campbell told CBS News said the crisis is still on people’s minds. He still sees construction going on across town with the city’s pipes. And it’s still the first thing people ask about when they find out someone is from Flint.

    “I think there’s a lot more work that needs to be done to, hold people accountable for their actions,” he said.

    Seven years after the crisis began, former Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and eight other current and former Michigan officials were charged in connection with the scandal — charges that were dismissed last year because the state Supreme Court ruled a one-judge grand jury was improperly used to bring the charges.

    When CBS News reached out to the EPA to ask about Flint’s water, an agency spokesperson said in a statement: “Flint’s water system has continually tested below action levels for both lead and copper. Residual chlorine levels also met water quality parameters.”


    Read the EPA’s full statement:

    Every community deserves clean water to drink, and the Biden-Harris Administration is working to ensure no family has to worry whether their water is safe when they turn on the tap. That’s why EPA efforts to ensure safe, reliable drinking water for Flint residents are ongoing. The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy has primary authority for Michigan’s safe drinking water program and works with Flint to ensure compliance. EPA and EGLE oversee and track compliance of public water systems in Michigan, including Flint. EPA also provides direct technical assistance to help Flint maintain compliance and build capacity.

    Nationwide, EPA is committed to partnering with states and communities to protect children and families and ensure our nation’s drinking water pipes are lead-free. By leveraging the historic investment of $15 billion made possible by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, we are moving one step closer to achieving President Biden’s vision of 100% lead-free water systems for all.

    Background

    Ten years ago, the city of Flint’s state-appointed emergency manager changed the municipal drinking water source from the Great Lakes Water Authority (sourced by Lake Huron and the Detroit River) to the Flint River. Inadequate treatment of the river’s corrosive water stripped the protective layer of orthophosphate in pipes throughout city’s drinking water distribution system. This caused the rapid rise of lead levels in Flint’s drinking water and the ensuing public health crisis.   

    On January 21, 2016, EPA issued an emergency order under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act (Section 1431) to the city and the State of Michigan requiring numerous actions to protect Flint residents and address the public health threat. Since July 2016, Flint’s water system has continually tested below action levels for both lead and copper. Residual chlorine levels also met water quality parameters.

    EPA has been working closely with Flint and the State of Michigan to ensure full compliance with all actions required by the federal order. Key improvements include the following:

    • Flint constructed a backup pipeline connecting treated water from the Genesee County Drain Commission to the Flint Public Water System as a secondary, back-up source of water.  A reliable backup is critical to maintain service during an emergency and during routine maintenance and repairs.
    • The city and the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) completed comprehensive study on corrosion control and pipe loops to determine optimal treatment. That treatment regimen –now in place– ensures lead levels stay well below the action level.
    • Flint now has more permanent staff at its drinking water plant and has developed new and updated standard operating procedures.  As of January 2023, the city has 11 state-certified, licensed drinking water operators. Adequate staffing is key to ensuring safe, efficient, and effective operations.

    EPA efforts to ensure safe, reliable drinking water for Flint residents are ongoing. EGLE has primary authority for Michigan’s safe drinking water program and works with Flint to ensure compliance.  EPA and EGLE oversee and track compliance of public water systems in Michigan, including Flint. EPA also provides direct technical assistance to help Flint maintain compliance and build capacity.

    Through the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act of 2016, EPA provided Flint with grants totaling more $100 million for system upgrades. The agency has also established and maintained a robust program to engage with Flint residents and stakeholders. Last summer, EPA hosted two community workshops:  the first focused on water safety, testing and filters and the second focused on the ongoing redevelopI’m surement of the Buick City-RACER Trust site.

    For more information, visit EPA’s website on the Flint response.

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  • Outspoken Flint Councilman and TikTok sensation Eric Mays dies

    Outspoken Flint Councilman and TikTok sensation Eric Mays dies

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    City of Flint

    Flint City Councilman Eric Mays.

    Eric Mays, a passionate and combative Flint City Councilman and TikTok sensation who became one of the most outspoken supporters of residents during the water crisis, has died, city officials announced late Saturday.

    Mays was 65.

    His cause of death wasn’t immediately clear.

    First elected to the council in 2013, Mays was one of the first public officials to voice concerns about the water crisis that began in 2014. While other state and city officials downplayed the crisis, Mays was an unwavering advocate for residents.

    During council meetings, Mays’s passion often manifested as combativeness as he clashed with others on the board. On more than a few occasions, police escorted Mays out of council meetings for clamoring with his colleagues.

    In December, Mays was suspended from the council for 90 days for making “constant frivolous motions” and using “racist rhetoric,” according to a council motion. Mays planned to file a federal lawsuit against the council, saying the suspension violated his First Amendment rights and left his constituents unrepresented.

    In January 2023, Mays called other Black council members “handkerchief-head Negros,” “Uncle Toms,” and “Sambos.”

    Mays often posted his clashes on TikTok, where he garnered more than 220,000 followers who appreciated his unfiltered advocacy for Flint residents.

    click to enlarge Human rights activist Sam Riddle (left) with Flint City Councilman Eric Mays. - Courtesy of Sam Riddle

    Courtesy of Sam Riddle

    Human rights activist Sam Riddle (left) with Flint City Councilman Eric Mays.

    Sam Riddle, a longtime friend and supporter of the councilman, says Mays was popular among residents because he zealously fought for them.

    “Eric Mays raised hell and irritated people, but his behavior moved leadership and mis-leadership up the ladder of consciousness one rung at a time,” Riddle, political director of the National Action Network, a civil rights organization led by the Rev. Al Sharpton, tells Metro Times. “He had a unique ability to make people angry because he was so right analytically, so people would hate on him rather than take on the issues he raised. Like the rest of us, he had personal flaws, but they paled in comparison to his astute political abilities.”

    The Lento Law Group, which represented Mays in numerous legal matters, said the councilman stood up for his residents when no one else would.

    “We are heartbroken by the sudden, tragic death of our client, Councilman Eric Mays,” Lento Law Group wrote in a statement to Metro Times. “Our hearts go out to his family, friends, and constituents. Councilman Mays was a man devoted to public service. His unrelenting advocacy on behalf of his constituents gave them a voice in a government body that often seemed interested in silencing voices that did not agree with the majority.”

    The law firm added, “We will continue to fight for those constituents and the City of Flint in Councilman Mays’ name and memory, including against those individuals whose gracious statements concerning his passing stand in stark contrast to the actions they took against him while he was a public servant. Rest in Peace, Councilman Mays.”

    Flint Mayor Sheldon Neely, with whom Mays often clashed, spoke warmly of the councilman in a written statement.

    “This is a tremendous loss for our community and a shock to all friends and family,” Neeley said. “As our community grieves during this difficult time, on behalf of Councilman Mays’ family, we ask that community members respect their privacy and allow them time and space to mourn. We continue to lift the family in prayer.”

    Citing Mays’s “bold and courageous service,” city officials said in a statement that the flag at City Hall would be lowered to half-staff in his honor Monday.

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    Steve Neavling

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