DiscoverThe Mother Jones PodcastHow Flint Closed the Gap Between Black and White Suffering Under COVID
How Flint Closed the Gap Between Black and White Suffering Under COVID

How Flint Closed the Gap Between Black and White Suffering Under COVID

Update: 2021-09-01
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As the Delta variant upended hope of returning to normal this summer, Mother Jones reporter Edwin Rios published a deeply reported story on Flint, Michigan, recounting how residents of this predominantly Black city have battled COVID-19 in spite of government distrust, neglect, and environmental catastrophe.



But the pandemic isn’t Flint’s first crisis: In 2014, public officials implemented cost-cutting measures that led to dangerous concentrations of lead in the city’s water supply. Up to 12,000 children were exposed to contaminated water. Then-President Barack Obama declared a state of emergency. And in 2021, nine people—including ex-Gov. Rick Snyder—were indicted on criminal charges in the matter.



A few years later, when COVID-19 barreled across the globe and vaccinations became a political flashpoint, Flint already had an infrastructure of outreach and support in place. Their water crisis wound up being a crash course in how residents learned to band together in a catastrophe—and shows how one community used a dose of social medicine to close the gap between Black and white suffering during a pandemic.



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Comments (1)

John Reed

You read good lol.

Sep 1st
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How Flint Closed the Gap Between Black and White Suffering Under COVID

How Flint Closed the Gap Between Black and White Suffering Under COVID

Mother Jones