Bathing your child. Drinking a glass of water. Even brushing your teeth with tap water is no longer possible for the community of Flint, Michigan. “It can’t be done,” says Michael Harris, founder of The McKenzie Patrice-Croom Flint Community Lab.
In 2014, the city of Flint failed to treat its water with corrosion inhibitors, resulting in lead leeching out of the water pipes and into the water that supplied the homes of tens of thousands of people. The consequences were devastating. Once lead enters your system, it stays in your blood for around two weeks, before seeping into your bones and brain, where it can cause neurological disorders, behavioral issues in children, and sterilization and miscarriages in women. “What happened in Flint was a huge breakdown of trust,” Candice Mushatt, head of the Flint Community Lab, explains. “We needed a way to restore the trust in our water and we needed a way for our residents to be empowered.”
And so, the Flint Community Lab was born.