The New York Times Tainted Water, Ignored Warnings and a Boss With a Criminal Past

  • oeb11
  • 08-24-2019, 03:29 PM
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ta...FWV?li=BBnbcA1


NEWARK — In the year after receiving test results showing alarming levels of lead in this city’s drinking water, Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark made a number of unexpected decisions.
© Bryan Anselm for The New York Times Newark officials issued a declaration last fall to allow them to purchase and distribute water filters for faucets in homes, according to an internal memorandum.

He mailed a brochure to all city residents assuring them that “the quality of water meets all federal and state standards.”
He declared the water safe and then condemned, in capital letters on the city’s website, “outrageously false statements” to the contrary.
And he elevated an official to run the city’s water department who had served four years in prison for conspiring to sell five kilograms of cocaine.
The moves were the latest in a long line of questionable actions that have created one of the biggest environmental crises to hit a major American city in recent years. This month, the city told tens of thousands of Newark residents to drink bottled water, but only after receiving a stern warning from federal officials about lead leaching into tap water from aging pipes.
The water emergency has torn at the fabric of Newark, recalling the public health crisis over lead contamination in Flint., Mich., and highlighting the decay of the nation’s infrastructure, particularly in poorer cities.
It has sowed anger, anxiety and confusion among residents, who question whether the city’s negligence has endangered its youngest citizens. More than 13 percent of the children in New Jersey afflicted with elevated lead levels in 2017 were in Newark, which accounted for only 3.8 percent of the state’s children.
The crisis could also cast a shadow over the presidential campaign of Senator Cory Booker, who served as Newark’s mayor from 2006 to 2013.
In 2013, an agency that Mr. Booker had revamped to handle much of the city’s water operations was gutted over a scandal involving kickbacks, no-show contracts and millions of dollars in wasted public funds. Eight officials were later charged in federal indictments, six of whom pleaded guilty.
Some advocacy groups claim that the scandal distracted Newark officials from monitoring the water supply, possibly setting the stage for the current lead crisis.
An investigation by The New York Times, based on dozens of interviews and hundreds of pages of public records, reveals blunders at all levels of government in safeguarding Newark’s water infrastructure. City officials brushed aside warnings and allowed the system to deteriorate, while state and federal regulators often did not intervene forcefully enough to help prevent the crisis.
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“There clearly has been a systemic failure,” said Erik Olson, a senior director at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group that has sued the city over the lead levels. “Residents of Newark are the ones harmed by the top-to-bottom failures of government.”
In fact, as the crisis has grown in recent weeks, officials have turned on one another, in an apparent effort to shift blame.
In an interview, Mayor Baraka defended his performance and lashed out at federal environmental officials, saying they had repeatedly refused to give the city money to pay for new pipes and bottled water.
“We have been getting no love from them, from that place at all,” Mr. Baraka said, adding that he was not criticizing the federal scientists on the ground in Newark.
Mr. Baraka defended his decision to appoint Kareem Adeem as acting director of the water department in November, overseeing a system that provides water to 400,000 people in the city and surrounding communities.
In 2011, Mr. Adeem was released from federal prison after serving four years for conspiring to sell five kilograms of cocaine, according to court records.
Mr. Adeem, who worked lower-level jobs in the department before prison, received the $130,000-a-year position but does not have a college degree. He was deputy director of the department before becoming acting director.
“His knowledge of this stuff is unparalleled,” Mr. Baraka said. “There’s no one else in the city who has the level of information, and I have full confidence that he knows what he’s doing.“
For his part, Mr. Adeem said he and his team were working hard to address the crisis.
“Early on in my life, I made some bad choices,” he said. “I got a second chance. And I’m going to take full advantage of my second chance, helping my city that I love.”
Judith Enck, a former E.P.A. regional administrator whose territory included New Jersey, said officials who run municipal water systems are typically engineers.
“It’s not an easy job,” she said. “There are a lot of regulatory requirements. Someone is in a better position if they’ve got an engineering background and some management experience.”
An impoverished city, an aging water system
Newark, with 285,000 people, is the largest city in New Jersey, but also one of the poorest in the country. It has long struggled with lead contamination, both in the water and from paint in homes.
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No concerns have been raised about the source of the water — reservoirs in northern New Jersey. The lead has leached into the tap water from 15,000 antiquated service lines that connect water pipes to homes and businesses.
City and state officials have known for years that the infrastructure was a major risk, but they lacked the funding to replace the aging service lines.
So, the city turned to an approved chemical, sodium silicate, that prevents corrosion and the leaching of lead from pipes into water. For more than two decades, it worked as expected, and no tests showed elevated levels of lead.
Then in 2016, the chemical seemed to stop working.
Here is what appeared to have happened, according to interviews and public records: The year before, the city had tinkered with the water, increasing its acidity to tamp down on possible carcinogens.
But the increased acidity seemed to reduce the effectiveness of the sodium silicate.
Elevated lead levels were found in water in nearly half of the public and charter schools in Newark. City and state officials maintained that findings in the schools were caused largely by internal plumbing and poor maintenance.
Yet beginning in 2017, New Jersey switched its water testing requirements, forced some cities to test twice a year for contaminants instead of once every three years.
The first test results to show sharply elevated lead levels in Newark were delivered to the city in July 2017 through a letter of “non-compliance” from the state Department of Environmental Protection.
A coalition of national and local groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council, sent a letter to the city demanding more information and urgent measures in response to the results.
They were met with public silence.
Mr. Baraka said in the interview that after the July 2017 letter, Newark began extensive testing as required by state law.
He said the city also notified any homes that had tested positive for lead.
But he maintained that the city simply did not know the extent of the leaching to warrant further actions, like distributing filters to homes.
“We didn’t know if there was a widespread problem, or if there’s a specific problem in people’s homes,” Mr. Baraka said. “That’s why the protocols are in place. So you can continue to do the testing.”
‘Outrageously false statements’
In January 2018, the second consecutive test results from the state found similar lead levels in Newark’s water, leading to renewed calls from local activists and national groups for transparency and action.
But Mr. Baraka played down the warnings. In the city’s annual water quality brochure, which is required by federal law to be mailed to residents each year, he wrote that the high-lead readings were only in older homes.
“Many of you have heard or read the outrageously false statements about our water but please know that the quality of our water meets all federal and state standards,” the mayor wrote on the first page of the 12-page brochure.
Buried on the fifth page, in a single paragraph, was more extensive information about the consecutive tests showing elevated lead levels.
A month later, a consultant from CDM Smith, a company hired by Newark to conduct a study of the water, sent an email to top officials at the water department, including Mr. Adeem, stating that the chemical the city had been using for nearly 20 years to prevent leaching appeared to be failing.
By this point, the water had become an election issue. Mr. Baraka’s re-election opponent, Gayle Chaneyfield Jenkins, said the lead levels showed a failure of leadership.
Mr. Baraka dismissed the warnings and rejected comparisons to Flint.
In a statement in capital letters on the city’s website, he railed against “absolutely and outrageously false statements” about the city’s water. (That statement was deleted in October 2018.)
In the interview, Mr. Baraka said he has sought to draw a distinction between Newark’s source water in its reservoirs and water that may have later been contaminated by lead from water mains.
“All I’ve been trying to do is make sure people have the facts,” Mr. Baraka said. “We can disagree and go back and forth on how that messaging was crafted.”
He was re-elected with an overwhelming majority in June 2018. A month later, the city received its third consecutive letter of noncompliance from the state, saying that for 18 consecutive months, Newark’s water was above the federal action level.
In December, the city hired Mercury Public Affairs, a public relations firm that was also contracted by former Gov. Rick Snyder of Michigan during the Flint water crisis. The $225,000 contract was intended to combat the negative publicity over contaminated water.
A Cory Booker legacy
Mr. Booker is promoting his environmental achievements as a pillar of his presidential bid, but his tenure as Newark’s mayor ended with a scandal that the current water crisis has dragged back into public eye.
The Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation was a public-private agency he revamped and stocked with leadership to handle expanded water operations. But several of the agency’s leaders skimmed money and obtained kickbacks, leaving it poorly managed, according to court records and interviews.
“Officials were concerned with taking money, not running a professional water department by hiring chemists and engineers who know how to meet E.P.A. requirements,” said Brendan O’Flaherty, a Columbia University economist who served briefly in Mr. Booker’s mayoral administration. “They left behind a seriously depleted department that made the sort of mistakes responsible for the current crisis.”
A 2014 report by the New Jersey comptroller outlined rampant abuse of public funds and scant oversight.
The atmosphere was such that staff members felt they “could do their own thing,” Linda Watkins-Brashear, the agency’s former director, later told investigators. She is now in federal prison, one of eight people charged in the scandal.
Mr. Booker came under intense criticism for failing to supervise the troubled agency, but he was never implicated in the scandal.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Booker’s campaign, Sabrina Singh, said Mr. Booker had fought for years for clean drinking water and improved urban infrastructure “from Newark City Hall to the Capitol.”
She said the earlier scandal was unrelated to the current crisis.
“There is just no connection between the people who defrauded Newark residents at the Newark Watershed a decade ago and the very real water crisis impacting Newark residents today — other than they both share one word in common — ‘water’,” she said.
Still, critics claimed the scandal likely compromised water operations going forward. Newark officials now say that some water testing records were lost during this tumultuous period in the city’s water stewardship.
It was around the time that the watershed agency was mired in scandal that acidity levels started increasing, for reasons that remain unclear. Acidity levels were in safe territory until 2015, when a sharp acceleration corroded pipes, leading to lead leaching.
“The first rule of corrosion control is to never let acidic water contact lead pipe” said Marc Edwards, a professor of engineering at Virginia Tech.
He added, based on data in reports by CDM, the consultants, “There was acidic water in the Newark system for quite some time.”
Andrew Pappachen, a longtime director of public works in Newark who retired last year, said the city had monitored the water chemistry carefully during the Booker years, stored records carefully and kept acidity levels safe.
A scramble to respond
Last October, spurred by alarming test results, officials from city, state and federal agencies moved quickly to try to coordinate a rapid response. Yet that effort soon turned to squabbling and finger pointing.
Newark officials issued an emergency declaration to allow them to purchase and distribute water filters for faucets in homes, according to an internal memorandum. The emergency declaration was never made public.
Then, in May, officials added a new chemical to the water — orthophosphate — that has proved helpful at preventing leaching. The chemical would take roughly six months to be effective.
At the state’s urging, the city began testing in homes to see if the orthophosphate was working its way into the water. As a precaution, the state also asked the city to test, for the first time, whether water filters were removing lead.
But the tests revealed two of three filters studied were not properly removing the lead. E.P.A. officials responded by sending a letter on Aug. 9 that threatened penalties “should the state and city not promptly undertake” distribution of bottled water and other actions.
Gov. Philip D. Murphy and Mayor Baraka then agreed to distribute bottled water, even as their aides began questioning why the E.P.A. had recommended filters that were now in doubt.
“We’ve gone above and beyond by providing the filters,” Catherine McCabe, the commissioner of the state Department of Environmental Protection. “We’re going above and beyond again in figuring out what’s wrong with the filters, although that is really something that E.P.A. should be full time focused on.”
After a week when state and city officials scrambled to distribute thousands of cases of bottled water and test hundreds of filters, the E.P.A. sent in field technicians and opened its local labs to speed up testing.
In a statement, the agency noted that the city and state had primary responsibility for safeguarding the water. “We continue to work together to find a longer-term solution to address the risks,” it said.
For their part, Newark residents will be picking up water for at least another month, until further testing shows lower lead levels.
“This is just a mess. I didn’t even know they were giving out free water until my sister called me to tell me,” said Adunola Clement, 45, as she picked up water on a recent week. “I don’t know what’s going on, but they are going to have to do something to fix this.”
Christina Goldbaum contributed reporting.Susan Beachy contributed research.
Christina Goldbaum contributed reporting. Susan Beachy contributed research.

Another city under long-term DPST management - and another Flint, Michigan scandal regarding lead in the drinking water for the city.

Not once did NYT point out Mayor Baraka is a DPST loyalist. Baraka responds by whining - the Feds didn't ive us bottled water and new pipes for the city.
Baraka obviously feels no responsibility for the city, his position, or the scandals involving millions of dollars under his administration.

Typical DPST management - another Baltimore. And NYT are complicit in the cover-up for the DPST Party Narrative. .

Next forum DPST's will spout "Racism" and "nazi" in defense of Mayor Baraka!
Yssup Rider's Avatar
[/I]
Typical DPST management - another Baltimore. And NYT are complicit in the cover-up for the DPST Party Narrative. .

Next forum DPST's will spout "Racism" and "nazi" in defense of Mayor Baraka!
Originally Posted by oeb11
So, if you didn't want to hear "Racism" and "nazi," why did you post this?

You give a fuck about Newark? About Flint? About anywhere but your trailer park in McManorberry?

Let the game begin!

  • oeb11
  • 08-24-2019, 04:19 PM
Just personal attacks - with false attributes to what Others care about.

I do care about those people - they should have clean water, and a city administration not siphoning off money to their own pockets.
I have seen the results of lead poisoning - it is a devastating illness.

I doubt YR has any experience - in the privileged environment in which YR lives.
Or to care about anything but little name-calling" games"

Unable to constructively address a topic or issue.



Shameful!
But PUTIN!

Time we held our federal, state and local officials accountable.
themystic's Avatar
Just personal attacks - with false attributes to what Others care about.

I do care about those people - they should have clean water, and a city administration not siphoning off money to their own pockets.
I have seen the results of lead poisoning - it is a devastating illness.

I doubt YR has any experience - in the privileged environment in which YR lives.
Or to care about anything but little name-calling" games"

Unable to constructively address a topic or issue.



Shameful! Originally Posted by oeb11
You call everyone a Socialist and a Fascist. Is that what you did when someone slapped your MAGA hat off of you? Americans like me make it possible for Un Americans like you to voice your views. But don't be surprised when people push back on your Nazi and Racist views. Please stay with cogent and constructive comments only
Is that what you did when someone slapped your MAGA hat off of you? Originally Posted by themystic
Another OCD HAT(E) ALERT.
DPST's and water appear to be an unhealthy combination.

Sad that Spartacus is unfairly tainted by his former city fiefdom.
Yssup Rider's Avatar
Just personal attacks - with false attributes to what Others care about.

I do care about those people - they should have clean water, and a city administration not siphoning off money to their own pockets.
I have seen the results of lead poisoning - it is a devastating illness.

I doubt YR has any experience - in the privileged environment in which YR lives.
Or to care about anything but little name-calling" games"

Unable to constructively address a topic or issue.



Shameful! Originally Posted by oeb11

Apoplectic much, oeb?

Just attack attack, attack. You contribute nothing here. Represent nothing. Influence nothing. You simply lie and condescend to the giggling delight of the very small handful of extremist posters who let you into their circle.

That makes you the world’s largest midget.

The only leadership you condescendingly provide is as coach of the 3-5 man circle jerk team. And you and your pals are hard in training. But not for long.

You might want to reassess your attitude and lay off the personal attacks on everybody who isn’t a Trumpsucker, or I shall taunt you a second time!

rexdutchman's Avatar
Clearly its the RUSSIANS ,,,,,,,,
Apoplectic much, oeb?

Just attack attack, attack. You contribute nothing here. Represent nothing. Influence nothing. You simply lie and condescend to the giggling delight of the very small handful of extremist posters who let you into their circle.

That makes you the world’s largest midget.

The only leadership you condescendingly provide is as coach of the 3-5 man circle jerk team. And you and your pals are hard in training. But not for long.

You might want to reassess your attitude and lay off the personal attacks on everybody who isn’t a Trumpsucker, or I shall taunt you a second time!
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
So a post full of personal attacks to discuss laying off personal attacks.

  • oeb11
  • 08-26-2019, 08:47 AM
Methinks Poster makes it clear it is about venting, taunting, and personal attacks.
Not cogent and constructive debate on the issue - which is the abject failure of Newark City management and Sen Booker to address the issue of lead in the city water pipes.

Could not learn from the criminal indictments and pleas in Flint, Michigan, can they.

A real stain on Sen Booker..
Worse - what the corruption is doing to the health of people- particularly the children - who must use the water supply of Newark.



And all some DPST posters have is threats of taunting!
Vote - DPST - their priorities are on clear display!!


I suspect it will take a Federal effort and investigation of corruption to get anything done for the people of Newark. While the DPST's close ranks behind the "Plantation Minority: and scream - Racism- caring nothing about the lead poisoning of the people.
Yssup Rider's Avatar
Methinks Poster makes it clear it is about venting, taunting, and personal attacks.
Not cogent and constructive debate on the issue - which is the abject failure of Newark City management and Sen Booker to address the issue of lead in the city water pipes.

Could not learn from the criminal indictments and pleas in Flint, Michigan, can they.

A real stain on Sen Booker..
Worse - what the corruption is doing to the health of people- particularly the children - who must use the water supply of Newark.



And all some DPST posters have is threats of taunting!
Vote - DPST - their priorities are on clear display!!


I suspect it will take a Federal effort and investigation of corruption to get anything done for the people of Newark. While the DPST's close ranks behind the "Plantation Minority: and scream - Racism- caring nothing about the lead poisoning of the people. Originally Posted by oeb11

Like YOU give a shit about Newark.




Poor oeb11. Stuck in a glass prison of emotion.


  • oeb11
  • 08-26-2019, 01:07 PM
YR makes it clear what he thinks of a predominantly Minority city with a lead water contamination issue.

Cares nothing of the people , particularly the children, affected by lead poisoning.

No ability to care one whit about other people
Classic Stalinist DPST!
Thank you for showing what is One''s character.


Nothing to offer on the topic.

Truly Hateful!