We sit in a rectangle of tables, old manila file folders
halved and then creased so we can write our names and prop them up in front of
us.
I’ve found my way to the basement of the Unitarian
Universalist church for the meeting of a group called Communication/Publication.
It’s something to do with water and print media.
Jan has asked me to find out what’s going on. Is there a role for East Village Magazine here?
I am clueless, but diligent. Ready for an hour and a half meeting on a cold
Monday afternoon in late March.
Around the table are some 25 people from non-profits,
grass-roots organizations, churches; many greet each other and chat---it’s
clear that they’ve been working together for some time.
Jamie-Lee, tall and strong-voiced, in a Live United tee
shirt convenes what I now understand is the Communication Workgroup, one of six
workgroups that together form Flint Water Crisis Community Partners. All around the table people introduce
themselves, say whether they represent an organization. In fact, just being a
Flint resident or concerned citizen suffices----the group is open to all. Every meeting begins this way, I learn
later. Every meeting someone new comes.
I’ve styled myself as an observer from East Village Magazine, glad to seem useful. And I live in the city of Flint.
Scanning the manila cards scrawled with first names and
organizations, I decipher the initials: EPA, HHS, ARC/LWV, and AARP are clear to
me. Some I am learning: CBOP (Community Based Organization Partners)
and CAC (Communication Access Center)---services for the Deaf. Two signers are
here.
Present too are Salvation Army, Genesee County Health Department,
Michigan Works, the Genesee County Medical Society, Save the Children (they
target the over 5000 children not in Head Start), Valley Area Agency on Aging,
and two uniformed National Guard officers---presumably from the Mayor’s office.
They listen, sometimes answer
questions.
The Unitarian minister, Deane, contributes her pastoral
insight and experience with clergy who advocate for the people of Flint.
A few people strike me as old hands at community organizing:
Joe King from Flint Neighborhoods United, Jane Richardson from Salem Housing
and the paper, Flint Our Community Our
Voice, and Jane O’Dell from the Flint’s Community Resolution Center.
A regional organization, Crossing Water, is here in the
person of Michael Hood, acerbic and outspoken.
Devoted to disaster relief for vulnerable communities, Crossing Water
coordinates with social services and mobilizes teams of volunteers who go house
to house, install, fix or change filters. Check if young children (under 6
years) or pregnant or nursing mothers are in the home. The reports from the front is discouraging.
But after a winter of blaming and castigation, suspicion and
aspersion, MSNBC exposés, presidential candidate slogans, and Congressional
hearings, I am cheered to sit in a group where local staff from EPA, Health and
Human Services, and the Genesee County Health Department respond supportively to
questions, text queries to their superiors, and take notes to get more
information from their offices.
And it’s clear from the discussion that answers do come back.
These folks see one another every Monday; they evince the ease of people going
at a common problem for a couple of months together.
As a veteran of decades of academic committees, I can see
the picture emerging. First order of
business is a review of “open issues.”
Who has answers for the list from last time?
The Communication group works steadily through questions about organ and blood
donation (various reasons why lead transmission through blood transfusions
would be low; organs also low since majority of lead is stored in blood and
bone rather than organs), the effect of heat on plastic water bottles (EPA
doesn’t anticipate problems since the kind of plastic is stable), getting a
flow chart that shows the official entities involved in Flint water recovery
efforts (Jamie-Lee is getting this; word is that a unified document is in the
works but will take months). The
community needs a single source of information; this is a traumatized
population.
Discussion moves to today’s concerns. First voice at the
table comes from the Genesee County Medical Society about problems with calling
2-1-1 to report skin rash issues and get to free screening with dermatologists;
why is there a 40-60% no show rate?
The deaf community representative notes that those using the
“relay” ID complain that they are often denied service (a problem in general
with doctors). Someone mentions that a lead screening program was also put in
place right away and it’s not being used.
Then there’s the media and conflicting information. Water
Defense (Mark Ruffalo’s group) hasn’t shared their data on why not to bathe in
the water with EPA. The EPA stance
remains the same: except for young children bathing is ok. Both EPA and CDC continue to test.
What about people with pacemakers and metal implants? It goes on the list.
Back to the media and how to hold them responsible for
accuracy? Corrections after the fact are useless. What about a press conference with media? (This
is voted down). Sometimes the headline is inflammatory while the whole article body
not. Local radio does the same. Media
expand the context of misinformation while the real news is that there is
conflicting information.
Then there’s the issue of uniformed National Guard at the points
of distribution for water---the PODs. Some
populations (such as the undocumented) are wary of uniformed presence. Fire stations are phasing out in favor of community
PODs, C-Pods, one in every ward in the city. More education---verbal information and
flyers---can take place at C-PODS.
I check the time; the hour and a half is nearly up and the
group has not yet broken out into its two task groups to work on the website
and print publication. The issues that
have come forth today have swamped the meeting.
Although it’s too late to work today, the two task groups report: website people have made progress and a shell is ready. It’s a measure of our
computerized society that the website seems an easier task than the print
challenge---up-to-date material in simple language for a range of different
groups unlikely to use the internet (senior citizens, homebound, illiterate,
vision impaired, homeless, undocumented, and non-English speaking are some of
the 19 categories).
The print people also have a list of 50 trusted sources to
communicate print information. How to cover printing costs, especially high
because color graphics are needed. EPA has produced an effective flyer with
simple language and graphics, but it bears the EPA logo. So the next question is who are the people whom
will these populations trust? Who are
the individuals and organizations who can get reliable information to people on
the other side of the digital divide, mistrustful, wary of endless conflicting
information, worn down by changing conditions?
I am a print person, happy to find myself among those struggling
with paper and text and distribution. It’s 5 pm and people are packing up. The publications task group is frustrated. They
assure me that today’s meeting was a exception; next Monday the break out into
the two groups will happen first.
For me, for now, I take home what one participant leaned
over to me and said as today’s session ended, “you come to one meeting and you
are no longer observer; it is your meeting now.”
Note:
This was the first of a series of meetings of the Communication
Workgroup of Community Partners that I attended on March 21, 2016. I’ve continued to attend their Monday
meetings. The website has now been
launched; find it at http://flintcares.com The
publications task group has developed a print flyer using simple language and
graphics called “The Bottom Line.”
Information comes from the website where accuracy is vetted; content of
“The Bottom Line” will change according to current need. First issue deals water resource sites and
using and changing home filters. Next
issues will deal with nutrition and Legionella.
View more essays like this one at
East Village Magazine
http://www.eastvillagemagazine.org/
View more essays like this one at
East Village Magazine
http://www.eastvillagemagazine.org/