Judge drops bomb on illegal water rate hikes in Flint, MI: Ruling breathes life into fight for water rights

Latest

Marchers on the “Water Justice Journey,” a 70-mile march fromDetroit to Flint, MI to unite people statewide in a fight for water as a human right. PHOTO/VALERIE JEAN
Marchers on the “Water Justice Journey,” a 70-mile march fromDetroit to Flint, MI to unite people statewide in a fight for water as a human right.
PHOTO/VALERIE JEAN

 
FLINT, MI — After months of demonstrations, public forums and court challenges, residents of Flint, Michigan, are emboldened by a court decision in their quest for quality, affordable water. Water shut offs, coupled with over 13,000 property liens caused by exorbitant water rates, have become too common in a city known for its labor legacy.
Now a decision lawsuit filed by ordinary citizens, with an extraordinary local attorney, Val Washington, gives residents hope. The suit charged the city with illegally raising water rates 35%  in 2011 under the auspices of the then Emergency Manager regime. Relying on a recent Court of Appeals decision, which found that Emergency Manager’s do not have the authority to violate or neglect local ordinances, despite their dictatorial powers.  (This could have implications for other municipalities and school districts trapped in the mire of dictatorship.) The suit also charged that the city raided water and sewer funds in 2007 to pay off a lawsuit.
Judge Archie Haymon’s decision was bold and decisive. The temporary injunction highlights:
Suspend All Water Shutoffs
Suspend All Property Liens
Suspend Water Service Fee (Average $60.00 per household)
Reduce Water Rate 35% to satisfy illegal rate hike in 2011
Return $15 million to Water and Sewer illegally taken in 2007
With the dismantling of Democracy taking place all over the state of Michigan, with the end game to totally expropriate public assets, particularly water, citizens have been forced to turn to the courts for relief. Unfortunately, there has not been much success in this arena. The Federal courts have made it clear that we have no Constitutional right to water (including the bankruptcy judge in the Detroit case.) Yet, the struggle continues and it’s no surprise that Flint found that needle in the haystack even for this partial victory.
Due to the flurry of appeals, and with the city playing the “bankruptcy card,” the victory may be short lived, but inspires us to fight on, recognizing water is a human right.

+ Articles by this author

Claire McClinton is a Flint resident and UAW retiree.

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

1 COMMENT

  1. Our water bill has trippled since we moved to Flint. We lived in Grand Blanc and our water bill was less, way less we were paying less for clean water! Not tripple for dirty, contaminated filt! Since we have moved we pay more in one month than we did every three months in Grand Blanc! And did I mention it was Clean water, useable water!! Over charged for filt we are forced to use and expoxe our selfs and children to led and other nasty things! What kind of city mayor dose this to his people?? Who? What? Is this!!

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Middle East War Could Lead to Skyrocketing Prices—and WWIII, Says Economist

“This [war] is so out of control, without logic, rationality, humane, moral, legal justification. And extraordinarily dangerous. It will lead to world war, the way we’re going. Netanyahu and Trump are leading us to disaster,” says economist.

Tribunal of Conscience to Hold Hearings on US Crimes Against Migrants and Countries

The International Tribunal of Conscience of Peoples in Movement will launch a series of hearings beginning March 18 in Mexico City. The hearings, to be held throughout Latin America and the US, will deal with the crimes of the Trump regime and its predecessors and accomplices against migrants and refugees within US borders, as well as US crimes against other countries.

Glimpses of the Terror Inside a Detention Hotspot

The patch pictured above appears on the uniforms of some guards at "Alligator Alcatraz" in Florida. Below the grim reaper riding on an alligator are two human skulls, similar to the Totenkopf or death's head that the Nazis who ran and guarded German WWII concentration camps had on their SS uniforms.

The Women Who Move the Labor Movement Forward

History shows that the labor movement moves forward when women organize. Women have repeatedly proven willing to confront power, build solidarity, and move the fight forward when others hesitate.

She was sentenced to life in prison. A new law set her free after 23 years.

Nicole Boynton was the first woman freed as part of Georgia’s Survivor Justice Act, putting a national spotlight on how courts discount abuse in homicide cases — especially for Black women.

More from the People's Tribune