Gerrymanderer2 Wrote:
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> That motherfucker shit elitist Republican governor
> of Michigan and his emergency planner cut costs
> and saved 50 grand. Just like Brownback of Kansas.
> Or that piece of shit you got in Florida. Let's
> not forget the fat fuck in New Jersey. Republican
> governors doing great things nationwide.
Meet Darnell Earley, the [Democrat] man behind Flint’s water crisis and a lot of other municipal messes
BY
JASON SILVERSTEIN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, January 21, 2016, 4:40 PM
Let’s not allow one name to slip out of the chaotic conversations about Flint’s water crisis: Darnell Earley, the man who sealed the deal on the city’s poisoned system.
Earley, 64, is the former emergency manager of Flint and the current emergency manager of Detroit Public Schools. In other words, his haters now represent the intersection of People Who Drink Water and People Who Go To Schools.
Darnell Earley, former emergency manager for Flint and current one for Detroit Public Schools.
This emergency manager keeps managing to make emergencies, putting him at the center of a public health crisis that has poisoned tens of thousands of people, as well as a protest movement that brought Michigan's biggest school district to a standstill. (His office did not return requests for comment.)
Most national discussion over Flint has centered on Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, but what about Earley? Here’s what you need to know about the man behind Michigan's municipal meltdowns.
He worked as Flint's emergency manager briefly and after much reshuffling
When Earley took that position in 2013 —with a mission to fix Flint’s finances —he was the third emergency manager that year. By that point, citizens apparently had emergency manager fatigue.
“I think if (Earley) knows the city and he knows it so well, obviously he knows the emergency manager has not been working,” resident Brian Michalik told MLive in an article casting doubt on the appointment.
“It’s just like medicine,” he said.
“Sometimes we have to take medicine that doesn’t taste very good, but we take it, it works and we feel better.”
He left the job 15 months later.
His memory of the Flint crisis is murky
Earley, like everyone else tied to the crisis, has his own idea of who’s the culprit: the Flint City Council, which voted 7-1 to stop using Detroit’s water system in March 2013, seven months before he stepped in as emergency manager. The deal was intended to save the city $8.5 million.
Earley is apt to keep bringing this fact up, writing in a Detroit News op-ed that the water plan “was presented to me...a full seven months after the City Council’s affirmative vote.”
He later said in a statement that he wasn't in a position“to second guess or to invalidate the actions that were taken prior to my appointment.”
His story is partly true. But there is no record of the council choosing to use the Flint River as a water source. That decision fell to Earley.
When the switch happened, he joined other city government bigwigs in toasting the occasion.