Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Repeal Michigan’s Emergency Manager Law
Shea Howell
17 Feb 2016
🖨️ Print Article

by Shea Howell

Michigan Governor Rick Synder has agreed to testify before a congressional committee about his role in poisoning the people of Flint. The evidence is incontrovertible. Snyder’s emergency financial manager law is designed to disenfranchise local citizens, and “has been used almost exclusively on poorer African American communities that are strong sources of democratic power.”

Repeal Michigan’s Emergency Manager Law

by Shea Howell

This article originally appeared in the Detroit People’s Blog.

“The law is intended to silence democratic decision-making and to rob people of the ordinary checks and balances of political life.”

Governor Snyder’s main response to the Flint water crisis has been to hire two public relations firms.  He has yet to replace a single lead pipe. Snyder wants to save himself and his emergency manager law. He has launched a full scale campaign to blame anyone but him for the decisions that rest squarely on his shoulders and those of his appointed emergency managers and bureaucratic agency heads. 

Snyder’s emergency manager law is unraveling.  It is being revealed for what it is – an anti-democratic tool for businesses to turn public responsibilities into new sources of private wealth. It allows appointed individuals unchecked power. It is intended to silence democratic decision-making and to rob people of the ordinary checks and balances of political life. It has been used almost exclusively on poorer African American communities that are strong sources of democratic power, opposing Snyder and all he stands for.

“Snyder wants to save himself and his emergency manager law.”

Snyder’s public relations ploys are clear. He has unleashed two arguments that are contradictory. First he is trying to narrow the discussion.  This argument claims emergency managers are good, only one small decision was bad. This argument appeared in a recent article by Nolan Finley entitled “Trace Flint blame from water plant.” Finley labels concerns over who decided what, when, and why in Flint as an “obsession” that is “misplaced.” He says, “While it turned into a disaster, it would have been inconsequential had it not been for some bad and baffling choices made before the water started flowing.” Later he claims that the only “opportunists” want to make this all about the administration of a Republican Governor and the emergency manager law. He actually makes the claim that “the outcome would likely have been the same” had the decision been left to local officials.

This is nonsense and is contradicted by fact. Thanks to Finley’s own newspaper, we now know that Governor Snyder and his Emergency Managers met with all the principle players in Detroit on April 17, 2013 and oversaw the debate about Flint leaving the Detroit water system. Flint Emergency Manager Ed Kurtz and Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr participated. The decision to switch to the Flint River was made in October of 2013 by Emergency Managers Kevyn Orr and Darnell Early, who followed Ed Kurtz and Michael Brown.

“Governor Snyder and his Emergency Managers oversaw the debate about Flint leaving the Detroit water system.”

The decision to stay on Flint River water was made by Emergency Manager Jerry Ambrose. In March of 2015, after nearly a year of public complaints about the water quality Ambrose overruled a Flint City Council vote to return to Detroit water system. Ambrose flatly refused the Council’s request. He said it was “incomprehensible” and a waste of $12 million. Ambrose was well aware that water quality was suspect. General Motors had stopped using the water because it was rusting auto parts and state offices were being supplied with bottled water.

The second, contradictory argument is to blame everyone, especially the federal government, EPA and Michigan Department of Environmental Quality.  It attempts to diffuse responsibility by blaming everyone. Snyder floated this in his State of the State address. As soon as he said he was “sorry” he tried to obscure his own responsibility saying, “Government failed you – federal, state, and local leaders – by breaking the trust you placed in us.” Other Republicans from Jeb Bush to the congressional committee investigating this calamity, have picked up the theme.

The people of Michigan can see through these weak attempts to deflect attention away from Snyder and his emergency managers. We have repeatedly expressed our disdain for emergency managers. Every city that has endured their rule is suffering from decisions these people made to protect banks and big business. From poisoned water in Flint to no water in Detroit where 91,000 people have been shut off from water, Emergency Mangers have put profits before people, money above concerns for public health and welfare. It is time to repeal this draconian, undemocratic legislation. It is a disaster for people.

Shea Howell is a professor and chair of the Department of Communication and Journalism at Oakland University in Rochester, MI, where she teaches courses on communication theory and multicultural and political communication.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    “Reflections on Parenting and Revolutionary Struggle”: An Interview with Erica Caines
    26 Jun 2024
    “Reflections on Parenting and Revolutionary Struggle” is a space for parent-organizers to share their experiences and struggles with parenting. BAR Book Forum Editor, Roberto Sirvent will speak to…
  • Ujima People’s Progress Party
    Ujima People’s Progress Party Statement on Governor Wes Moore’s Marijuana Conviction Pardons
    26 Jun 2024
    Maryland Governor Wes Moore recently issued pardons for over 175,000 people in a show of "progress" in criminal justice reform. But these pardons barely scratch the surface of the destruction of…
  • Abayomi Azikiwe
    Detroit Wayne State U Faculty/Staff for Justice in Palestine Formed
    26 Jun 2024
    Wayne State University faculty and staff and the surrounding community steped up to support students as the school continues its repression against pro-Palestine organizing.
  • Chris Geraldi
    Meet the Cops Running the NYPD’s 86-Member Public Relations Team
    26 Jun 2024
    The police department’s PR team has more than doubled in size in the past two years. Some of its recent hires have histories of dishonesty and misconduct.
  • Candice Norwood
    Parole and Probation Rules Limit Travel. That Can Be Complicated for People Seeking Abortions
    26 Jun 2024
    More than half of the 800,000 women under community supervision live in states with abortion restrictions, making the path to access more difficult — or impossible.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us