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Flint declares its water safe after replacing lead pipes, but health issues and doubts persist
Melissa Mays said she may never trust the water from her Flint, Michigan, tap again. In the 11 years since the city's ...
NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Flint resident Melissa Mays, a clean water activist, about the EPA's proposed rule that most U.S. cities will have to replace lead water pipes within the next 10 years.
—Melissa Mays, interview with author, February 17, 2016 In July 2014, three months after the switch to the Flint River, Melissa Mays began to notice changes in her water.
When it debuts Saturday at 8 p.m. keep in mind that people like Melissa Mays and Nayyirah Shariff, activists depicted in the film by Marin Ireland and Jill Scott, are still contending with toxic ...
Melissa Mays is a Flint woman who has been a strong advocate for environmental justice for for the city of Flint knows all too well what the people of Benton Harbor are going through.
Melissa Mays is one of the hardest working and most vocal activists in Flint. And all she wants is the nation not forget about Flint’s water crisis.
For Melissa Mays, the Flint Water crisis is far from over. The 39-year-old mother of three founded Water You Fighting For in 2015 in an attempt to improve Flint's water quality for her family and ...
FLINT, Mich. (WNEM) - Flint residents want answers about whether the Aug. 1 deadline for lead pipe replacement was met. “I don’t believe the city met the Aug. 1 deadline to have all the ...
Melissa Mays hasn’t had clean water in her home for more than three years. She drives from Flint, Michigan, to a nearby town to do her family’s laundry, her family exclusively drinks bottled ...
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