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Flint’s former emergency manager says he didn’t know about dangerous water

The former emergency manager for the city of Flint — who was at the helm when polluted water began flowing through the taps  claims he did not know the water was dangerous.

Speaking via his attorney, Darnell Earley said that the decision to switch Flint's water source (which is blamed for the polluted water) was made before he came on board.

Earley was Flint's state-appointed emergency manager between 2013 and 2015.

"Nothing came across his desk nor was he ever advised that there was anything wrong with the water or the use of the water," attorney A. Scott Bolden told CNN Thursday on behalf of his client.

"He was relying on the experts," Bolden said.

The Flint water crisis has become a national story, and a congressional hearing on the issue was held on Wednesday.

Earley was a no-show at the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. The committee issued a subpoena Tuesday evening for him to appear.

Committee chairman Rep. Jason Chaffetz criticized Earley for skipping the meeting.

Chaffetz promised another Flint hearing in the coming weeks, and he insisted Earley will be there.

"We're calling on the U.S. Marshals to hunt (Earley) down and give him that subpoena," the Utah Republican said.

Bolden told CNN earlier in the week that travel was impossible to appear by Wednesday morning after the subpoena was issued Tuesday evening.

Bolden said he hasn't heard from the committee or received a new subpoena.

"He certainly wants to tell his side of the story and that he's been a target of so many allegations," he said.

Water crisis

Once a bustling industrial city, Flint has fallen on hard times in recent years. These financial troubles led to the state's takeover in 2011, when Snyder appointed his first emergency manager. State officials were in charge in April 2014 when Flint's water supply was switched (as a cost-cutting measure) from Lake Huron (via Detroit's water system) to the Flint River, despite the fact that river's water was 19 times more corrosive, according to researchers from Virginia Tech.

It didn't take long for residents to suspect something was wrong. Water out of Flint taps looked, smelled and tasted funny. Yet officials indicated that nothing was the matter, with then-Flint Mayor Dayne Walling even drinking his city's tap water on local TV to try to calm concerns.

In fact, something was very wrong.

Chaffetz entered several emails into the record suggesting that EPA officials realized there was a problem from the spring through the summer of 2014, yet did little about it. Snyder has said the EPA and his state's Department of Environmental Quality "missed" what was happening, and top officials from both agencies -- including Susan Hedman, who resigned last month as the EPA's administrator for the region that includes Flint -- have already lost their jobs.

It wasn't until last September that authorities began to take the issue seriously. A month later, they reversed the earlier decision by switching Flint's water supply back to Lake Huron.

But by then, in many ways, it was too late.

Flint residents had already drunk tap water tainted with lead that, according to the Mayo Clinic, "can severely affect mental and physical development" in children and can even be fatal at high levels. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes, while exposure to lead isn't good for anyone, "no safe blood lead level in children has been identified."

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