This story was originally published by ProPublica , an independent, nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism.
By Anna Clark
HHS Sec. Robert Kennedy Jr.
Just 15 months after receiving an award from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for excellence in community water fluoridation, the city of Grayling, Michigan, changed course.
With little notice or fanfare, council members voted unanimously in May to end Grayling’s decadeslong treatment program. The city shut down the equipment used to deliver the drinking water additive less than two weeks later.
Although it already paid for them, the town returned six unopened barrels of the fluoride treatment to the supplier.
Personal choice was the issue, said City Manager Erich Podjaske. “Why are we forcing somethin