But that impression is incorrect. "We are waiting to see how much of the $80 million will be allocated to the City of Flint and how much of it will go elsewhere,” Mayor Karen Weaver said in a statement. The federal grant money will go to long-term repairs to the city’s water infrastructure, not to shorter-term responses like delivering bottled water and installing filters.

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Still, those short-term efforts are ongoing. At five fire stations around the city, enormous pallets of bottled water cases have been trucked in. Locals drive up in a steady stream to pick up cases of water and filters, and National Guard members help carry the water out to residents' cars, while others canvass neighborhoods and deliver water to the elderly and disabled.

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The bottled water goes faster than you’d think. People use it for drinking, of course, but also cooking and brushing their teeth. Many Flint residents now use bottled water for cleaning, watering flowers, even doing laundry. Officials say Flint's tap water is safe to bathe and shower in, but not everyone believes it. Water filters seem like a more sustainable solution, but they need to be replaced every few months.

It's not clear how far the federal relief funds will go. Officials estimate that completely replacing the city's pipes will cost $1.5 billion.

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Some locals say the federal government needs to contribute more, especially considering the role that the federal Environmental Protection Agency played in the crisis. While state officials—especially the state-appointed emergency manager—are most directly to blame, EPA officials played down warnings about water problems for months, leaked emails have shown. The agency admitted this week that it should have acted sooner, and the regional EPA head resigned on Thursday.

At a privately-sponsored free blood testing event on Saturday, residents questioned why the situation didn’t merit a federal disaster declaration.

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“Obviously it’s a disaster,” said lifelong Flint resident Santiago Espinoza, 23, as his three-year-old son played video games on his iPhone. “Would Obama be bringing his family here to drink the water? Would Governor Snyder?”

“It’s even scary to take a bath,” Espinoza added.

Meanwhile, donations are coming in from all over the country and the world. Mary Stevenson, the director of Center for Hope, a local charity, said people from around the midwest have loaded their cars up with bottled water and driven to Flint to donate it, while others around the country have shipped donations. A visitor from Sweden donated and installed a reverse osmosis filter in one of their homeless shelters on Thursday, she said.

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“I'd feel more comfortable if there was a clear plan in place,” Stevenson told me. “We can't rely on people donating water six months from now.”

Casey Tolan is a National News Reporter for Fusion based in New York City.