. >> kenyatta dotson: i'm very concerned about my children. not only my children, but i'm concerned about the children of flint. >> alfonsi: kenyatta dotson is still fearful of the water, even though the state is spending more than $300 million to fix the water system. the city promised to replace all 12,000 supply lines that may have been contaminated with lead by last fall. now, they say the work won't be done until summer. dotson says she and her daughters will continue to use bottled water for cooking and brushing their teeth. >> dotson: i need time to come back to a place where i feel whole again. >> alfonsi: you don't feel whole right now? >> dotson: oh, no. >> alfonsi: would this have happened in a rich, white suburb? >> dotson: maybe it would've happened in-- in a rich, white suburb. would it have continued for as long as it has? i don't believe so. >> alfonsi: we found many parents in flint still bathe their young children with bottled water-- first warmed on the stove then brought to the tub. >> dr. mona: when i'm in clinic, almost e