More on the Cascade Locks victory over Nestle story...
"Our Water, Our Future": Voters in Oregon Defeat Nestlé's Attempt to Privatize Their Water!
" Opponents of Nestlé believe the passage of the ballot measure is perhaps
the most significant win in the fight against water privatization in
the United States."
Flathead Beacon article from May 4th 2016
Kalispell population growth (and water usage soaring)...Click on image to enlarge...
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Anti-Nestle ballot measure: Bid to block the Nestle Cascade Locks water plant succeeds!
“Voters in Oregon’s Hood River County today made their community one
of the first in the country to ban industrial-scale water bottling.” –
Local Water Alliance
Around 68% of residents voted “yes” on ballot measure 14-55,
blocking Nestle’s years-long battle to establish a bottling facility and
export 118 million gallons of water a year from Oxbow Springs.
Amid Western drought, Oregon county to vote on Nestlé bottling public water
If successful, the measure could set a precedent making it much harder
for Nestlé and other water-bottling companies to find new sources at a
time when a long drought in the American west
has triggered public anger at the very notion of private companies
making money and creating extensive plastic bottle waste out of a badly
needed resource.
Tapped Video Trailer: Great Video about the privatization of water...
Tapped is a film that examines the role of the bottled water industry
and its effects on our health, climate change, pollution, and our
reliance on oil. This trailer will give you a taste, I'll try to locate the full movie later....
"Crystal Geyser is opening the bottling plant soon without any
environmental review or limits at a time when everyone else in the state
is being asked to drastically cut water use. California's non-existent
laws on groundwater use allow this."
Would you want this in your back yard?
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Video: Bottled water companies taking us for fools?
"
A 2011 study published in Environmental Health Perspectives found that almost all of the 455 commercially available plastics that were tested leached estrogenic chemicals."
BPA and even BPA free plastics can put our river and streams and maybe even us at risk.
As I see it, the moral of the story is we need to be extremely careful of what we allow to go into our water. Also since estrogenic chemicals are active at very low levels, the old catch phrase "the solution to pollution is dilution", is simply not true.
Sunday, May 1, 2016
The question for tonight is "Do Water Bottling Companies provide good jobs?" I found this PDF during my internet searches, so I thought I might share.