The epic battle between Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation and Nestle Waters North America ended Monday in a settlement. Read the different shades on the outcome at these links.
Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation statement
Please take 15 minutes to weigh in on community priorities by taking this survey from the City of Salida (closes 9/22). Read more.
The epic battle between Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation and Nestle Waters North America ended Monday in a settlement. Read the different shades on the outcome at these links.
Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation statement
Delicious Digg StumbleUpon RSS Feed
The Citizen is happy to provide a forum for commenting and discussion. Please respect and abide by the house rules: Keep it clean, keep it civil, keep it truthful, stay on topic, be responsible, share your knowledge, and please suggest removal of comments that violate these standards.
Congress is taking testimony today on bottled water today
The view of the Government Accountability Office and the Environmental Working Group
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jqOBYb1sY3xodWibfMNarODUhMGwD99AAJA80
The view of the International Bottled Water Association (IBWA)
http://www.prweb.com/releases/Bottled_Water/Regulation/prweb2620594.htm
I read both of the press releases and found that to be an beneficial exercise. One event and two perspectives. Nestle’s press release sounds so familiar in its jargon of sustainability and responsibility. It cost the Michigan Citizens group upwards of $1,000,000 dollars to get Nestle to reduce their pumping rate from 400 gpm to 218 gpm.
I really hope that our County Commissioners are clear in understanding who we are dealing with.
I sure hope that our commissioners take the time to read this. I also hope it puts fear and trepidation into their hearts.