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5 responses to “Nestlé Waters receives preliminary approval”

  1. If only reality lived up to your corporate spin.

    It’s shocking that Nestle would attempt to claim credit for the community involvement that didn’t appear until your water extraction project found itself in jeopardy and sinking fast.

    Given that the full extent of your support for the community originally involved donating bottled water to the schools, it’s hard to see anything added to the list later as anything but a payoff.

    And before you wrap yourself in the green cloak of environmental steward, I’d like to point out that the extent of your original “monitoring” program included a couple of 72 hour pumping tests.

    It’s the same thing we see repeated in other parts of the country; in McCloud, Nestle didn’t conduct a single flow monitoring study downstream of your intended project until the lack of flow data became a a PR burden even your legions of PR staffers couldn’t overcome.

    Now you – without even the hint of a smirk – point to that as proof of your green street cred.

    In Mecosta County (MI), you repeatedly lost court cases concerning the amount of damage your pumping operation was causing, and repeatedly refused to do anything about your pumping levels until a judge threatened a complete injunction.

    Then you turned around and – in your own corporate video created to counter the movie FLOW – repeatedly claimed the reduced pumping rates (forced on you by the courts) weren’t harming the watershed.

    In simple terms, you did the wrong thing, fought to keep doing it, then claimed sainthood when you were forced to do it right.

    Here, we see the same shuck and jive being performed on Chaffee’s residents.

    You tout your “in-stream fishing access at the Ruby Mountain and Bighorn Spring Sites” without irony, apparently forgetting that in a last-minute memo to the commissioners you sought to have that access removed from your agreement.

    The same effect is seen when you speak in self-congratulatory tones about your “long-term hydrologic monitoring,” much of which you sought to shed from the agreement in the same memo.

    And I don’t even have time to go into the numerous (and oddly favorable to you) errors in your economic analysis of the benefits to the county – any one of which should have been enough to have your permit thrown out.

    The same stories play out in rural communities all around the country; Nestle wanders into town, cuts backroom deals, rips small rural communities apart with divisive language and their always-at-the-ready legal bludgeon, and then issues saccharine press releases which not only defy reality, but release your Swiss-based multinational from any responsibility for the damage done.

    I hope the citizens of Chaffee County are spared the legal and divisive community thunderbolts rained down on the residents of Fryeburg, McCloud, Mecosta, Wells and a long list of others.

  2. I for one would like some additional information on the half million endowment.

  3. Both the Salida School District and the Buena Vista School District have been told that Nestle Corporation will make a $500,000 contribution to K-12 public education in Chaffee County ($250,000 to each district). A group of Chaffee County citizens worked with Nestle to determine the best use for such a donation and the committee recommended that it be given to the public schools. As of yet, we have not received any payments. Once the schools receive money, it will be put into a foundation for short term and long term uses – which have not yet been determined.

  4. The $500,000 is an endowment, not an outright gift. Typically the way endowments work, is that only the interest earned on the principle sum may be used. Most likely, a nonprofit foundation with a board will be set up. This board would decide who gets the money. This may amount to $25,000 a year depending how the investment pays off. The school districts will definitely NOT each be receiving $250,000. I hope this offers some clarification.

  5. Uhh, I wonder which will come to pass?

    When the endowment idea first appeared, it was accompanied by language suggesting it would be used to support non-profits that supported Nestle’s mission in Chaffee County – an astounding idea that would have left Nestle in control of the purse strings.

    Hopefully, that hummer of an idea is gone, though hopefully the board for the nonprofit won’t be in Nestle’s pocket. We’ve seen similar situations in other communities, and the results are less than pretty.

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