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After 6-Year Battle, McCloud, CA Defeats Water Bottling Giant Nestle

Posted by Tara Lohan, AlterNet at 10:20 AM on September 15, 2009.


How a tiny town sent a multinational packing.

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We've been covering this issue for the last several years, and it was welcome news to hear that Nestle Waters North American has decided to scrap their plans entirely to bottle spring water in McCloud, CA, up near Mount Shasta. McCloud Watershed Council, along with help from groups like Food and Water Watch and Corporate Accountability International, have been fighting six years against Nestle's planned pumping, that at one point would have allowed them to take 200 million gallons of water.

Leslie Samuelrich, Deputy Director of Corporate Accountability International explained what happened:

The grassroots campaign to keep water under local control began the night of September 29, 2003. At a town meeting officials slammed the gavel, and Nestlé Waters North America was the proud new owner of the town's water for 50 years...with an option for 50 more. The five member McCloud Community Service District board had been pressured by Nestlé to take stealth action to approve the deal. This gave the town's 1,300 residents but a few days to review and consider the proposal prior to the meeting - hardly enough time to get organized.

But get organized they did. Debra and community members quickly formed McCloud Watershed Council (MWC) a grassroots group, working in concert with California Trout, Trout Unlimited, Concerned McCloud Citizens and other organizations to respond to Nestlé's plans to build a 1,000,000 square foot bottling plant with untold consequences for the local environment (Nestlé initially failed to conduct a requisite environmental review). Collectively, the coalition hunkered down to protect local water resources and the surrounding environment of Siskiyou County for generations to come.

Due to the dedicated organizing of residents, the initial contract was ruled null and void by the Siskiyou County Superior Court. But Nestlé continued to invest millions in public relations, lobbying and legal efforts to overcome this early obstacle to its bottling plans. National media exposure, continued grassroots mobilization, lawsuits, testimony before Congress and comments by the California Attorney General finally pressured Nestlé to honor the wishes of McCloud residents.

This victory is not only one for Northern Californians, but it shows a new trend of small communities taking on, and beating, multinationals when it comes to water. As Food & Water Watch said in a statement:


This latest development is one is an escalating trend against allowing private corporations to bottle public water. In July, 2009, the grassroots group Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation successfully sued Nestle to limit the amount of water the company could withdraw for one a bottling facility in Mecosta County. Less than a month later, the City of Flagstaff, Ariz. denied Nestle a contract to bottle water from local resources there. Proposed bottling operations in Maine, Oregon, Colorado and Wisconsin are also drawing public scrutiny.

Let's keep up the pressure.

Digg!

Tagged as: water, water privatization, mccloud, nestle

Tara Lohan is a managing editor at AlterNet.


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This is great news!
Posted by: badkitty on Sep 15, 2009 11:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not only is bottled water rarely necessary, but in California, water is pretty scarce these days, and due to the lessening of the snow-pack due to climate change, apt to get scarcer.

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Would have been nice to get the town political perspective
Posted by: Paul_C on Sep 15, 2009 1:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who were the scumbags trying to give away the town's water? What consequences, if any, befell them for being crooks?

Anyway, this is indeed fantastic news! Although I fear it will only drive the leaches overseas to prey upon places like Fiji.

This is one of the great challenges of trying to regulate multinational corporations: if they don't like the laws in one state off they go to bribe some corrupt official elsewhere.

peace,
Paul

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Suddenly...
Posted by: TCWriter on Sep 16, 2009 10:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As the writer/editor of the StopNestleWaters.org site, I'm happy that Nestle won't be visiting its uniquely predatory business vision on the tiny town of McCloud.

But I'm also a little disheartened to see the contributions by so many deserving local organizations overlooked in media and yes - even the press releases of national organizations.

I have no affiliations with any organization here, so it's with (hopefully) a little credibility that I want to suggest the real heroes in this battle are the McCloud Watershed Council, CalTrout, and the coalition they formed (Protect Our Waters).

The Watershed Council - in several incarnations - are largely locals, and they fought long hard for (at the very least) a fair deal for the town of McCloud.

Their advocacy for a fair deal for the town and a real look at environmental impacts often came at some personal cost in a sharply polarized McCloud.

They deserve the highest praise.

In the same vein, CalTrout brought a lot of legal and fisheries firepower to bear, and raised a lot of issues that Nestle simply couldn't ignore (no matter how hard they tried).

CalTrout also managed to focus some financial resources on the issue, which were critical to generating national media attention on the story.

Trout Unlimited also offered support, and it's a shame that TU's other state chapters haven't been as aggressive as the California chapter was.

With that knowledge, it's a little shocking to read stories and press releases which give the national organizations equal (or even greater) billing over the two CA-based organizations.

I understand their need to raise money, but let's be clear about the people who put really the boots on the ground.

And thanks for all your coverage of this issue. In the (recent) past, Nestle was able to apply the same predatory business template in small town after small town, but thanks to the work of a CalTrout PR firm and a lot of folks on the Internet, small communities are far less likely to be taken by surprise than in the past.

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Prevention of more Pristine Water Rape by Nestle in California
Posted by: Meadow on Sep 17, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The person who got Nestle into McCloud in the first place has moved to Twain Harte, CA. He has been there for several years. This area needs to be watched for Nestle activity. It is near Yosemite.

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man
Posted by: sopomike on Oct 10, 2009 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nestle please come to nashville georgia we got more water than we know what to do with and we would love the jobs

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