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Wade Norris .: March 2009 Archives

Hey NESTLE-hands off our water!

By
Wade Norris .
on March 23, 2009 5:30 PM
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..

Recently in my statewide travels around Colorado, I have heard a lot about the lack of rainfall and the drought which is plaguing our state. My bud WeatherDem also has been doing an excellent job of covering the measurable effects of Climate Change and the recent mass tree die off.
He also has told us about the water grab by Shell energy.
If that was not enough, there is a Pine Beetle epidemic in our mountains, leaving numerous acres and homes vulnerable to a massive wildfire.

You can imagine my shock today when I read that Nestle co. wants to bottle up 65 million gallons from the Arkansas river.

read on...

From Jason Blevins of the Denver Post:

Nestle -- with 12 U.S. brands of bottled water and almost $4.3 billion in North American sales in 2007 -- came calling for Arkansas Valley spring water about two years ago. The company wants to draw 65 million gallons a year from an aquifer feeding two freshwater springs near Nathrop, pipe it 5 miles to a truck stop and ship it 100 miles to a Denver bottling facility. It would be sold under the company's Arrowhead brand.Nestle has promised to replace all the water it takes from the valley and spend $1 million to restore riverside habitat where a dilapidated fishery sits. It has installed 10 monitoring wells to gauge the health of the underground aquifer that supplies the springs and will monitor wetlands near them.

Nestle hydrogeologist Bruce Lauerman calls the plan a "sustainable, surgical extraction" of water and describes preserving the pristine water supply by taking only a fraction of its flows.

"We are one of the best things that could happen to these springs," he said. "Our involvement affords a level of protection that other owners and users of this property could never offer."

Maybe so, say many locals. But no thanks.

"We have to take everything they are promising on faith," said Michele Riggio, who last week helped found the anti-Nestle group Chaffee County Citizens for Sustainability. "The risks are too great, and there are not enough proven benefits, so why try?"

The point here Nestle guys, is that you have already got 12 brands of bottled water, which alone probably creates its own huge carbon footprint in plastics, gasoline use and clogged transportation, and you are making 4.3 BILLION dollars from those brands.
Water is the one resource you can't pay money for. Once an aquifer is drained, it doesn't come back.
While this may seem like one county's problem, imagine a drought and a forest fire spreading across the Rockies with even less water than we already have now.

But it gets better. Nestle had to pay for study on the impact of the water draining as part of the exploration. That research differed from theirs...

Several residents trumpeted a consultant's review of Nestle's research by Colorado State University ecologist Delia Malone -- a review commissioned by the county and funded by Nestle as part of the county's permitting process.
The report repeatedly criticizes the water bottler for not considering warming climate trends when studying wildlife, wetlands and the long-term ecological health of the aquifer, which catches drainage from the Mosquito Range. Malone's review contradicts the company's research by suggesting that water withdrawal during a drought could drain the aquifer and nearby wells could run dry.

Nestle has an all too familiar sounding response:

Nestle says the report "is not based on scientific evidence"

Why is it that when interfering with making tons of money, scientific evidence becomes something other than scientific evidence?
we already know about the lengths Nestle will go to in selling their powdered infant formula, so this dismissal of scientific evidence should be no surprise.

I had a phone interview with Michelle Riggio of Chaffee County Citizens for Sustainability and she summed up the situation with Nestle and also Shell as more proof that the big companies are making their grab for next big thing in the commodities market - water.

"They want to privatize our water"

Let's all do ourselves a favor and contact Nestle and let them know how you feel about this idea.
The water belongs to the people and to the forests that can't exist without it.

I want to encourage you to thank Jason Blevins for covering this story at the Denver Post jblevins@denverpost.com
and to encourage the local residents who are with the Chaffee County Citizens for Sustainability group by visiting their blogspot or emailing them
at ccfsustainability@gmail.com.

Overwhelming support for Andrew Romanoff for the Colorado Senate Primary...

By
Wade Norris .
on March 8, 2009 1:04 PM
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(crossposted on Daily Kos)
Here in Colorado, we just had our annual Democratic Party Jefferson Jackson dinner. The speaker was former Clinton Aide, and CNN commentator, Paul Begala.
There were two things about this dinner that surprised me.
The first was the ability of Paul Begala as a speaker, (his closing topic about his Grandmother's visit to the White House brought down the house)
and second, was the level of support for Andrew Romanoff for a Senate Primary run in 2010...

First of all, I was pleasantly surprised by Paul Begala. The man can give a speech. He is one those rare democrats that can weave his beliefs and religion into his speech without coming across as preachy. Thank you Mr. Begala.

Secondly, our first official testing of the waters was quite successful. At the Colorado Convention Center, the annual JJ Dinner was larger than it has ever been, and our numbers of elected officials was larger than it has ever been.
As we handed our volunteers their clipboards with sign up sheets and stickers that said "Friends of Andrew Romanoff", I was a little skeptical about how willing people would be to show their support. It takes nerve for volunteers to circulate petitions for a primary at a formal function.
However, my volunteers were running out of stickers and out of sign up sheets and were turning people away by the time dinner started.

Senior Citizens don't come up to you and grab your arm and tell you "tell him we are behind him" for nothing.

And, even more so, elected officials in the State House and Senate have a lot to risk by signing our sheets to support Andrew Romanoff in a primary, yet they still did so.
And this dinner was not a freebie. Tickets were over $100, and the people there are part of the fundraising base.
Barack Obama has proven that when the people are behind you, they can outraise the millionaires and make their voices heard.

Thanks to Ray, Lori, Alex, Faren, Julia and to Sarah for your hard work last night. (sorry I did not print up more stickers and sign up sheets!!!)

Mr. Romanoff, if you are reading this, the support for you is real, the people are behind you.

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This page is a archive of recent entries written by Wade Norris . in March 2009.

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