I am at a complete loss to understand how it is in this day & age that people in the United States Do NOT Have A Right toClean Water. I do not understand how their local government officials are able to deny their poorer constituents clean water and adding insult to injury; turn off their constituents' filthy, lead-laden, toxic water when those same constituents refuse to pay for the water..... while at the same time, those same Greedy government officials allow Nestle all theClean waterit wants for basically free and then allows Nestle to turn around and sell it back to their constituents at over a 100% profit.
Nestlé pays $200 a year to bottle water near Flint – where water is undrinkable
While Flint battles a water crisis, just two hours away the beverage
giant pumps almost 100,000 times what an average Michigan resident uses
into plastic bottles
by Jessica Glenzain Detroit, Michigan
Gina Luster bathed her child in lukewarm bottled water, emptied
bottle by bottle into the tub, for months. It became a game for her
seven-year-old daughter. Pop the top off a bottle, and pour it into the
tub. It takes about 30 minutes for a child to fill a tub this way. Pop
the top, pour it in; pop the top, pour it in. Maybe less if you can get
gallon jugs.
Luster lives in Flint, Michigan, and here, residents believe tap water is good for one thing: to flush the toilet.
“I don’t even water my plants with it,” she said.
Flint became synonymous with lead-poisoned water after government
officials, looking to save money, switched the city’s water supply from
Detroit city water to water from the corrosive Flint river.
Once the city had switched, the number of children with elevated lead exposure doubled; residents reported unexplained rashes and losing hair. An unpublished study recently found fetal deaths in Flint increased by 58% during the crisis.
Suddenly, Flint was a cause célèbre. The Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders held a debate in Flint. Barack Obama visited to raise morale. Americans who could afford it started ripping out old lead pipes. Media outlets across the country started examining their own towns for lead.
Despite having endured lead-laden tap water for years, Flint pays
some of the highest water rates in the US. Several residents cited bills
upwards of $200 per month for tap water they refuse to touch.
But just two hours away, in the tiny town of Evart, creeks lined by
wildflowers run with clear water. The town is so small, the fairground,
McDonald’s, high school and church are all within a block. But in a town
of only 1,503 people, there are a dozen wells pumping water from the
underground aquifer. This is where the beverage giant Nestlé pumps
almost 100,000 times what an average Michigan resident uses into plastic bottles that are sold all over the midwest for around $1.
To use this natural resource, Nestlé pays $200 per year.
Now, Nestlé wants more Michigan water. In a recent permit
application, the company asked to pump 210m gallons per year from Evart,
a 60% increase, and for no more than it pays today. In the coming
months, the state is set to decidewhether Nestlé can to pump even more.
The proximity of the Nestlé plant to Flint’s degraded public water
supply has some Michigan residents asking: why do we get undrinkable,
unaffordable tap water, when the world’s largest food and beverage
company, Nestlé, bottles the state’s most precious resource for next to
nothing?
‘Don’t seem right’
“It’s almost like a civics class for us Flint folks,” said Luster.
“You shouldn’t be able to profit off of water – it’s free. It came out
of the ground.”
Free water is not uncommon. In the US, water has traditionally been
free for companies and people to use – it’s the government
infrastructure that cleans and delivers people safe water that costs
money. The government infrastructure is what failed in Flint.
Still, in Michigan, what people have a problem with is a company
bottling the state’s water and selling it back to people who, through no
fault of their own, are completely dependent on it.
Bottled water is “a necessity of life right now”, said Chuck
Wolverton, a Flint resident. He won’t touch his tap water. He drives 15
miles outside of town to his brother’s house to shower every night,
where he often also washes his clothes. His water bill, he said, was
around $180 per month. “I don’t even give it to my dogs.”
“Don’t seem right, because they’re making profits off of it,”
Wolverton said, with several fresh cases of bottled water in the back of
his car.
“With the money they make, they could come and fix Flint – and I mean
the water plants and our pipes,” Luster said of Nestlé. “Me and you
wouldn’t even be having this conversation.”
Activists here, such as Luster, see Nestlé’s bottling plant and
Flint’s tainted water and Detroit’s mass water shutoffs as connected –
part of an “ecosystem” (as Luster calls it) meant to put water into
private hands.
Nestlé had $92bn in sales in 2016, and $7.4bn from water alone. Nevertheless, the company pays nothing for the 150 gallons per minute it already pumps from the ground in central Michigan. The $200 per year is just an administration fee.
“We’re not saying give everyone a new car, a new home. We’re just
asking for our water treatment,” Luster said. “That’s a no-brainer.”
Nestlé doesn’t bicker with the price it gets water at, but it does
maintain that when it turns Evart water into brands like Nestlé Pure
Life and Ice Mountain, it is being a steward of the environment.
The company has 52 bottled water brands altogether, including some of
the best known in the world – Poland Spring, Perrier, San Pellegrino.
“Nestlé promotes sustainable water practices throughout its operations,” said the company’s 2016 annual report.
“For Nestlé Waters, this starts at the source with engagement
activities with local communities to ensure the sustainability of our
shared public water resources.”
Many people in Evart would probably disagree, and they’re hardly alone. A small town in Canada was recently disappointed that it was outbid by Nestlé
in a bid to fund a long-term water source for the town. And
environmentalists in California are watching closely whether Nestlé can
continue to pump water – for $524 – out of San Bernardino national forest on a permit that expired nearly 30 years ago.
Further, Nestlé’s annual report does not address plastic pollution: a problem piling up at one million bottles per minute
according to a Guardian analysis. Some campaigners believe plastic
pollution to be the most significant environmental problem behind
climate change. Studies have also begun to find plastic pollution in the
food chain – in fish, salt, honey, beer and tap water.
A social justice issue
Michigan’s water conflicts, with Nestlé as a new focal point, have begun to attract broad social justice campaigns.
The Rev Dr William Barber II, a powerhouse preacher sometimes
compared to Dr Martin Luther King Jr for his ability to weave together
left-leaning politics and Christian teachings, trained some of
Michigan’s local water activists in August. Many said they were directly
politicized by rolling water crises in Flint and Detroit.
“One of the reasons we’re here today,” said Barber, standing
backstage in a community college in Detroit, was “this water crisis”.
Social justice groups focused on water in Michigan have become an increasingly powerful force. Protesters pushed for public hearings on Nestlé’s permit in January. Residents in Flint agitated for continued state support in February. Activists in Detroit blocked city contractors from shutting off residents’ water, and won a reprieve when a judge dismissed charges against them.
Politicians are also entering the fray. The Michigan state
representative Tim Sneller and colleagues asked the Michigan department
of environmental quality (MDEQ) not to approve Nestlé’s permit.
“Now, I firmly support economic development in our state, and I
recognize the extent to which Nestlé Waters’ presence in Michigan has helped our economy,” Sneller said, in an opinion article
in April. “However, there needs to be a balance between the economic
benefit of Nestlé and the responsibility of the MDEQ to protect
Michigan’s environment and natural resources.”
On Friday, activists from Flint will join activists from Evart, where
Nestlé pumps water. They will be joined by groups from Detroit, where
people are having their water shut off, from north of the border, where
the social justice group Council of Canadians is based, and from
indigenous communities around the Great Lakes. Together, they want to
promote a “water summit” on “human rights and water sovereignty”.
“When it comes to water, we should be working within the government
to make that as cheap as possible,” Barber said. “Privatizing that which
the lord created is just wrong”.
Where Barber spoke, in Detroit, water still technically belongs to the city’s residents. But in neighborhoods where one in five homes had their water shut off last year, it is anything but affordable.
‘Water is not affordable to us’
Nicole Hill, a mother of three, has her water shut off every few months. It still costs “more than $200 a month”.
The first time her water was shut off, she said, “I get up, I make
them breakfast, I take them to school, I come back to wash the dishes
and no water comes out the faucet.”
That was in 2014, when 33,000 homes
in Detroit had their water shut off. She was one of thousands who were
part of a city “blitz” that shut off water to delinquent accounts. Last
year, 27,000 homes in Detroit had their water shut off.
Hill went so far as to file a class action
lawsuit to try to secure her community’s right to affordable water. She
lost in a lower court and appealed. Last year, a panel of three federal
judges ruled against her, writing: “A right of this nature is not
rooted in our nation’s traditions.”
Valerie Jean, a mother of five, bonded with her neighbors after her
entire block was cut off from water when multiple residents fell behind
on their bills. Still struggling, Jean perpetually seems to have a blue
stripe in front of her home, a kind of scarlet letter painted on front
yards by city workers to highlight a home’s water access point. That
makes it easier to shut water off.
“When they shut off a whole community, it shows water is not affordable to us,” said Jean.
Barber spoke to a crowd of hundreds in Detroit, with 11,000 more people watching online. The rally was not just about raising spirits. It was part of the Poor People’s Campaign, a “moral revival” organized by Barber and his co-chair, the Rev Dr Liz Theoharis, to train impoverished Americans to be activists.
Barber is a tall, stout man with a teeter-totter gait. He’s got hands
the size of a bear’s and builds his speeches like a fire – nurturing a
spark into a cheering, song-singing, burn-the-house-down blaze.
“The prophet said, ‘Take away your prayers, take away your sacrifice –
if you want to please me, let justice roll down like water!’”
Barber started with a cold crowd, but some were soon in tears, and
answered calls in unison – “Forward together!” Barber yelled. “Not one
step back!” the crowd shouted back.
“Forward together!”
“Not one step back!”
In April 2014, Flint switched from Detroit city water to the
corrosive water in the Flint river. Luster remembers – it happened on
her daughter’s birthday. She and her nine-year-old daughter (then seven)
quickly became sick. By July, she had collapsed at her job as a retail
manager. Even today, strange, unexplained health effects remain.
Luster, 43, has had part of her uterus removed, an unexplained
abscess taken from her left breast, and a lymph node removed from her
right underarm and back. She has lost a five-gallon bag’s worth of hair.
Now, she is a full-time organizer with Flint Rising, and is
considering law school. And almost two years after the crisis made
national headlines, Luster still does everything in her Flint home with
bottled water – cooking, washing hands, and even seemingly innocuous
tasks, like ironing. She filters bottled water to drink.
By this summer, the state of Michigan alone will have provided 157m
bottles of water to Flint and counting. Once, a news crew counted how
many 16.9-ounce bottles Luster’s household used in a day – 151. “So now you see, when I see a bottle of water, I don’t see, ‘Let me go get a drink.’”
No comments:
Post a Comment