Porterville Recorder

Nestle to continue taking water from CA forests

- By CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER

U.S. officials offered Nestle, the maker of Arrowhead bottled water, a three-year permit on Wednesday to keep taking millions of gallons of water from a national forest in Southern California — but with new restrictio­ns designed to keep a creek flowing for other uses.

The offer announced by the U.S. Forest Service allows Nestle Waters North America, the biggest bottledwat­er company in the nation, to keep piping water from the Strawberry Creek watershed that it's tapped for decades.

The permit would allow extraction only when water is available to protect natural resources in the San Bernardino National Forest northeast of Los Angeles. Use could be restricted if the state's scattered drought conditions worsen.

The company, a division of the Swiss food giant, took about 32 million gallons of water from wells and water collection tunnels in the forest in 2016. It contends that it inherited rights to forest water dating back more than a century.

Opponents have long sought to turn off Nestle's tap, arguing that the water usage could harm the environmen­t and wildlife, particular­ly in a state that has struggled with drought.

Environmen­tal and public interest groups sued the Forest Service in 2015, arguing that it was improperly allowing Nestle to take national forest water under a permit that expired in 1988. A court ruled that the company could continue water operations while its applicatio­n to renew the permit was pending.

The new three-year permit would provide time for the company and forest officials to conduct more studies that could lead to a longer-term decision, the Forest Service said.

The decision ensures "the water withdrawal and conveyance infrastruc­ture is under a current permit, and it provides for protection of forest resources," District Ranger Joe Rechsteine­r said in a statement.

The agency said the watershed's health is now rated as "impaired" and that water extraction will be allowed "when there is water available consistent with the forest's Land Management Plan."

Nestle has 60 days to decide whether it will accept the terms.

During its applicatio­n process, the company provided 70 environmen­tal studies and will "carefully review the specifics of the decision," spokeswoma­n Alix Dunn said in a statement.

"California­ns are passionate about water and so are we. We take our responsibi­lity as a California water steward seriously and Arrowhead's successful operations for more than a century point to our commitment to long-term sustainabi­lity," the statement said.

The company collects water using a gravity-fed system of two water tunnels drilled deep into the mountainsi­de. The water flows downhill through a pipeline to a tank, where it's pumped into trucks and hauled to a bottling plant.

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 ?? JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN VIA AP, FILE ?? In this July 13, 2015, file photo, a pipeline carries water drawn from wells in the San Bernardino National Forest, Calif. Nestle has been offered a three-year permit to keep taking millions of gallons of water from Southern California's San Bernardino National Forest, but with new restrictio­ns designed to keep a creek flowing for other uses. The offer announced Wednesday, June 27, 2018, by the U.S. Forest Service allows the maker of Arrowhead bottled water to continue piping water from the Strawberry Creek watershed as it has done for decades.
JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN VIA AP, FILE In this July 13, 2015, file photo, a pipeline carries water drawn from wells in the San Bernardino National Forest, Calif. Nestle has been offered a three-year permit to keep taking millions of gallons of water from Southern California's San Bernardino National Forest, but with new restrictio­ns designed to keep a creek flowing for other uses. The offer announced Wednesday, June 27, 2018, by the U.S. Forest Service allows the maker of Arrowhead bottled water to continue piping water from the Strawberry Creek watershed as it has done for decades.

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