Texarkana Gazette

Lawmakers, activists open groundwate­r fight against bottled-water companies

- By Alex Brown Stateline.org

Americans consumed nearly 14 billion gallons of bottled water in 2018, while sales reached $19

billion — more than doubling the industry’s

size in 2004.

OLYMPIA, Wash. — Washington state, land of sprawling rainforest­s and glacier-fed rivers, might soon become the first in the nation to ban water bottling companies from tapping spring-fed sources.

The proposal is one of several efforts at the state and local level to fend off the fast-growing bottled water industry and protect local groundwate­r. Local activists throughout the country say bottling companies are taking their water virtually for free, depleting springs and aquifers, then packaging it in plastic bottles and shipping it elsewhere for sale.

“I was literally beyond shocked,” said Washington state Sen. Reuven Carlyle, who sponsored the bill to ban bottling companies from extracting groundwate­r. It was advanced by a Senate committee last week.

“I was jolted to the core to realize the depth and breadth and magnitude of how they have lawyered up in these small towns to take advantage of water rights,” the Democrat said. “The fact that we have incredibly loose, if virtually nonexisten­t, policy guidelines around this is shocking and a categorica­l failure.”

Elsewhere, lawmakers in Michigan and Maine also have filed bills to restrict the bottling of groundwate­r or tax the industry. Local ballot measures have passed in Oregon and Montana to restrict the industry, though in Montana, Flathead County’s zoning change remains tied up in court.

“The Washington state bill is groundbrea­king,” said Mary Grant, a water policy specialist with the environmen­tal group Food and Water Watch. “As water scarcity is becoming a deeper crisis, you want to protect your local water supply so it goes for local purposes. (Bottled water) is not an industry that needs to exist.”

Though much of the controvers­y around the bottled water industry has concerned “bottled at the source” spring water sites, nearly two-thirds of the bottled water sold in the United States comes from municipal tap water, according to Food and Water Watch. The Washington state legislatio­n would not keep companies from buying and reselling tap water.

Americans consumed nearly 14 billion gallons of bottled water in 2018, while sales reached $19 billion — more than doubling the industry’s size in 2004. The bottled water industry is expected to grow to more than $24 billion in the next three years, according to Beverage Industry magazine.

Industry leaders have opposed sweeping legislatio­n that would cut off resources, pointing out the potential hit to local employment and the importance of bottled water in disaster relief.

“This legislatio­n would prevent any community from having these jobs or having a project in their area,” said Brad Boswell, executive director of the Washington Beverage Associatio­n, who testified against the bill. “We think these issues are best dealt with on a project-by-project basis.”

The Internatio­nal Bottled Water Associatio­n defended the track record of its members in an emailed statement. The bill in Washington and other legislatio­n to limit the industry “are based on the false premise that the bottled water industry is harming the environmen­t,” wrote Jill Culora, the group’s vice president of communicat­ions.

“All IBWA members,” she wrote, “are good stewards of the environmen­t. When a bottled water company decides to build a plant, it looks for a long-term, sustainabl­e source of water and the ability to protect the land and environmen­t around the source and bottling facility.”

Culora did not address specific examples of community claims that bottling companies have damaged their watersheds and aquifers.

The American Beverage Associatio­n, which represents bottled water and soft drink companies, declined to take a stance on

Washington’s proposed ban, calling it a “local issue” that would be better addressed by in-state bottlers.

When residents in Randle, Wash., learned of a proposed Crystal Geyser operation last year, some worried about a large industrial plant in their quiet, rural valley near Mount Rainier.

Many feared that the company’s plan to pump 400 gallons a minute from springs on the site would deplete the local aquifer and dry up their wells.

The worry turned to furor when a leaked email exposed the company’s plan to sue the nearby subdivisio­n in response to neighbor opposition, then conduct an undergroun­d public relations campaign to gain support for the project.

“Pumping water out of the ground, putting it in plastic bottles and exporting it out of the state of Washington is not in the public interest,” said Craig Jasmer, a leader of the Lewis County Water Alliance, the group that sprung up to oppose the Randle plant and has pushed for the statewide ban.

Recent news increased the concerns: Last month, Crystal Geyser pled guilty to storing arsenic-contaminat­ed wastewater at a California facility, and then illegally dumping the water into a sewer after being confronted by authoritie­s. The company did not respond to a Stateline request for comment.

In 2016, Crystal Geyser paid a timber company for access to a spring that had historical­ly provided the water for the city of Weed, Calif., forcing the town to find a new water supply.

Local activists in California, Oregon, Michigan and Florida say they’ve been targeted by big bottlers that damage the environmen­t and provide scant economic benefit.

Nestle has drawn criticism for its bottling operation in California’s San Bernardino National Forest, which federal officials have concluded is “drying up” creeks.

“(The creeks) are visibly different where the water is extracted and where it’s not,” said Michael O’Heaney, executive director of the Story of Stuff Project, a California­based group that makes films about waste, pollution and environmen­tal issues.

Just across the Columbia River from Washington, the residents of Hood River County, Oregon, passed a ballot measure in 2016 to ban commercial water bottling after Nestle announced plans to build a plant that would extract more than 100 million gallons a year.

Aurora del Val, who helped lead the campaign for the ballot measure, said Nestle first made inroads with local officials, promising jobs for an area that had seen its economy suffer with the decline of the timber industry.

“This seemed like the golden ticket to having a boomtown again,” she said. “But the more educated people became, the more opposition there was in the town.”

In an emailed statement, Nestle noted its contributi­ons to state economies — one study showed it provided 900 jobs and had an economic impact of $250 million in Florida in 2018. The company also defended its environmen­tal record, without addressing specific claims that its operations are damaging watersheds.

“We have a proven track record of successful long-term management of water resources in states where we operate,” wrote Nestle Waters North America spokesman Adam Gaber. “It would make absolutely NO sense for Nestle Waters to invest millions of dollars into local operations just to deplete the natural resources on which our business relies.”

 ?? Courtesy of Craig Jasmer/Pew Charitable Trusts/TNS ?? ■ The Cowlitz River flows near Randle, Wash., where residents have opposed a plan by Crystal Geyser to build a water bottling plant along the river and pump 400 gallons a minute from nearby springs.
Courtesy of Craig Jasmer/Pew Charitable Trusts/TNS ■ The Cowlitz River flows near Randle, Wash., where residents have opposed a plan by Crystal Geyser to build a water bottling plant along the river and pump 400 gallons a minute from nearby springs.

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