Texarkana Gazette

Nestle warned it lacks rights to California spring

- By Robert Jablon

LOS ANGELES—Nestle, which sells Arrowhead bottled water, may have to stop taking millions of gallons of water from Southern California’s San Bernardino National Forest because state regulators concluded it lacks valid permits.

The State Water Resources Control Board notified the company on Wednesday that an investigat­ion concluded it doesn’t have proper rights to pipe about a quarter of the water it currently withdraws for bottling.

“A significan­t portion of the water currently diverted by Nestle appears to be diverted without a valid basis of right,” the report concluded.

Nestlé Waters North America was urged to cut back its water withdrawal­s unless it can show it has valid water rights to its current sources or to additional groundwate­r.

The company, a division of the Swiss food giant, also was given 60 days to submit an interim compliance plan.

“We are disappoint­ed by the fact that we have just received a copy of the report from the State Water Resources Control Board and that others appear to have received it much sooner,” Nestle said in a statement Thursday. “Once we have had an opportunit­y to review the report thoroughly, we will be in a position to respond.”

The move was applauded by activists who have fought to turn off Nestle’s tap in the forest.

Amanda Frye, who filed one of the complaints that prompted the investigat­ion, said she was pleased with the result although she hadn’t read the entire report.

“I feel like it’s a victory,” Frye told the Desert Sun of Palm Springs. “I’m happy that the State Water Resources Control Board did pursue it and look into it. I feel that they’re protecting the people of California.”

Nestle took about 32 million gallons of water from wells and water collection tunnels in the forest last year. A long water board investigat­ion concluded that it only had the right to withdraw 26 acre-feet per year, or about 8.5 million gallons.

Nestle has contended that it inherited rights dating back more than a century to collect water from the forest northeast of Los Angeles. It uses the water in its Arrowhead Mountain Spring Water.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States