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June 17th, 2010 | Category: Community Rights, Health, Legal, Maine |
The state may ban some uses of a controversial plastic additive as its first “priority chemical” under a new toxic chemical control law.
Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection is recommending that bisphenol-A, or BPA, be banned from use in reusable food and beverage containers such as baby bottles and water bottles sold in the state. Continue reading Maine may limit use of BPA
March 2nd, 2010 | Category: Community Rights, Health, Maine, Report, World |
Download a Powerpoint Version by clicking HERE
January 21st, 2010 | Category: Health |
Consumer backlash begins to bite, but recession also likely to blame

Karen Bleier / AFP-Getty Images file
A debate over water is boiling over in the United States and elsewhere amid growing environmental concerns about bottled water and questions about safety of tap water.
By Jennifer Alsever
msnbc.com contributor
updated 12:08 p.m. ET, Fri., Dec . 18, 2009
Heather Lewis was wracked with guilt when she realized she was addicted to the bottle.
Bottled water, that is.
At her worst, she said she went through five plastic bottles of water a day nearly every day for two years.
“It was appalling,” said Lewis, an architect from Louisville, Colo. “I felt like Aquafina’s trained monkey.”But one day in January, as she gazed at the piles of plastic in her recycling bin, she decided to quit. “It was a cumulative sense of responsibility that made me do it,” Lewis said
Lewis is part of a bigger backlash against bottled water happening across the nation, and after decades of growth, the $11 billion industry is stuttering.
After steady expansion that saw U.S. per capita consumption grow from less than two gallons a year to a peak of 29 in 2007, bottled water sales slipped 3.2 percent in 2008 and are projected to dip another 2 percent this year, according to estimates by the Beverage Marketing Corporation, a New York research and consulting firm.
The primary cause of the decline is hotly contested. Continue reading Bottled water sales dry up; industry asks ‘why?’
January 21st, 2010 | Category: Health |
By MEHAK BANSIL
Special to the Record-Eagle
Published: December 14, 2009 12:30 am
LANSING — Environmental interests in Michigan said the fight to stop privatization of part of Michigan’s water resources isn’t done.
Following a courtroom battle between Nestle Waters North America and environmental groups over a bottling plant in Mecosta County, the organizations are pressing state lawmakers for steps to preserve Great Lakes waters.
“We don’t want to destroy the beauty and wonder for the Great Lakes by bottling it and then selling it to other countries or states,” said Linda Berker of Davison, the Sierra Club’s Nepessing Group’s conservation chair. “Our legal structures should act to preserve the water.” Continue reading 12:30am: Battle over water still unresolved
January 21st, 2010 | Category: Health |
Published: December 13, 2009
EL ALTO, Bolivia — When the tap across from her mud-walled home dried up in September, Celia Cruz stopped making soups and scaled back washing for her family of five. She began daily pilgrimages to better-off neighborhoods, hoping to find water there.
Though she has lived here for a decade and her husband, a construction worker, makes a decent wage, money cannot buy water.
“I’m thinking of moving back to the countryside; what else can I do?” said Ms. Cruz, 33, wearing traditional braids and a long tiered skirt as she surveyed a courtyard dotted with piglets, bags of potatoes and an ancient red Datsun. “Two years ago this was never a problem. But if there’s not water, you can’t live.”
The glaciers that have long provided water and electricity to this part of Bolivia are melting and disappearing, victims of global warming, most scientists say.
If the water problems are not solved, El Alto, a poor sister city of La Paz, could perhaps be the first large urban casualty of climate change. A World Bank report concluded last year that climate change would eliminate many glaciers in the Andes within 20 years, threatening the existence of nearly 100 million people. Continue reading In Bolivia, Water and Ice Tell of Climate Change
October 19th, 2009 | Category: Health, Nestlé, Other US | Comments are closed
By Patti Lynn, Pocono Record, October 19, 2009
Things aren’t looking pretty for drinking water these days. Recent articles from The New York Times and the Associated Press have exposed unchecked pollution, grave gaps in oversight, decaying infrastructure, and concerns about emerging contaminants.
Yet one voice sees the decay of our water infrastructure through a rose-colored glass. “We’re bullish on water in the next 10 years,” said Nestlé Waters North America CEO Kim Jeffery, on a recent call for analysts. How exactly can he say this, given recent reports?
Continue reading We lose when companies badmouth public water
July 29th, 2009 | Category: Health, Other US | Comments are closed
By Stephanie Clifford, New York Times
CAN an ad campaign turn bottled water into the new tobacco? Taking a cue from anti-tobacco campaigns, Tappening, a group opposed to bottled water on environmental grounds, has introduced a campaign called “Lying in Advertising,” that positions bottled water companies as spreading corporate untruths.
Continue reading An Environmental Group’s Campaign of Wry Lies Against Bottled Water
July 22nd, 2009 | Category: Health | Comments are closed
“The FFDCA does not specifically authorize FDA to require bottlers to report test results, even if violations of the standard of quality regulations are found.”
“….FDA deferred action on DEHP [a chemical used in the manufacture of polyvinyl chloride plastics] in a final rule published in 1996 and has yet to either adopt a standard or publish a reason for not doing so.”
The Government Accounting Office has issued a report “Bottled Water: FDA Safety and Consumer Protections Are Often Less Stringent Than Comparable EPA Protections for Tap Water”
(GAO-09-610) on June 22, 2009. Read a summary or the full report.
July 13th, 2009 | Category: Health, World | Comments are closed
Today at the park, around Noon, an ambulance (and fire truck!) was called for a little girl. Apparently, she fainted due to dehydration. It can happen much more quickly for kids than for adults. So, make good use of the water fountain (or water balloons – several kids were drinking from those) while at the playground and park.
VESTA (Vancouver Elem. School Teachers Assoc.) has recommended to trustees that the Vancouver Board of Education ban the sale of bottled water in Vancouver schools, and for the Board to ensure free safe drinking water access at all worksites.
Continue reading Vancouver (BC) Teachers Group calls for bottled water ban
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