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This week, to mark the 60th anniversary of the United Nations, San Francisco is
hosting World Environment Day, a week-long series of events celebrating the theme
of "Green Cities."
Created by the UN to heighten environmental awareness and encourage public
action, one of the seven areas to be highlighted is water. This is a perfect
opportunity to engage in one of the most important debates of our time: how
to preserve water as a human right and public good -- not a commodity to buy
and sell -- and how to restore and safeguard our watersheds and guarantee affordable
access to clean water.
More than a billion people worldwide lack access to clean water and 6,000 children
a day die of preventable water-borne diseases. This crisis is expected to worsen
as the demand for fresh water continues to double every 20 years. Yet the call
for immediate action to protect the right to water is not just a demand coming
from developing countries such as India and Ghana but is originating from communities
throughout California.
In California, a number of rural communities, particularly in the Central Valley,
lack access to clean water and rely on bottled water for their daily needs.
The irrigation water in this vast agricultural region is diverted from a number
of imperiled watersheds, including the Bay Delta and the San Joaquin River,
which runs bone-dry in some parts. Native American tribes such as the Yurok
and Winnemen Wintu continue to fight for basic recognition of their rights to
water for fishing and other cultural practices. And now, in the era of globalization,
communities are also on the front line of fighting to protect water as a public
good and an essential public trust resource.
From Felton to Stockton to McCloud, local water wars are erupting across California
against global corporations whose agenda is to privatize and profit from turning
water into a commodity. In each case, citizens are banding together to fight
back against the private companies proposing to take over municipal water systems.
As budget crises continue to strain local governments, private companies are
luring government officials with promises of cost savings and improved compliance
with clean water regulations. But municipalities that embark on the path of
handing their water systems over to corporate management can find themselves
on a slippery slope of hidden costs and weak accountability, with tax and ratepayers
usually footing the costs of broken promises.
The trend of privatized water is quickly sweeping the country in diverse ways.
Most popular is the bottled water phenomenon -- a marketing gimmick that has
duped consumers into believing that water parceled into little plastic bottles
and priced 200 times higher than tap water is somehow chic and healthy. Bottled
water, however, can ruin local water sheds, drain aquifers and generate over
20 billion plastic bottles to be added to landfills annually.
What is more, bottled water--which is often just tap water in a bottle--does
not have to meet the same safety standards as public water systems. But communities
are waking up to the ruse. In McCloud, near Mt. Shasta, have won the first round
of a battle to keep food giant Nestle from tapping local springs for its bottled
water business, which racks up more than $2.7 billion annually in sales.
A second emerging trend is the direct corporate takeover of local water systems.
Private water companies are focusing on mid-sized cities like Stockton and smaller
cities, such as Felton, near Santa Cruz. Stockton's experience serves as a cautionary
tale for other cities being approached by water companies touting the benefits
of private management.
Cities should be wary because the personnel, legal and administrative costs
involved in privatizing a municipal water utility can balloon far beyond predictions
--as they did in Stockton where local watchdog groups are battling the 20-year,
$600 million contract with British-based Thames Water and Denver-based OMI in
court. Stockton had a well-run public utility before it was thrust into privatization.
Now, water rates for Stockton residents have risen two years in a row, customer
service requirements have been unfulfilled, maintenance tasks are backlogged
and OMI-Thames dumped chlorinated water into an irrigation canal, resulting
in a $125,000 fine from the state.
Similarly, residents of Felton and Monterey are so outraged at spiraling rates
and service problems caused by the privatization of their water system that
they are trying to take back control of it. These communities are also battling
Thames Water, the third largest water company in the world, which has taken
over local water utilities in 27 states across the country with the intent of
profiting from delivering water to millions of homes. Groups like Felton FLOW
(For Locally Owned Water) aim to put their local water utilities in public hands
to ensure the best possible stewardship of this vital resource.
Water democracy is our future. Water should be protected as a public commons,
not subjected to international trade laws or the open market, which would deem
it a commodity and sell it off to the highest bidder. Famed Indian activist
Vandana Shiva in her book, Water Wars, describes the nine principles of water
democracy. In her words, "Communities have always recognized two things.
First, that which we need for survival should never belong to an individual.
It should be the common wealth. Second, it should be managed as the common wealth.
Therefore, community structures of responsibilities have to be put in place."
People-centered and earth-centered water policies are the path to a water-secure
future. That is why California communities are joining with social movements
worldwide to call for a global convention on the right to water. This legally
binding framework would take precedence over international trade laws that grant
corporations rights to commodify and privatize water and water utilities. It
would also give communities a powerful tool to hold their government accountable
for guaranteeing a sustainable water policy.
This policy must begin with the long-term protection of the headwaters and
ground water and extend an ecologic stewardship role to the entire hydrological
system, which includes the atmosphere that is being destroyed by global warming.
The right for future generations to have a safe and sufficient water supply
and a healthy environment is at stake.
Juliette Beck is the California Director of Public Citizen's Water for All
Campaign.