Guest guest Posted February 17, 2005 Report Share Posted February 17, 2005 Wed, 16 Feb 2005 18:04:56 -0500 " Maj Fiil-Flynn " <mfiil [WATERFORALL] CURRENTS: Public Citizen's Water for All Campaign February 2005 News from Public Citizen's Water For All Campaign ********** CURRENTS: Public Citizen's Water for All Campaign February 2005 Stockton gets a failing grade At the City Council meeting on Dec. 7, the Concerned Citizens Coalition of Stockton released to the public the first Annual Service Contract Compliance Review covering the first phase of OMI-Thames 20-year, $600 million water privatization contract in Stockton, California. The Review details changes to the contract that benefit OMI-Thames: water rates for Stockton residents have risen two years in a row due to the contract; customer service requirements have been unfulfilled; a number of staffing positions are filled with temporary or interim employees; unaccounted for water has risen from around 3.5% under municipal operation to nearly 7.5% under private operation; maintenance tasks are backlogged and finally, OMI made an unauthorized dump of chlorinated water into an irrigation canal that resulted in a $125,000 fine from the State Water Resources Control Board. Perhaps this is why the champion of this privatization, former mayor of Stockton Gary Podesto, failed in his bid to win a state Senate seat. The Concerned Citizens' lawsuit challenging the privatization deal is still pending before the state appeals court. California Attorney General Bill Loykear recently filed an amicus brief in support of the Citizens claims that the City of Stockton violated the California Environmental Quality Act by not conducting the environmental review required by state law. For more information http://www.cccos.org/ Water report from the World Social Forum The issue of water, defending and protecting this vital natural resource for humankind and the planet, was a key topic at the World Social Forum (WSF) in Porto Alegre, Brazil in late January. More than 32 workshops were organized including large open sessions at the beginning and end of the WSF where a draft global water action platform was debated. Public Citizen,along with many other organizations in the inter-American water activist network (Red VIDA -Vigilancia Interamericana para el Derecho y Desarrollo del Agua) and from Europe organized workshops focusing on the role of the World Bank in promoting water privatization, a speak-out on formulating a UN Treaty on water, a special workshop to build solidarity for the struggle in El Alto, Bolivia, a strategy session to plan for the World Water Forum in Mexico City and much more. There were many opportunities for networking and learning about water struggles around the world. The Red VIDA held its first Hemispheric Assembly prior to the WSF and developed a collective workplan with three broad planks: (1) challenging privatization through campaigns focused on the transnationals, especially Suez, the international financial institutions, and their national and local accomplices; (2) defending our public water systems and developing new models of democratic water governance and management with social responsibility and citizen oversight; and (3) expanding our membership and building alliances with networks and organizations across the globe. Learning about the strength and diversity of social movements around the world made it a truly inspiring experience. Small town residents fight Nestle Water bottling plant Residents of McCloud, California, a small community near Mount Shasta, have taken legal action to stop Nestle Waters North America from building a bottled water plant in their township. The group filed a lawsuit in March asking a Siskiyou County judge to set aside an agreement that would allow Nestle to purchase up to 1,600 acre feet of water per year from springs that feed Squaw Valley Creek and the McCloud River. The group brought to the judge's attention that Nestle and the Service District failed to file an environmental impact review before agreeing on the contract, an extremely important report given the potentially serious impacts the deal could have on the area's water supply. The judge's decision on the case is expected in March or April. The Nestle deal has spurred residents to action. A new group, the McCloud Watershed Council, a project of the Mount Shasta Bioregional Ecology Center (MSBEC), hopes to harness the community's growing concern about the environmental impact of the bottling plant and the lack of community input in the Nestle deal. Donations earmarked for McCloud Watershed Council can be mailed to MSBEC at PO Box 1143, 211 East Alma St, Mount Shasta, CA 96067. Don't Believe the Hype On Feb. 9, Public Citizen released a new report on the largest water company in the world, Veolia Environnement. The report focuses on the French-owned multinational company, which operates in 84 countries and had a 2004 net income of $2.58 billion. Its U.S. arm is now called Veolia Water North America, formerly known as USFilter, which operates and manages water and/or wastewater facilities and systems in 38 states. " Despite repeated public failures in the United States, these water companies continue to push their unwanted vision on us, " said Wenonah Hauter, director of Public Citizen's Water for All Campaign. " Veolia leads this industry, and it's time that the public learned more about how this corporation operates, particularly its shoddy environmental record. As Veolia attempts to expand its control of the world's water resources on every continent, in nations rich and poor, citizens, communities and countries need to understand Veolia's purpose, practices and track record. " Read the report: http://www.citizen.org/documents/Vivendi-USFilter.pdf Also, in its Fall/Winter 2004 magazine, Veolia published a critical piece about Public Citizen titled " PPPs vs. PC, " where it defended its practices and attempted to discredit the Water for All Campaign. (Read the article http://www.citizen.org/documents/Veolia_PPPvsPC.pdf) In response, Public Citizen issued a statement (Read the response http://www.citizen.org/documents/Veolia%20vs%20Veracity.pdf) Read This! There's a new book out titled Reclaiming Public Water (co-published by Transnational Institute and Corporate Europe Observatory), available online:http://www.tni.org/books/publicwater.htm. Written by public water utility managers, trade unionists and civil society activists from more than 20 countries, Reclaiming Public Water gives examples from around the world of how urban public water delivery can be improved through democratic reforms, such as citizens' participation. It also draws on the experiences of anti-privatization coalitions and their visions on making public water work. For more information http://www.waterjustice.org/ " Reality Tour " in Bolivia Global Exchange, an international human rights organization, is sponsoring a reality tour in Bolivia this month, part of a program that was created to help people understand first-hand contemporary political, economic, environmental, and cultural issues around the world. The Bolivian people have been protesting privatization since they succeeded in keeping their public water rights in 2000. But President Carlos Mesa has been working to open up the country for international investment, so grassroots organizations are uniting to protest the sale of their country to multinational corporations. Global Exchange's tour will explore Bolivia's fight to stop privatization, along with other issues igniting the people's zeal including the drug war, with increasing conflict over the coca trade, and workers' rights. While it's too late to sign up for the February tour, Global Exchange is already planning for a similar tour June 18-27, 2005. For more information http://www.globalexchange.org/tours/616.html or call (800) 497-1994 ext. 226. TAKE ACTION! Plan an event in your community to celebrate World Water Day. For ideas, visit our webpage from last year's events http://www.citizen.org/cmep/Water/us/articles.cfm?ID=11100. Or, call the Water for All Campaign at (202) 454-5178. ********** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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