National mayor’s meeting spotlights need to support, reinvest in the tap
For Immediate Release: June 11, 2010
Conact:
Christina Rossi, 617-306-0920
Oklahoma City, OK– Today, the U.S. Conference of Mayors released the preliminary findings from an ongoing national survey demonstrating that more and more cities are phasing out bottled water from city budgets. These initial findings come on the heels of an executive order by Colorado Governor Bill Ritter cutting state spending on the bottle. Four states, including New York, Illinois, and Virginia have now taken such action.
Also supporting the efforts of mayors and public officials are three Oklahoma City restaurants –
Bricktown Brewery, Grateful Bean Café, and Sage– that announced today they have gone bottled water free.
“These actions are not just about fiscal responsibility, they are about civic pride and protecting common resources,” said Leslie Samuelrich, Corporate Accountability International Chief of Staff. “Spending taxpayer dollars on bottled water sends the wrong message about our nation’s high quality tap water. It is also entirely wasteful to spend scarce public dollars on such a non-essential use of our most essential public resource.”
The survey was prompted by an earlier resolution passed by the 1,204-mayor body encouraging cities to phase out bottled water spending. Up to 40 percent of bottled water, in fact, comes from the same source as the tap. Bottled water is also far less regulated. Yet bottled water marketing has been so effective that many U.S. cities responsible for delivering tap water to the public have been spending millions each year on the bottle – even as public water systems face a $22 billion annual shortfall.
The survey found that out of 101 cities responding:
·72 percent have considered eliminating or reducing bottled water purchases within city facilities;
·45 percent sited “promoting public water” as the reason for taking action; and
·44 percent have taken action to phase out city purchases and use of bottled water
U.S. Conference of Mayors staff has said they will continue to gather responses from their membership in the coming weeks to capture a fuller picture of city action on this issue.
“Public officials and the small businesses supporting them are to be commended,” said Samuelrich. “They have listened to the tens of thousands across the country who want their tax dollars spent on public water solutions not on plastic bottles.”
For the last four years Corporate Accountability International’s national education and action campaign, Think Outside the Bottle, has worked with public officials, communities of faith, campus administrators, small businesses, and individuals to support public water systems and call on the bottled water industry to honor local control of water and be more transparent about its labeling and water quality.