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On the day before the start of the U.S. Conference of Mayors annual meeting, activists gathered on the steps of the State House to urge officials in Rhode Island and across the country to step up efforts to reduce the nation's consumption of bottled water. Members of Boston-based Corporate Accountability International called on Gov. Carcieri to order an end to state purchases of Poland Spring bottled water, which totaled at least $73,585, according to the advocacy group. But state Rep. Arthur Handy (D-Cranston), who spoke in support of the effort along with state Rep. Frank Ferri (D-Warwick), said the figure likely didn't include other brands of bottled water consumed at the State House. The group on Monday also called on the U.S. mayors to vote at the conference in four days on a resolution to investigate how much water bottlers pay--and how much it costs communities--when bottlers sell public water for profit. Providence Mayor David Cicilline co-sponsored the resolution and another that the mayors passed last year calling on cities to phase-out spending on bottled water. The activists say that the bottled water industry fills landfills and litters public places with discarded containers, consumes energy needed to produce and transport the product, wastes taxpayer money when purchased by governments and harms the reputation and revenues of public water systems. "Opting for tap water is what's best for our environment, our pocketbooks and our long-term equitable access to this most essential resource," said Kristina Urquiza, director the advocacy group's Think Outside the Bottle campaign. "Tap water has, in fact, far more regulatory oversight than bottled water and public water systems are the backbone of our country's health, economic growth and well-being. "Bottled water marketing has eroded confidence in our public water systems to the extent that one in five Americans drinks only bottled water, illustrating how many people believe the only place to get clean,drinking water is from a bottle." CommentsLeave a commentPlease be civil. Vicious comments, personal attacks and profanity won't be published. Name and email are required; email address will not publish. |
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Has anyone actually tasted the tap water in cities like Providence? Tell me which you would prefer. If you get calcium buildup on your drains, guess where it comes from. Use bottles and encourage recycling.
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More people die from drinking bad water than die of Malaria and AIDS combined in Africa. Tap water is such an amazing luxury that far too many people take for granted.
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The tap water in Providence is superb. I laugh when I see neighbors having bottled water brought in on trucks.
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