Bell/POE/SWC/Polaris/Bar Code/Mexico/Fuel  in Water
 
 
Our Santa Fe River, Inc.

www.oursantaferiver.org

386-454-2366

 
Hello,
We have received a number of terrific e-mails about the Writ of Certoriari as filed by Blue Springs a few weeks ago in the 8th Circuit Court in Alachua County.  Keep the comments coming we are doing our best to read them and make notes. 
  
Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson
OSFR
 
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BELL   JAG   TEAM   WINS   COMPETITION
 
JAG stands for Jobs for America's Graduates, it is a program that teaches the kids job skills for getting and keeping jobs.  However at the middle school level it teaches kids to set goals (small or large) and find ways to reach those goals.
 
I thought you would like to know that the Bell JAG team won the state competition using the Dr. Seuss story to talk about saving Florida's water.  They are very proud of themselves and 4 of them get to represent the state of Florida in Washington D.C. in December.  They are the only middle school kids going to this 38 state conference.  They won against 4 other middle schools, 13 high schools and a college prep academy. 

They are very excited, they are also keeping an eye out for the ruling, they have made sure to tell me that this wasn't about the competition for them it was about the water and they want to continue to help.
Karen L Murray
teacher at Bell Middle School

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CALL TO ACTION:
 
POE SPRINGS MEETING TOMORROW=TUESDAY in Gainesville, FL
 
This is a critical meeting for protection of Poe Springs... Pls take time to call Alachua County Commissioners and let them know that high attendance events will definitely have enormous adverse affect on both the Spring and the Santa Fe River!  Think, just too many people in a confined area. 

PLEASE CALL and tell them what you think 352 -264-6900  Alachua County Commissioners
Mike Byerly,  Paula Delaney, Rodney Long, Cynthia Chestnut & Lee Pinkoson

Ask them to imagine the pollution generated by the flocks at Ginnie Springs, garbage in river, urine stained trees, cigarette butts everywhere, trash on land and soil erosion...
 
Why must this be a MONEY MAKER ANYWAY??? Poe Springs itself is worthy of protection.

 
Byerly is solid proponent of protection as prob Delaney would be too, Long is a sell, prob good too. But calls will be vital....
 
-Pam

poe:

County Commission to hear management proposals for Poe Springs

Yeago proposed to reduce the county's management payment by $10,000 per year over the five-year contract.

Self-sufficiency may be possible after five years with possible payments to the county.

The commission is set to discuss the proposals at its Tuesday morning meeting, which begins at 9 a.m.

http://www.gainesville.com/article/20081124/NEWS/811241003/1002/NEWS01?Title=Commission_to_hear_management_proposals_for_Poe_Springs
_____________
 
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 Gainesville Sun Sentinel 

How the Soil and Water Conservation District works

Published: Monday, November 17, 2008 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, November 16, 2008 at 11:32 p.m.

The Alachua County Soil and Water Conservation District collects no taxes and has no regulatory power. So just what is the mission of this elected body?

Mostly it's to act in an oversight capacity for state-owned land. The group also serves as an advisory council to natural resource conservation groups, agencies like the USDA and water management districts.

read more...
 
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Great Photo Opportunity

Monday, November 17th 2008

 

 

Students “tap in” to challenge bottled water industry on campus

 

OTTAWA – Today, eight Canadian universities are taking part in a day of action to raise awareness about bottled water and to call on administrations to increase access to public tap water systems on campus. Campus organizers at Brock, Guelph, Lakehead, Queen’s, Ryerson, Ottawa, Prince Edward Island and Trent universities are planning a variety of events and activities.

 

The day of action will engage campus communities in learning about the social, environmental, economic and health impacts of bottled water, and to draw attention to the lack of access to public tap water on Canadian campuses. Katherine Giroux-Bougard, Canadian Federation of Students National Chairperson, says, “Students are taking action against the privatization of water and unnecessary waste.”

 

Some day of action activities include:

 

  • Campus tours with stops at Coca-Cola or Pepsi advertising, vending machines, and water fountains on campus.

 

  • Taste tests of bottled water vs. tap water

 

  • Festive parades with dance and street theatre performances

 

  • ‘Chain of consumption’ displays made of empty plastic bottles that demonstrate the amount of energy it takes to produce bottled water and the waste the products create.

 

Bottled water companies are reacting to challenges in schools, municipalities, and in school boards against their product, by claiming that they are simply providing consumers with a choice. Today, students are asking “whose water? And what choice?”. Zoe Maggio, Water Campaigner with the Polaris Institute asks, “What choice do people on campus really have to buy a bottle of Dasani or Aquafina from Coca-Cola or Pepsi vending machines when there are not enough water fountains or they are not being maintained?” A survey released in September by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, Canadian Union of Public Employees and Polaris Institute, found that 33% of respondents noticed a reduction in the number of water fountains on campus and 43% cited delays in repairing them.

 

The Bottled Water Free Zones Campaign was launched in March in conjunction with World Water Day, with over 40 zones on 15 campuses being created – spaces where bottled water is not being purchased, alternatives such as glasses, pitchers and reusable stainless steel containers for tap water are being promoted and provided, and beverage exclusivity contracts are being challenged.

 

Campus groups participating in the day of action are:

 

·            Environmental Society, University of Prince Edward Island

·            Green Campus, University of Ottawa

·            Guelph Students for Environmental Change (GSEC), Guelph University

·            Lakehead Campus Sustainability Committee, Lakehead University

·            Ontario Public Interest Research Group – Brock (OPIRG-Brock), Brock University

·            Students Taking Responsible Initiatives for a Viable Environment (STRIVE), Queen’s University

·            Sustainable Trent, Trent University

·            Working Students’ Centre, Ryerson University

 

-30-

 

For more information, and to arrange interviews with campus organizers, please contact:

 

Zoe Maggio, Water Campaigner, Polaris Institute at 613-237-1717 ext. 104, zoe@polarisinstitute.org, www.insidethebottle.org

 

Monique Woolnough, Ontario Sustainable Campuses Coordinator, Sierra Youth Coalition at 416-537-3616, ontario@syc-cjs.org, www.syc-cjs.org/sustainable

 

Ian Boyko, Campaigns and Government Relations Coordinator, Canadian Federation of Students at 613- 232-7394, campaigns@cfs-fcee.ca, www.cfs-fcee.ca

 

 

The Campus Bottled Water Free Zones Campaign is a Polaris Institute initiative in collaboration with the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) and the Sierra Youth Coalition (SYC). The campaign aims to challenge the corporate control of water one space at a time by raising awareness and action on the bottled water industry and calling for the re-building and maintaining of safe and accessible public tap water systems for all.

 

Polaris Institute works on major public policy issues like water and develops new tools and strategies to assist social movements in fighting for democratic social change in an age of corporate driven globalization.              

 

The Sierra Youth Coalition’s Sustainable Campuses project aims to empower students to lead initiatives on their campuses toward greater social, ecological and economic sustainability through changes to campus operations, curricula and culture.             

 

The Canadian Federation of Students represents over one half million Canadian students and provides them with an effective and united voice, provincially and nationally.

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DO YOU KNOW WHERE ITEM WITH BARCODE CAME FROM?
 
The whole world is scared of Chinese 'black hearted goods'. Can you differentiate which one is made in the USA, Philippines, Taiwan or China? This is our right to know, but the government and related departments never educate the public, therefore we have to INFORM ourselves.

In the unlikely event you don't believe everything I tell you, feel free to check with Snopes.  But as of today they haven't finished checking it out.
 
Most of it relating to the countries of origin of the bar codes is true.  What could be deceiving is that bar codes are placed on the final product when it has been completely assembled.  So a U.S. (0) bar code would indicate the product was assembled or packaged here.  But everything that went into it could be from China, and the bar code wouldn't disclose that.
 
One of the emails originated from the milk scare in Taiwan.  Maybe this will be of interest to those who care where their goods come from, especially baby food and pet food.  

The first 3 digits of the barcode is the country code wherein the product was made.  

Sample: all barcodes that start with 690 up to 695 are MADE IN CHINA.  471 is Made in Taiwan

Nowadays,  Chinese businessmen know that consumers do not prefer products 'made in china', so they don't show from which country it is made.  However, you may now refer to the barcode, remember if the first 3 digits is 690 to 695, then it is Made in China . 

00 ~ 13 USA & CANADA

30 ~ 37 FRANCE

40 ~ 44 GERMANY

49 ~ JAPAN

50 ~ UK

57 ~ Denmark

64 ~ Finland

76 ~ Switzerland and Liechtenstein

471 ~ Taiwan

480 - 489 ~ Philippines

628 ~ Saudi-Araba

629 ~ United Arab Emirates

690 - 695 ~ China

740 ~ 745 - Central America


 
This barcode indicates it was made in Taiwan.  Use the first 3 digits - 4 7 1 to make the determination.
 
 
All-
The next time Governor Crist brings an interstate lawsuit about water use involving Florida, Alabama and Georgia or avoids Executive intervention for an intrastate lawsuit involving conservation of water bodies versus utility and municipality extractions..... or speculates about the need for Florida to mimic 'western' water use policies....let him think upon the following article about Mexico and extrapolated social meanings of migration/immigration *extracted* from water politics. 
 
   The stresses of water politics are universal and at the heart of each controversy is the philosophy of water as a human right versus water as an economic commodity. 
 
Two telling points in the extreme illustration:
 
 a)   The problem with U.S. water negotiators is that they do not see water as a basic human right: they see water as a commodity in this war over natural resources; this view is reinforced by a decade-long catastrophic drought in the Colorado River Basin and the entire region of southwestern United States and northern Mexico. There are other nails, of course, in the coffin of Mexico's water future: a mega-drought induced by global climate disruptions; chronic lack of funding for water infrastructure and utilities throughout the country; rapid development and population growth; increasing pollution; water privatization and inequality in water allocation ; and in general, governmental corruption, incompetence, infighting, and mismanagement of water.
 
  b)  But will water negotiators and water lobbyists representing U.S. stakeholders have compassion for the plight of Mexico's poor and subsistence farmers? Or even have the foresight to see that it is in its long-term self-interest to help Mexico's poor? Water is not only a human rights issue-it is also a national security issue for Mexico. With increasing hunger and malnutrition, poverty, and political instability in Mexico, this water crisis will worsen Mexico's food crisis, leading to more food riots, which may just trigger a national security crisis for Mexico. Don't think for a minute that the United States can be insulated from Mexico's crises.
 
Don't think for a moment that *extraction* can be divorced from conservation need within Florida, don't think for a moment that Georgia and Alabama use can be divorced from Florida within the southeast, don't think for a moment that 1986 Cadillac Desert warnings for the western US can be divorced from the 2007 Mirage warnings about the eastern US.... all are contextually embedded within a global scale of public policy interests and scarcity has caught up with us all.   Our national near future will be the western hemisphere and water resources as much as weaning away from oil and the middle east and substituting alternatives to fossil fuel energy.
 
David Wiles
 
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Profligate Water Use in the US Is Fueling the Flight of Mexicans Across the Border

»

by: Jo-Shing Yang, AlterNet

photo
A container of water and a cross create a make-shift memorial to an immigrant who died trying to enter the US by crossing the desert. (Photo: John Carlos Frey)

    On October 21, 2008, the U.S. Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne inaugurated the ground breaking of the new Imperial Valley water reservoir near the U.S.-Mexico border. The 500-acre $172.2-million reservoir, to be completed in August 2010, will store surplus Colorado River water for use by coastal Southern California, southern Nevada, and central Arizona; previously this water had been flowing to Mexico and used by its cities and thousands of Mexican farmers.

    This reservoir, along with the $250 million project to line a 23-mile stretch of the All-American Canal, also in the Imperial Valley, with concrete to prevent water seepage to an underground aquifer, Mexicali Valley aquifer, which is used currently by Mexican cities and farmers, means that there will be substantially less water from the Colorado River and dire consequences for Mexico.

    An estimated 67,000 acre-feet of water seeps from the canal annually. In 2006, the Mexican government and two California environmental groups filed a lawsuit to stop the canal-lining project-ultimately unsuccessful. This captured seepage water will be sent to San Diego for municipal use. Now, Mexico has even less water to use, although theoretically it will still get its share of water of 1.5 million acre-feet under the 1944 treaty. The new Imperial Valley reservoir and the All-American Canal lining are two nails in the coffin of Mexico's water future. The triumphant U.S. water and irrigation districts, the winners of the two latest battles in the U.S.-Mexico water wars, are gloating over their victory in capturing the last drops of water in the Colorado River before they reach Mexico. Now, in the drought-stricken southwest, they can continue to irrigate vast corporate farms planted with thirsty crops, hose millions of suburban lawns, sprinkle golf courses, and fill tens of thousands of private swimming pools.

    The losers are, naturally, poor Mexican peasants and subsistence farmers. Drought-induced social strains are the hardest for the most vulnerable people in Mexico and will further fuel illegal migration to the United States.

    The problem with U.S. water negotiators is that they do not see water as a basic human right: they see water as a commodity in this war over natural resources; this view is reinforced by a decade-long catastrophic drought in the Colorado River Basin and the entire region of southwestern United States and northern Mexico. There are other nails, of course, in the coffin of Mexico's water future: a mega-drought induced by global climate disruptions; chronic lack of funding for water infrastructure and utilities throughout the country; rapid development and population growth; increasing pollution; water privatization and inequality in water allocation (i.e., the wealthy-such as agribusiness, cattle ranchers, and mining corporations-get about 70 percent of water for virtually nothing, while the poor must buy costly water from trucks and often die of waterborne diseases); and in general, governmental corruption, incompetence, infighting, and mismanagement of water.

    As more than 85 percent of Mexico is arid or semi-arid, Mexico's government considers deforestation and the lack of clean water two national security issues, and before he left office its former president Vicente Fox repeatedly said that water is a national security issue. In the past year, Mexico's poor have had to contend with skyrocketing food prices, general inflation (which also raised the price of water they must buy from water-delivery trucks driving long distances), a calamitous drought, rising unemployment, and increasing hunger and malnourishment.

    The poor have staged street protests-the so-called tortilla riots-since January 2007 when tens of thousands of Mexicans marched to protest against a 50 percent price hike of corn tortillas. Now the subsistence farmers have even less water to irrigate their crops, which means decreased harvests and more expensive food staples further out of reach of the urban poor; but the livelihood of those living on subsistence farming will be affected as well by drought and water scarcity and higher food prices for the food they cannot grow and must buy themselves. Thus, this water scarcity and water insecurity is triggering food insecurity in Mexico, which has implications for its national security.

    Global Climate Disruptions and Extreme Drought in Mexico and Southwestern United States

    Like the southwestern United States, which has been suffering from a decade-long drought which began in 1998, northern Mexico also has been afflicted by a punishing drought since 1992. This year, the extreme drought in Mexico continues, unrelenting. Climate scientists have predicted that the entire region from southwestern United States to north-central Mexico will be hit especially hard by global climate change and its associated extreme weather disruptions and extreme droughts. For example, researchers from the Scripps Institute of Oceanography forecasted that Lake Mead will be empty by 2021 at the current rate of use. According to a United Nations-commissioned report published in August 2008, there will be more increased dry periods and significant drought hazards in most of Mexico and Central America due to global climate disruptions.

    Mexico's largest freshwater lake, Lake Chapala, in the state of Jalisco, has been steadily shrinking since the 1970s. Scientists said that the lake has lost approximately 80 percent of its water due to rapid development in central Mexico. Researchers at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory have linked the mega-drought to the impacts of NAFTA and water privatization in Mexico in a February 2008 study:

    The Mexican drought has coincided with major changes in the Mexican economy and agriculture triggered by the North American Free Trade Agreement and moves to privatize water supply in much of Mexico. The combination of drought and economic change has created serious social impacts in Mexico with impacts on internal and cross-border migration. Both the southwestern United States and Mexico are robustly projected by climate models to dry in the current century intensifying social impacts in Mexico where water resources are already stretched.

    Scholars of climate and water resources have cited stories of poor farmers who find it more difficult to tap into groundwater to irrigate their subsistence crops using traditional, manual techniques due to a combination of factors: deforestation, drought, over-withdrawal of water by cities, and over-pumping of water by agribusiness and large ranchers. In Tamaulipas (the Mexican border state across from the Lower Rio Grande River Valley), there were news reports of farmers who have not been able to irrigate their crops since 1996 and have had to switch from the lucrative corn crop to sorghum. In other words, the drought and water scarcity have exacerbated Mexico's food crisis for the urban poor and for medium-size and small subsistence farmers. According to Los Angeles Times, Interior Secretary Kempthorne said he "remained hopeful that the two countries would find solutions to their common problem: drought."

    Unfortunately, with the construction of the new Imperial Valley reservoir and the lining of All-American Canal, it is difficult to imagine how the United States would work with Mexico to find solutions to their common drought problem. Are any of the powerful water districts from Las Vegas to San Diego offering to send additional water to Mexico? Or has any of the seven states volunteered to help rebuild Mexico's crumbling water infrastructure or help its small and medium-size farmers invest in water-conserving irrigation equipment?

    For the past eight years, the Bush administration has not placed climate change and finding solutions to cope with extreme climate disruptions on of its list of priorities, nor has upgrading its domestic infrastructure been a priority: instead, fighting the war on terror and the two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were its priorities.

    What Really Drove Mexico's Food Crisis

    Several factors have contributed to Mexico's food crisis and led to food riots (the "tortilla riots"), although there were no food shortages and no decreases in food production in the country, including the following:

    * Neoliberal policies and NAFTA's destructive impacts on Mexico's agriculture

    * Biofuel and ethanol production leading to soaring corn prices

    * Commodities speculation by index funds and hedge funds

    * Hoarding, speculation, and market consolidation by multinational food corporations

    NAFTA. Millions of Mexico's medium-size and small farmers went out of business when they couldn't compete with much cheaper, U.S. government-subsidized agricultural exports to Mexico at zero or low duty (in fact, U.S. taxpayers directly subsidized corn in the U.S. to the tune of $8.9 billion in 2005).

    According to a 2003 Carnegie Endowment report, at least 1.3 million farmers were displaced by NAFTA and many of them eventually migrated (often illegally) to the United States in search of work. Farming accounts for approximately 23 percent of Mexico's 100 million people. The result is that Mexico could not supply its internal food markets by itself-it must rely on imports from the United States. When prices of grains and food staples soared in the international commodity markets, Mexicans became hostages to the skyrocketing imported-food prices. Walden Bello wrote an excellent analysis of Mexico's food crisis earlier this year.

    Biofuels. A suppressed World Bank study completed in April 2008 revealed that at least 75 percent of recent escalating food prices can be attributed to biofuel production in the U.S. and Europe. Even the conservative think tank Council on Foreign Relations said that biofuels could starve the poor.

    Speculation. Analysts have also attributed much of the sudden rise of food prices in the international market to Wall Street traders and speculators who speculated on oil and other commodities as a hedge against U.S. recession and a weak U.S. dollar.

    Multinationals. Laura Carlsen wrote an in-depth analysis of Mexico's food crisis in the middle of this year and attributed the steep food price hikes to four corporations' hoarding and speculation to achieve consolidation (to drive out the small players) in the corn-flour market and to maximize speculative profiteering: the corn-tortilla cartel of Cargill, Maseca-ADM, Minsa-Arancia Corn Products International, and Agroinsa. But in most serious analyses of Mexico's food crisis, water has not been mentioned as a factor. With worsening global climate disruptions, scientists have already predicted a potential 30 percent reduction in Mexico's crop yield (UN's IPCC 2007 report, citing a 2004 study published in peer-reviewed journal Global Environmental Change).

    As neoliberal policies and NAFTA have decimated many small farmers in Mexico, more intense droughts attributable to global climate disruptions are expected to worsen Mexico's food crisis and hunger among its chronically impoverished and most vulnerable groups. Mexico's internal governmental corruption, in addition to its chronic inability to maintain and upgrade its crumbling water infrastructure, in the midst of the extreme drought will not spell relief for its farmers and poor alike.

    Mexico's Environmental Refugees and Water Refugees

    California's legal entitlement to Colorado River is only 4.4 million acre-feet (MAF) plus 50 percent of any declared surplus, based on 1922 Colorado River Compact, but in recent years, the state has used as much as 5.37 MAF annually. (One acre-foot is 326,000 gallons.) This additional water usage above the 1922 compact occurs in the context of a historic, decade-long drought in California and elsewhere in the U.S. southwest.

    The severe water shortages have intersected with soaring migration of Mexicans into the United States in the past decade and food crises in Mexico in the past two years. Among other critical issues such as NAFTA and biofuels production, Americans who seriously want to address the issue of undocumented immigration from Mexico into the United States must fundamentally address global climate disruptions which led to extreme drought in Mexico, the issue of water privatization in Mexico, and revisit water allocation and U.S.-Mexico water treaties to include how both countries will find common solutions to unrelenting drought in the face of climate disruptions affecting the Colorado River and the Rio Grande. Unfortunately, the anti-immigration groups in the United States see these "illegals" as taking over American jobs, rather than as refugees of environmental stresses (the global climate disruptions, which the U.S. is a major culprit of because of its CO2 pollution), refugees of NAFTA and refugees of IMF- and World Bank-imposed neoliberal policies, refugees of U.S.-based multinational food corporations and cartels, and refugees of agribusiness and U.S. corn lobby's biofuel-production mandate.

    Underlying undocumented immigration is poverty and hunger, and one underlying factor of poverty is chronic and severe water shortages in Mexico. The new Imperial Valley reservoir and concrete-lining of All-American Canal will capture more river water and seepage water for California, Nevada, and Arizona, but they spell more water scarcity and further destruction for Mexico's peasant farmers and Mexico's northern cities. Battered by the decade-long drought, the small and medium-size Mexican farmers have had their water taken away by their own Mexican corporate agribusiness via water privatization, their domestic markets taken away by U.S. agribusiness via NAFTA, and now they have to contend with the powerful water districts in California, Nevada, and Arizona.

    The next time Southern Californians water their lawns or central Arizonans fill their swimming pools or the Las Vegas casinos display their elaborate waterworks in those fancy fountains as if they are actually in Venice and not in a desert, they should think that they are taking water away from their neighbors across the border, those desperately poor peasant farmers in northern Mexico who rely on that water for their very survival and who now must depend on extremely costly water trucked over long distances. More children, elderly, and sick people-an untold number of Mexico's poor and frail-may die of waterborne diseases.

    Many of our so-called illegal aliens may be, in fact, water refugees or environmental refugees. With intensifying global climate disruptions, there will be more of this category of people in Mexico. Water is a basic human right, not a commodity to be fought over in resource wars. Given the historic nature of the mega-drought in the Colorado River Basin, seven states and Mexico will be holding more talks over the allocation of Colorado River.

    But will water negotiators and water lobbyists representing U.S. stakeholders have compassion for the plight of Mexico's poor and subsistence farmers? Or even have the foresight to see that it is in its long-term self-interest to help Mexico's poor? Water is not only a human rights issue-it is also a national security issue for Mexico. With increasing hunger and malnutrition, poverty, and political instability in Mexico, this water crisis will worsen Mexico's food crisis, leading to more food riots, which may just trigger a national security crisis for Mexico. Don't think for a minute that the United States can be insulated from Mexico's crises.

    -------

    Jo-Shing Yang is the author of Ecological Planning, Design, & Engineering, Solving Global Water Crises: New Paradigms in Wastewater and Water Treatment, Small and On-Site Systems for Water Self-Sufficiency and Sustainability and can be reached at jsyang@alum.mit.edu.

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November 21, 2008

Dear Merrillee,

Once again, the Bush administration is ignoring science and putting public safety at risk. In the meantime, chemical companies will get away with polluting our water. And it's all in the waning days of their lame-duck administration.

Act now to protect your drinking water from an ingredient found in rocket fuel.

Drinking water in 35 states and our nation's capital contains perchlorate, an ingredient in rocket fuel, at levels that could be harmful to human health.

The Bush administration is trying to rush a decision NOT to limit perchlorate rather than heeding the advice of three of their own science advisory committees.

Scientists say perchlorate impacts the thyroid's production of hormones that are important for fetal neural development.

Rather than safeguarding your health, your family's, and your community's, the Bush administration is up against the clock to let chemical companies off the hook for cleaning up the rocket fuel mess.

We are up against the clock to stop the flailing lame-duck administration from jeopardizing public health. Write now to protect your water from this contaminant.

Sincerely,
Mitch Jones, Water Policy Analyst
Food & Water Watch
P.S. Check out Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter's letter to the editor about perchlorate in the Washington Post (registration maybe required)



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