Corporate Control of Public Water

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A Big Win Against Corporate Control of Water

By Megan Tady, In These Times.

In the battle over whether the people or corporations should control public water, residents of Stockton, Calif., won a huge victory over a multinational but other localities remain threatened.

Bill Lokyo never expected to find himself embroiled in a six-year battle over water with a multinational corporation and city officials in Stockton, Calif. "We all thought this would only be a one-year fight," Lokyo says.

But Lokyo and the group Concerned Citizens Coalition of Stockton (CCOS) felt compelled to challenge a rushed deal that turned the city's publicly owned water system into a for-profit venture. This month, their perseverance paid off when the city finally sent privatization packing.

"We believed that we were right," Lokyo says. "And when you believe that, you just can't stop."

In 2003, against the wishes of many Stockton residents, the city signed a 20-year contract with the company OMI-Thames to manage its wastewater, water and stormwater system. The CCOS, joined by the Sierra Club and the League of Women Voters of San Joaquin County, filed a lawsuit under the California Environmental Quality Act to halt the project until it allowed for public participation. Judges twice ruled in favor of the groups, and on July 17, city officials voted to rescind their appeal and dissolve what Food and Water Watch, a group that challenges corporate control of water resources, has called the "most notorious water privatization deal in the United States.

More than 80 percent of Americans fill their glasses with water owned and managed by public utilities -- a market for growth that has CEOs rubbing their hands. Across the United States, multinational corporations are swooping into towns and cities with promises of a more efficient and economical water system if they would just turn over their taps.

But for many municipalities, it is a raw deal. Privatization often results in exorbitant water rates, poor service, little accountability, a disregard for public safety and destruction of the environment. City officials in Atlanta, for instance, cancelled their contract with Suez four years into privatizing their water system after residents experienced routine boil orders, water shortages and rate hikes.

"People get at a very basic level that they don't want a really important public service like water to be privatized," Hauter says. "They don't want the customer call center to be 1,000 miles away. They don't want their water rates going up. Privatizations are succeeded with environmental disasters, as [companies] try to cut corners and they don't fix the leakages."

Two hours from Stockton, residents in Felton, Calif., have been trying to pry their pipes out of a corporation's grip since 2002. Cal-Am, owned by the multinational giant RWE, raised water rates by 44 percent and is pushing for another increase that would raise rates by a total of over 100 percent

Snip

But public control of water isn't problem-free. Public utilities are struggling financially to maintain and modernize water systems, and water infrastructure is deteriorating across the nation. A 2005 report card issued by the American Society for Engineers gave the United States a "D-" for drinking water infrastructure, warning, "America faces a shortfall of $11 billion annually to replace aging facilities and comply with safe drinking water regulations." An estimate by the coalition Water Infrastructure Network (WIN) puts the funding shortfall at $23 billion per year.

But while billions are needed to restore and protect America's drinking water, the Bush Administration has repeatedly cut federal funding to address the problem. Bush's 2008 budget actually provides incentives for the privatization of water utilities, rather than increase funding to the public sector.

With little help from the government, some flailing municipalities are looking to public-private partnerships to keep them from drowning.

"Some [municipalities] say, 'Gee, maybe we should privatize and turn our facilities over to the private sector. Maybe they'll do a better job and we wouldn't have to worry about it,'" Kirk says. "That isn't going to work, and hasn't worked in most cases."

Snip…as lawmakers consider legislation to adequately fund water infrastructure, private corporations are buying up public utilities. People need to be "engaged" and "watchdogging" at the community level to protect their water from corporate takeovers, says Hauter.

Above all, Lokyo says, the "minute" your community hears murmurs of privatization, "you have to start getting organized, and figure out if it's in your city's best interest. If it's not in your city's best interest, than you fight it. And you just keep fighting and fighting until you win."

http://alternet.org/environment/58589/

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