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Louisiana teachers' union concerned about educators' future; Supreme Court hears arguments in Trump immunity case; Court issues restraining order against fracking waste-storage facility; Landmark NE agreement takes a proactive approach to CO2 pipeline risks.

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Speaker Johnson accuses demonstrating students of getting support from Hamas. TikTok says it'll challenge the ban. And the Supreme Court dives into the gray area between abortion and pregnancy healthcare, and into former President Trump's broad immunity claims

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The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Bottled Water Deal Raises Concerns

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Tuesday, May 17, 2016   

BLOOMFIELD, Conn. - A deal allowing a commercial company to bottle and sell water from the Hartford area's public water supply has some residents up in arms.

Niagara Bottling plans to draw up to 1.8 million gallons of water a day from the system for sale as bottled water.

Valerie Rossetti of the group Save Our Water Connecticut says the deal gives the company priority over residents, even in the event of a drought.

"Our natural resource, which is a public trust, is becoming a corporate asset that's being sold off for profiteering by corporations," says Rossetti.

Niagara says at full capacity, the plant would use only 2.3 percent of the available water supply, while creating what it describes as "120 good-paying jobs."

Rossetti says her group thinks the volume of water Niagara will be bottling is huge, and points out that bottled water is different from other uses that keep water cycling through the local environment.

"Here, it's actually being largely taken out of the watershed it comes from and trucked in various areas, including out-of-state, so it completely disappears from our watershed," says Rossetti.

Niagara was also granted a $4.1 million tax abatement as well as discounts on the water and sewage use.

And Rossetti says the plant estimates it will produce more than 2.5 million single-use plastic bottles of water a day. She questions the environmental impact.

"Up to 60 percent of them are going to never be recycled and will wind up in landfills and rivers and the ocean where they degrade at an extremely slow rate, over hundreds of years," says Rossetti.

Legislation to give residential consumers priority during water-supply emergencies and to prohibit charging commercial bottlers any less for water than local residents pay was passed in the State Senate this spring, but it stalled in the House.

Rossetti hopes for another try in the next legislative session.


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