Thursday, June 11, 2009

Water Water Everywhere...


I'm speaking to the school board next week on bottled water. The board wants to ban it from sale in the schools, but a trustee or two is filing motion to stop the ban for fear that students will turn to pop and "juices" instead and become obese and/or diabetic. They're proposing a comprehensive plan concerning bottled water use that might involve a lengthy, time-consuming committee development, implementation, and yadda yadda yadda.

Here's some of my ideas in point form that I'll split up with a student speaker.


The Switch to Pop Theory

Students in our school have shifted significantly and easily from bottled water to tap water in stainless steel water bottles. By selling the bottles in many styles and then offering them as prizes, most students seem to have a re-usable bottle. In fact it seems to be a bit of a status symbol or fashion statement. You're old school if you still drink out of disposable bottles. We also held a water taste test, and most students were shocked to find they prefer the school's tap water to two popular brands of water that have been shipped from who-knows-where and sat on shelves for months.

Next year we intend to get a water dispenser that will sit in the cafeteria, unplugged, and filled with tap water. This will increase water drinking even more as many bottles can't be easily refilled from a water fountain. If we want students to drink water instead of pop or juice, we just have to make water more accessible and free! If we want to really make sure kids only drink water and not pop or juice, we can also ban pop and fruity drinks sometimes called juice.

The Profits Conundrum

Schools make a tidy sum on vending machines. It really is a shame that schools can't fund sports and clubs with public money but have to rely on corporate sponsorship, bake sales, and pop machines. We don't want students to drink pop, but we need the profits from the pop machine. Isn't it funny that the board wants to ban water bottles, before it looks at pop. I'm pretty sure it's not because water in plastic is less healthy than pop in plastic, but, obviousy, because water sales don't hit the heights of pop sales. It's a smaller hit to take. I have no solutions for this. I don't think we'll make enough profit on apples and salad to fund teams. Any ideas?

Water Problems

Both Coke (Dasani) and Pepsi (Aquafina) have admitted that their water is from a tap. It's not special water from a spring. But we should be happy about this because in the film FLOW (For the Love of Water), it's made clear that bottled water is almost entirely unregulated, and municipal tap water is, in most cases in this part of the world, highly regulated. In 2003, almost 10% of food poisoning cases in the UK have been linked to bottled water. It won't be until December 1st, 2009 that it will finally be illegal to have any E. coli contamination in bottled water, and bottlers will be required to test their water weekly. From now until December, you're on your own.

Bottle Problems

Nothing should be consumed out of soft plastics that can be crushed with one hand. Soft plastics leach several toxins like BPA, and even hard plastic is coming into question. Remember when all pop and condiments and everything came in glass? Glass can be recycled more efficiently, and it doesn't add crap to our food. Yes, I also remember broken glass all over the place, so now we're into stainless steel bottles which don't break and don't leach.

If anyone has other reasons to stop the stopping of a plastic water bottle ban, let me know, and maybe I can strengthen my position by Monday. AND if you've got points in support of selling water in school, let me know that too. Then I'll know what I'm up against!

3 comments:

Dan said...

I am with New Wave Enviro Products, the bottles stainless steel bottles pictured are from us. We can offer discounts to schools that would like to order the bottles. Here are some facts on bottled water I have come across over time, maybey they can help with your cause. Feel free to email me with questions dan.dettwiler@newwaveenviro.com

• On average, one person uses 166 disposable plastic water bottles each year.
• If everyone in New York City were to use a reusable water bottle for one week, for one month, or for one year it would make a significant difference in reducing waste.
One week = 24 million bottles saved
One month = 112 million bottles saved
One year = 1.328 billion bottles saved
• Making bottles to meet Americans’ demand for bottled water requires more than 1.5 million barrels of oil annually, enough to fuel some 100,000 U.S. cars for a year.
• It costs more money to drink bottled water than to put gas in your car--up to five times more--due mainly to its packaging and transportation.
• 86 percent of plastic water bottles used in the United States become garbage or litter.

Team Aqua Star said...

Marie,
There's an alternate solution available not enough people are aware of. A new type of vending machine is available designed for use with reusable bottles. It can vend water as well as two beverages (which can be flavored waters, sports drinks, or teas)It can be programmed for varying volumes or for example free water, but purchased beverages.

These can replace your standard vending machines giving you a more eco-friendly product without sacrificing vending revenues, which unfortunately are important to school systems everywhere.

For more information regarding these machines in Canada contact Mobetta Water 780-349-2503
and tell them Rick at Aqua Star International recommended them to you.

This product should be a win/win for your efforts to "green" your community while still providing options for the students and revenue for the district. Good luck!

Marie said...

Thanks for the additional information!