-
You know, I only have a few years left in
life, maybe twenty years; fifteen maybe.
-
So I thought about what's the most
important thing that I could do
-
in the time that I have here.
And, uh, taking care of my grandkids,
-
and making sure that they have a place
to enjoy: that they have streams to enjoy;
-
that they have wildlife to enjoy.
-
That's, probably, one of the
most important things I can do.
-
Nestlé is drawing water from a
spring or a well,
-
within the National forests,
within public lands that are owned
-
by the people of the United States.
-
It's drawing that water and then it's
diverting it, in a pipe,
-
down several miles outside of the forest.
-
Nestlé has an expired special use permit,
issued 1978 that expired in 1988.
-
Uh, that permit alone allowed them occupy
National forest land, with the
-
infrastructure necessary to remove water.
And they take anywhere from
-
50 to 150 million gallons a year,
depending on certain conditions.
-
The Forest Service's maybe is getting
a pittance of what this water's worth.
-
We're subsidising the business that
depletes that public land resource,
-
and that then creates cost on down
the line in its lifecycle,
-
as well in the waste management cost.
-
The drought drags on but the watershed,
you know, grows drier.
-
Why is a foreign corporation like Nestlé
being allowed to withdraw millions
-
and millions of gallons out of our
watershed, making a huge, huge profit?
-
(interviewer) Do you have any intention of
ceasing bottling operations in California?
-
(Tim Brown) Uh, absolutely not, uh,
in fact, um, if I could increase it, I would.
-
We feel good about what we're doing.
-
Strawberry Creek is just barely hanging on
because there's so much water removed.
-
And then when we saw the drought
that's currently going on,
-
that's the worst drought
in recorded history here.
-
Um, so all of that together made me
really worry about Strawberry Creek,
-
I thought that there's a good chance we
could completely dry Strawberry Creek up.
-
Ah, the Strawberry drainage is, uh, is a
critical drainage for, uh,
-
our plant and animal communities, and it
becomes more and more critical every year.
-
Because as the urban population in
Southern California grows, uh,
-
the National forests down in Southern
California are becoming more and more
-
isolated islands, of plant and
animal communities.
-
This is a dry habitat that means that those
riparian areas, those areas that are wet,
-
are essential. Especially in dry years,
like this year, to wildlife.
-
And it's at 0.18 now, 0.18 cubic feet per
second, which is nothing,
-
I mean, it's almost no water.
-
Species that have lived there,
over eons of time, could be lost;
-
it's just a, it's a terrible thing.
-
The Forest Service hasn't looked at this
in a number of years and so they can't say
-
"yes we're protecting those public
resources, yes we're making sure
-
that there's sufficient water for all the
species, yes we're making sure,
-
that, we're holding this in trust
for the people of the United States,
-
we're using it in a sustainable way."
And they're obligated by law
-
to use the resources on the National
forest in a sustainable way.
-
A year ago, I started begging the Forest
Service and Nestlé to start meeting
-
together to start talking about Strawberry
Creek, to work together on their permit
-
and on the, uh, and on protecting the
National forests, and I was begging
-
them to do that, and, um, and still
nothing's happened;
-
there's no meetings, there's just talk.
-
Everybody in California is effected by the
drought, but not Nestlé,
-
or any other water bottling company.
I mean, this is our water!
-
The water in the, in those mountains
belong to every California(n),
-
and every tax payer in America.
-
Personally, I invested 40+ years of my
life being a professional forester.
-
And I care a great deal that public land
in our country is properly managed,
-
especially, in a manner that makes sure
that the goods and services it provides
-
are there for future generations,
-
and that's not how it's being managed
right now.