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Updated: Report Details How Corporate Pressure Seemingly Derailed Plans For a Plastic Bottle Ban at Grand Canyon National Park

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Well-placed marketing. At the Island in the Sky Visitor Center at Canyonlands National Park, you can buy bottled water right at the front door....or walk about 20 feet to the free water spout (that cylindrical feature in the background) nearby. Kurt Repanshek photo.

Efforts to showcase the National Park Service's commitment to a green environment were partially derailed when Coca Cola raised concerns over plans to ban disposable water bottles at Grand Canyon National Park with Park Service Chief Jon Jarvis, who blocked the ban.

Coca Cola officials approached both the agency directly and the National Park Foundation with its concerns, according to a report in the New York Times. Coca Cola is a major player in bottled water through its Dasani brand.

Park Service spokesman David Barna told the Times that Mr. Jarvis made the “decision to put it on hold until we can get more information.”

"Reducing and eliminating disposable plastic bottles is one element of our green plan," Mr. Barna added. "This is a process, and we are at the beginning of it.”

In a bid to see if any undue influence was wielded, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility today filed a lawsuit to obtain Park Service correspondence related to the matter.

"Why in the world would the Park Service director swoop down at the last minute to veto a common-sense conservation measure that a park had spent significant taxpayer dollars to implement?” asked PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that Director Jarvis often speaks about climate change and how national parks need to “teach us how we relate to the natural world.”

“In this agency, when a matter goes under ‘director’s review’ it never reemerges – in other words, the bottle ban is likely dead," the PEER official said.

Reportedly among the director's concerns was how a ban would impact the safety of visitors to dry, arid Southwest parks such as Grand Canyon, Zion, and Canyonlands.

The bottle ban had been in the works for some time. In anticipation of it, Grand Canyon crews early in 2011 installed nine free water supply stations throughout the park at a cost of more than $300,000, according to PEER calculations. Six were installed on the South Rim, three on the North Rim.

In addition to the NPS filling stations, Delaware North Companies’ Desert View and Canyon Village Marketplaces also installed their own in-store, water bottle filling stations. The new filling stations augment the water already available from sinks and water fountains in buildings and facilities throughout the park.

Some existing water fountains were also being equipped with bottle filling spigots. All of the water available at sinks, faucets, water fountains and filling stations can be used to fill bottles free of charge and is pure Grand Canyon spring water from the park’s “approved public water supply,” located at Roaring Springs on the North Rim.

The filling stations were part of a green initiative being implemented to encourage park visitors and residents to think about the environmental impacts of the choices they make every day, starting with the water they drink.

“The amount of litter associated with disposable water bottles has been increasing along park trails and walkways. It’s one of the major contributors of trash below the rim, and it’s currently estimated that disposable water bottles make up as much as 30 percent of the park’s solid waste stream," Tim Jarrell, the park's chief of facilities management, said last March.

Park concessioners, retailers, and cooperating association bookstores (Xanterra South Rim, LLC, Delaware North Companies Parks & Resorts at Grand Canyon, Inc., Forever Resorts, L.L.C., and the Grand Canyon Association) also said they would sell reusable water bottles at a variety of price points in their facilities throughout the park.

According to the Times' story, the National Park Foundation's chief executive officer, Neil Mulholland, confirmed that Coke officials had approached him with concerns about the bottle ban, but did not threaten to withhold its donations to the foundation if nothing was done.

“There was not an overt statement made to me that they objected to the ban,” Mr. Mulholland told the newspaper. “There was never anything inferred by Coke that if this ban happens, we’re losing their support.”

PEER officials, however, questioned that position, saying a major gift from Coke was contingent on the ban being lifted.

“It would be outrageous if corporate contributions are influencing national park management decisions,” stated Mr. Ruch, noting that Director Jarvis has called for creation of a billion dollar endowment drawn largely from corporate donors.

“As the Park Service expands its dependence on corporate largesse, we need to make doubly sure that no strings that come attached.  The circumstances of these gifts and how they are used should be on the public record.”

Coca Cola officials, meanwhile, told the Times bans are never right, that those moves "don't necessarily address the problem."

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Personally, having been a presenter of several issues of concern directed at NPS, serious issues I believe, I do not feel comfortable throwing Superintendent Ubureauga into the same pot that I know others belong.  I just don't.  I have other reasons but the home assessed value versus selling price differential, even after the crash I sold property for twice the assessed value.  There just may be people inside NPS that just might surface and bring what they know inside to be the right course.  Somehow, I remain hopeful and I just got served with two citations from NPS, lol!  Forgive them, they know not what they do:)!


Perhaps, Julie, because often bottled water is only tap water put in a bottle? Most municipal water in the US is as safe as bottled water, but at much less of a price to produce and consume?

Check out this report: http://www.sfphes.org/water/FactSheets/bottled_water.pdf


Gaelyn:
One of the problems is recycling the plastic bottles. No one really wants the stuff and it ends up costing NPS to get rid of it appropriately.

 PETE is probably the easiest plastic material to recycle. Scrap PETE is worth as much by weight as aluminum. There are whole cottage industries in some countries around scavenging for PETE bottles.

Right now I'm using a blanket that made from recycled water bottles. Several clothing companies (most notably Patagonia) sell polyester fleece jackets spun from recycled PETE water bottles. It's not that great for making new water bottles, but there are lots of everyday plastics made from recycled PETE bottles.


I don't mean to insult Julie, but I really have to wonder about the wisdom level of people who are willing to waste (and I do mean to say waste) their money on bottled water when we can all open a faucet and fill a bottle with pure water.  Pure water that was provided by EPA laws -- that some people hate.  Pure water that millions of people in other lands are dying because they don't have it.

I'll bet Julie, like other Americans, complains bitterly about gasoline prices.  But bottled waterholics ignore the fact that they are spending enormous dollars for a liquid that is free if we only open a faucet.

If you're spending $1.49 for a tiny 9-ounce bottle of Evian, that's $21 a gallon!   It's all put into perspective with gallon prices for most brands of bottled water, which in most cases is just filtered tap water.  (And usually these bottlers have to add a few mineral ingredients to provide a taste users will like because filtered or distilled water tastes "flat.")  Actually, most people already get enough water through the food and beverages they consume throughout the day.  Is it possible the bottled water companies have created all this hype about "hydration?"  Wow, the power of advertising!

When I filled my car yesterday, it cost $3.32 a gallon.  So let's see -- I saved a cool $17.68 per gallon yesterday by filling up with gasoline instead of water.


I think paying for bottled water is a choice. I'm trying to cut back when I don't absolutely need it. I have a reusable bottle that I take to work, and I almost always drink out a reusable bottle on the trail. However, I do put packaged bottled water in my car and keep some around to share and might stash a few bottles in my pack. I also tend to reuse a lot of bottles. On a backpacking trip I kept several empty disposable bottles that I reused several times.

Frankly when I buy the stuff, I'd rather get real water from a mountain spring and not filtered tap water. Even so, I sometimes find myself in a pinch where my family is screaming that they need something to drink.

I'm actually too cheap to buy bottled water from a vending machine. I don't see the point of paying $1.50 for a bottle that I can get for less than 30 cents as part of a case.

The bottled water companies are trying to reduce waste. Bottles are lighter and just as strong as they used to be with more advanced manufacturing technology. I've noticed my cases often won't come with a cardboard bottom any more.


Lee -  If you don't find value in bottled water then so be it.  Don't buy it.  But quit trying to force everyone else to do what you want rather than what they want.  And if you are so anti banks, corporations, oil companies or what ever you Occupiers are railing against stop buying their products.  I'm sure they won't miss you.


I personally see nothing wrong about the NPS banning the sale of drinks contained in plastic bottles by stores inside the Grand Canyon.  It's the mission of the NPS to protect and preserve resources, and if it's determined that litter created by plastic bottles has become a problem, one way to reduce this litter is to ban the sale of this product inside the parks.  Such programs have already been implemented successfully in other major desert parks of the NPS system. 

Of course, there's no ban on taking such materials along on parktrails, as long as the bottles were purchased outside of the parks. 
My main gripe is that an NPS plan has been derailed given the appearance of pressure applied by the Coca Cola corporation, a major contibutor to the National Parks Foundation, and intervention by the NPS Director himself.  That just doesn't seem nor sound like a correct mode of action, given that this plan was already well on its way to becoming reality.


ec -- I'm not in any way trying to "force" anyone.  And, like most other Occupiers, I'm also not anti-bank, anti-corporation, or anti-oil.  I chose not to buy bottled water, but recognize it's up to others to make their own choices.  Although more than once when I've mentioned the cost of bottled water, I've had people suddenly become aware of how much it really costs. 

I moved my money to a credit union long ago when our Utah legislators -- several of whom worked as bank executives -- tried to pass a special set of taxes on credit unions to make them "more competitive" with their banks.

I drive a small motor scooter when weather allows and a car when it doesn't.  I have no choice but to use oil company products because there are no other options right now.  But I can't try to force others to use a scooter even though it gets 80 mpg and could save others a bundle of money.  Can't I, though, support development of alternatives to oil?

What I am trying to do, and will continue trying to do, is to wake up others about the abuses and dishonesty of powerful people who seek to rob ordinary Americans of their rights and things we have worked hard for.

I don't shop at WalMart and urge others not to do so because we are not helping our job situation by allowing them to forward our jobs and dollars to China.  I'm sure they don't miss me.  But I keep hoping that if others like me will keep calling them out and trying to persuade other sensible Americans to recognize the dishonest practices of powerful people, pandering politicians, and organizations, more will join in our efforts to clean up our government and the abuses of corporations and others.  Maybe if we succeed in getting others to take action, these outfits will begin to miss a lot of us.

If you choose a different way, then I'll respect that.  But is it okay if I feel sorry for your gullibility?  If you want to feel that I'm gullible, then I guess you have that right.

Maybe we're all gullible.  But I keep hoping that somehow we might all be able to sit down together and start to reason with one another.  Maybe if we could do that, we might find some workable solutions.  Trouble is, we're so divided now that chances of that seem very slim.  And chances will remain slim until we all start to unlock our minds, stop shouting at one another, and consider the possibility that there might be other ways to keep our nation the great place it always has been.  Perhaps we need people every once in a while who are willing to stand up and try to call attention to the falsehoods that surround us -- on all sides.


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