Bottle Bill Update
November 2, 2006
Bottle Bill Update
WV-CAG, as part of the People's Election Reform Coalition, monitors campaign
contributions made to our state legislators. During the 2004 election, the
beverage industry contributed more than $89,000 to candidates who went on to win
their legislative race for state Senate or House, up 43% from
2002. Coca-Cola's PAC alone contributed $39,992 and PACs for Pepsi and the Beer
Wholesalers gave $11,750 and $15,050 respectively. The PAC for the convenience
stores (OMEGA) gave $9,800.
It's safe to predict that as our campaign to bring a Bottle Bill to West
Virginia grows, so will campaign contributions from the groups opposed to the
legislation. It is SO important that your legislators hear regularly that you
support the WV Bottle Bill because they hear from industry lobbyists at the
interims and at fundraisers throughout each and every election year.
QUICK FACTS ON BOTTLED WATER VERSUS CLEANING UP THE DRINKING WATER
SUPPLY
* Members of the United Nations estimate that if the world took half of what
it currently spends on bottled water ($100 billion annually) and invested it in
water infrastructure and treatment, everyone in the world could have access to
clean drinking water.
* But bottled water is cleaner, right? Actually, the U.S. EPA sets more
stringent quality standards for tap water than the FDA does for bottled
beverages, and roughly 40% of bottled water is actually just tap water.
* 1.5 billion barrels of oil are consumed each year to produce the plastic
for water bottles, enough to fuel 100,000 cars.
* According to the Container Recycling Institute, only 14 percent of plastic
water bottles are recycled.
* A water bottle in a landfill or lying around as litter will take over
1,000 years to biodegrade. |