Did you know that one aspect of "sustainability" means drinking recycled water? Here's how that is happening in Australia.
Is this happening to your water? Before you say, "No way", you had best check. It happened to the folks in Huntington Beach, CA a while back and the "sustainability" notion is spreading.
Regionalism: Control the Water - Control the People
by Michael Shaw
Friday, 11 May 2007
Kevin Howe's article Monterey Herald, dated March 1, 2007, discusses the water regionalization program for the Central Coast of California. In his article, Howe states, "If Monterey Bay water officials are looking for alternatives for ensuring regional water supply; they might start by deciding just what the 'region' is.
Setting the Table for a Manipulated Water Crisis - Felton's Artificial Dialectic in Operation Now
by F21sc
Thursday, 30 June 2005
The town of Felton in Santa Cruz County is on the horns of a dilemma. Sustainable Development mercenaries are giving the town an electoral "choice" for water controls: Heads insiders win; Tails the citizens lose!
Water District Educational Programs Promoting Behavior Modification
by Lisa Rudnick
Friday, 15 August 2003
SUMMARY: Something seemed fishy in the San Lorenzo Water District when its Board of Directors introduced plans for using ratepayer fees to fund indoctrination programs. In this commentary, Lisa Rudnick presents the opposition to the Board's actions, and exposes how the program may not only be a questionable use of ratepayer funds, but that it may be illegal.
It is Time for Straight Answers from the Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency
by Ray AmRhein
Friday, 23 May 2003
Ray AmRhein asks the Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency "Who owns the groundwater in a farmer's well" and finds the answers, and the agengy's practices, violate the law -- and the private property of Santa Cruz County residents. In this Watsonville Register-Pajaronian article (4/30/2003), AmRhein uses his 49 years of experience in water law to compare PVWMA practices with the law, and finds that "for over 10 years the [PVWMA] directors have been acting under the false premise that the state owns the water."
Position Statement: Regionalization of Resources by Non-elected Administrators
by Michael Shaw
Thursday, 22 May 2003
A conglomeration of local and international government and non-government organizations groups are now in advanced stages of implementing programs that subjugate Santa Cruz County water use and citizen water rights to regional control by non-elected officials. This Freedom Advocates issue statement summarizes what we can do together to advance freedom and protect your private property.
Santa Cruz County, California is in a rain zone that dumps approximately 978,000 gallons of water for each resident every year. The failure to implement even a basic water storage plan allows the water to flow unused into the ocean. Jack Ward researches the question “Do we have a water shortage in Santa Cruz County?”, and finds a resounding NO! “Has it occurred to anyone else that the major problems confronting Santa Cruz County are contrived and are caused by the same politicians that we entrusted to solve them?”