VICTORIA 鈥 Have you noticed the latest degradation of standards on TV news? In addition to sensational depictions of crime, accidents and celebrities, the lineup now incorporates any nonsense that is momentarily 鈥渧iral鈥 on the Internet.
So it was with an online petition singling out Swiss food corporation Nestl茅, which operates a water bottling plant near Hope. It鈥檚 the largest in B.C., one of many that bottle the province鈥檚 water and sell it back to a gullible public.
This petition is courtesy of SumOfUs, one of those self-appointed environmental watchdogs that seem to pop up like mushrooms overnight. 鈥淔ighting for people over profits,鈥 they claim, pitching for donations.
The story has what U.S. comedian Stephen Colbert calls 鈥渢ruthiness.鈥 That鈥檚 when something is false, but it 鈥渇eels鈥 true.
鈥淣estl茅 is about to suck B.C. dry 鈥 for $2.25 per million litres to be exact,鈥 says the SumOfUs headline.
Using her keen sense of what鈥檚 superficially popular, Premier Christy Clark instantly called for a review of these low rates for selling the people鈥檚 water.
It then fell to Environment Minister Mary Polak to explain what鈥檚 really going on.
鈥淧eople keep saying there鈥檚 a deal with Nestl茅,鈥 Polak told reporters. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛. They pay the same as any other industrial user, in fact the highest industrial rate, and it goes for anything from hydraulic fracturing to bottled water, those involved in mining for example, any of those heavy industrial uses.鈥
And why is that rate so low? It鈥檚 because the province takes great pains not to 鈥渟ell鈥 water, which would make it a commodity under trade agreements, like oil or minerals. That would surrender provincial control, and allow the U.S. to press for equal access to Canadian water.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e buying the right to use the water,鈥 Polak said. 鈥淚 know it sounds crazy to the public, but we call it a rental 鈥 a water rental. There鈥檚 a reason we use that language, because we are very careful to avoid any suggestion that by paying this amount, you therefore own that water.
鈥淭hat reserves for us the right at any time, for a compelling public need, to say stop. It doesn鈥檛 matter if you have a licence.鈥
As for the brazenly false claim that Nestl茅 is sucking B.C. dry, I鈥檓 indebted to a real environmental professional named Blair King for explaining this. (His offers useful technical explanations of issues in the news, many of which contradict so-called environmentalists.)
King notes that the bottling plant uses less than one per cent of the flow through Kawkawa Lake:
鈥淚f Nestl茅 stopped operating (and put its 75 employees out of work and stopped paying municipal taxes) would there be more water for the rest of us?鈥 he writes.
鈥淎bsolutely not. Kawkawa Lake drains its excess water into the Fraser River, which drains into the Strait of Georgia. Neither the Fraser River at Hope nor the Strait of Georgia is particularly short of water, even in the driest of years.鈥
Clark made one useful contribution, when asked about this urgent non-issue by those seeking to further sensationalize the current drought and forest fires.
She correctly noted that most B.C. residents have access to the best tap water in the world, and have no need for bottled water.
Nestl茅, Perrier, Coke, Pepsi and other companies have done a fantastic job of convincing people that their drinking water has to be delivered in bottles from some mythical pure source.
Here鈥檚 a tip, Nestl茅 critics: Fill a jug with water and stick it in the fridge. Fight the corporations.
Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Twitter: @tomfletcherbc