Community Water Center

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KVPR: FARMERS, ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERS URGE LEGISLATURE TO SUPPORT SAFE DRINKING WATER BILL

ON Sep 09, 2017

Farmers and environmental justice leaders, including Community Water Center, have led a coalition that is urging California Assembly leaders to bring SB623, the Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund to a vote, instead of tabling it until the next legislative session.

United for Justice

ON Sep 07, 2017

We stand in solidarity with all our friends in Charlottesville who took a stand against white supremacy. We stand in solidarity with our neighbors, friends, family, and community members who are DREAMers and immigrants fighting for documentation.

SB 623, Safe Drinking Water Conversation Continues in Assembly

ON Sep 02, 2017

In an important step forward toward securing safe and affordable drinking water for all Californians, Senate Bill 623 (Monning) moved out of the Assembly Appropriations Committee to the Assembly Rules Committee today.

T is for Toxic: Danger Lurking in California School Drinking Fountains

ON Aug 11, 2017

AVENAL, CALIFORNIA – Reef-Sunset Unified School District Superintendent David East is worried about water. Not because of the drought – record rains this past winter ended five years of dry times. Rather, East, whose district encompasses the small towns of Avenal and Kettleman City on the San Joaquin Valley’s west side, is worried about the safety of the water that the 2,700 students in his school district are being given to drink.

"California’s Plan to Tackle a Carcinogen Widespread in Water"

ON Aug 11, 2017

IF YOU DRIVE Highway 99 through California’s Central Valley, you’ll pass through the heart of farm country, where the state’s bounty blooms with hundreds of crops – everything from peaches to pistachios, from tangerines to tomatoes. You’ll also pass through dozens of communities, large and small, whose water systems are tainted by a newly regulated contaminant, 1,2,3-trichloropropane (TCP), which for decades was used in agricultural fumigants injected into farmland across the Valley.

The California Drought Isn’t Over, It Just Went Underground

ON Aug 11, 2017

MADERA, CALIFORNIA – Evelyn Rios wept in 2014 when the well went dry at her home of 46 years – the home where she and husband Joe raised five children on farm-worker wages. They cannot afford another well, so they do without. Her angst only grew as California’s five-year drought dragged on.

Former Health-Protective Limit on Carcinogen Under Review

ON Aug 07, 2017

On Tuesday, August 1, 2017 the State Water Resources Control Board met to discuss the proposed resolution to delete the text of regulations establishing and implementing a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) on hexavalent chromium, a previously-regulated carcinogen. Following the Superior Court of Sacramento County’s May 31, 2017 decision to invalidate the prior MCL due to a “failure to properly consider economic feasibility,” the State Water Board was ordered to reconsider and adopt a new MCL after economic analysis. Though the ruling did not take a stance on whether or not the previously instated MCL was economically unfeasible, if it adequately protected public health, or what the MCL’s proper value should be, the State Water Board was left to return to the drawing board.

California Budget Takes Steps to Address State’s Drinking Water Crisis

ON Jun 30, 2017

Water justice advocates and environmental, health, rural and equity organizations thank the California Legislature for including emergency drinking water funds in the 2017-18 state budget to continue to chip away at California’s drinking water crisis. The $17 million allocated will address many immediate needs, but advocates urge the legislature to enact a long-term, sustainable funding source to meet the ongoing needs of the state’s water systems.

Increased Access to Funding for Drinking Water Projects in Severely Disadvantaged Communities is Adopted at State Board

ON Jun 23, 2017

This week, the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) approved the 2017-2018 Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Intended Use Plan (DWSRF IUP), which creates a new designation of Expanded Small Community Water Systems for those that serve 10,000 – 20,000 residents or have between 3,300 and 6,600 service connections.

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KVPR: FARMERS, ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERS URGE LEGISLATURE TO SUPPORT SAFE DRINKING WATER BILL

By Ezra David Romero Farmers and environmental justice leaders, including Community Water Center, have led a coalition that is urging California Assembly leaders to bring SB623, the Safe and Affordable...

United for Justice

  We stand in solidarity with our neighbors, friends, family, and community members who are DREAMers and immigrants fighting for documentation. We stand in solidarity with all our friends in Charlottesville...

SB 623, Safe Drinking Water Conversation Continues in Assembly

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T is for Toxic: Danger Lurking in California School Drinking Fountains

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The California Drought Isn’t Over, It Just Went Underground

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