It’s not as if selling yourself to a major multinational corporation is necessarily all bad, but why do it so cheaply?

In what will probably turn out to be bad news for fisheries and anglers:

In a reversal of an earlier decision, the third district court of appeals ruled Tuesday that the McCloud Community Services District did not violate environmental law when they reached an agreement to sell spring water to Nestle Waters North America.

For those not familiar with this whole mess, you can learn more at the McCloud Watershed Council Web site, where they detail the entire McCloud/Nestle water nightmare.

Suffice it to say that this isn’t good news for the McCloud and Squaw Creek, which will suffer some significant diversions from the springs that feed them.

Nestle’s ability to prey on an unsophisticated small town is cast into sharp relief once you find out that Nestle thoughtfully provided an attorney to help the McCloud Community Services District negotiate a contract with little public input – a contract that allows Nestle to buy water for 100 years without a single increase in the already-miniscule payment.

A lovely story. The Underground wonders when it’s open season on major multinationals (it’s always open season on small towns).

Source: Mount Shasta Herald, Weed Press, Dunsmuir News – Mt. Shasta News – News