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Concord, Mass. becomes first US town to ban plastic water bottles

By | January 12, 2013, 5:43 PM PST

Citizens of Concord, Massachusetts are taking after former resident Henry David Thoreau’s and his environmentalist leanings.

As of Jan. 1, 2013, the historic New England town became the first in the U.S. to ban single-serve plastic water bottles.

The ban comes as a result of the efforts of 84-year-old activist Jean Hill. The Concord resident has been championing the effort since 2010 when she started lobbying neighbors and politicians on the environmental consequences of disposable water bottles.

And while Hill finally got her way when the ban went into effect on New Year’s Day, the activist hasn’t completely avoided opposition.

Many local business owners have spoken out against the new rule, saying it restricts freedom of choice and that those who do want bottled water will simply drive to a neighboring town to get it. Unsurprisingly, the bottled water industry is also less than pleased with the ban and some groups have even considered fighting back with a lawsuit.

“This ban deprives residents of the option to choose their choice of beverage and visitors, who come to this birthplace of American independence, a basic freedom gifted to them by the actions in this town more than 200 years ago,” the International Bottled Water Association said in a statement in September. “It will also deprive the town of needed tax revenue and harm local businesses that rely on bottled water sales.”

Businesses needn’t get too up in arms however — the ban is mostly intended to raise awareness about the wasteful nature of plastic water bottles. Stores that violate Concord’s new rule will receive a warning on the first offense, a $25 fine for the second, and a $50 fine for the third.

[via TreeHugger, Boston Globe]

Image: Brian Smithson/Flickr

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Sarah Korones

About Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2012 to 2013.

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones

Contributing Editor

Sarah Korones is a freelance writer based in New York. She has written for Psychology Today and Boston's Weekly Dig. She holds a degree from Tufts University.

Follow her on Twitter.

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Ironic turn of events.
Within a few weeks of the vote to ban bottled water a huge water main connecting the Quabbin Reservoir to Boston blew a seal and was shut down for days cutting off water to over 30 communities.

http://www.wcvb.com/MWRA-Water-Main-Break-Triggers-State-Of-Emergency/-/9849586/11292320/-/item/1/-/4xer97z/-/index.html

Being just outside the Metropolitan Water District, Concord still had to truck in hundreds of cases of bottled water a day as municipal water was diverted to other communities for fire fighting. A few in town were quick to point out that under the new ban such emergency measures would have been illegal and city officials subject to fines.

Efforts to amend the ban to exempt emergency situations have been thwarted by the eco Nazis behind the ban.
Posted by Hates Idiots
14th Jan
0 Votes
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Not true
As a Concord resident, I thought I should correct this misinformation. 1. Concord and all the surrounding towns source their water from municipal wells, so were not affected by the water main break and can't really divert water to other communities. 2. So obviously no water bottles were "trucked in". 3. The ban is only on single serving bottles. You can still buy water by the gallon etc. 4. The ban does have emergency situation exemptions. 5. The ban is only on retail water sales, and the maximum fine for the third offense is only $50.
Posted by A Concord Resident
25th Apr
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Bottled water banned
Concord, Mass., has earned the distinction of being the very first area, in the United States, anyway, to have a bottled water ban. The area is no longer willing to pay to carry the empty bottles to the dump, though some citizens are irked. Article resource: https://personalmoneynetwork.com
Posted by JessicaTaylor
Updated - 20th Apr
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