MOUNT SHASTA, California — Throughout parched California, a punishing drought has forced communities to cut back on their water use. Just outside the town of Mount Shasta, however, a private bottling company is about to do the opposite, opening a tap on millions of gallons of the state’s dwindling public resource.
The pumping is set to start later this summer, when Crystal Geyser — a subsidiary of Otsuka Holdings, a massive Japanese health care conglomerate — will drop its straw into a famous spring here, sucking in and selling the run-off from ancient glaciers. Some of it will be shipped overseas, while the rest will be sold in-state, according to the company.
No matter where it’s sold, many residents of Mount Shasta are angry and confused by the move. They fear dry wells and an overdrawn aquifer. Some also believe that the mountain spring should be shared by all, not sold off for individual gain. They’ve decided to fight, hiring a lawyer and pledging to picket the plant when it opens.
“What we have to offer up here is the water,” said Raven Stevens, who is working to protect the water for the neighborhood adjacent to the new plant. “It’s the blood. It’s the blood of the planet.”
“It’s quite selfish,” added Amanda Thomas, who often visited the spring when she was a girl, and hopes to protect it for her son. “The whole state of California uses this water. So it’s not just water for me. It’s everyone.”
For the moment, the cold, clean glacier-melt of Big Springs flows into the wells and jugs of locals, and feeds the pipes and faucets of millions of thirsty state residents. It pools in a shrine-like park in the city of Mount Shasta, beneath a dome of blue sky at the roof of the state, a short hike from the base of the 14,179-foot peak.
Like the cap on a bottle, Mount Shasta protects a gigantic underground aquifer, which recharges as rain and snow filter through an unseen warren of fractured rock and lava tubes. It surfaces here first, luring thousands of visitors a year, from urban tourists who praise the flavor, to backwoods naturalists who whisper about the curative power it possesses.
The water flows south, joining other springs and burbling into the Sacramento River, the primary source of drinking water for much of the state. It floats the boats on Shasta Lake and ends up in the Central Valley Project, a huge federal reservoir system that supports the California way of life.
Mount Shasta’s water helped turn an arid state into oasis for fish, farmers and dream-seekers from all over the world. But while the drought has forced all three of those customers to cope with less water, Crystal Geyser faces no such restrictions. There’s also no legal cap on how much the company can pump, and no requirement for a new environmental review before it starts.
Perhaps the most controversial detail is the price that Crystal Geyser will pay for extracting this cherished public resource: zero dollars and zero cents. That’s mystifying to the local population.
“They say jobs. They say money. And I would say, as a community member, you can’t put a price on the value of this right here,” said Jonathan Hoefs, holding up a jug of free water from the spring. “It’s valuable as a natural resource. It’s valuable as a community center. It’s valuable in the long term.”
Crystal Geyser has already announced plans to expand their new facility, closing two nearby bottling plants and consolidating operations in Mount Shasta. It’s easy to understand why. Bottling companies have long prized California, because the state’s groundwater laws have historically made water the unregulated property of whoever has the straw.
But even by those lax standards, the Crystal Geyser deal has extraordinary elements. The state’s Groundwater Sustainability Management Act won’t apply, for example, and neither will state laws on diverting streams. That’s because geologists consider the aquifer to be a type of freestanding water, not a protected “primary basin” and not a flowing water source.
There’s no need for an environmental review, meanwhile, because Crystal Geyser is operating on the site of an old Coca-Cola bottling plant. Coca-Cola’s environmental review is more than a decade old, and it predates some of the hottest, driest years on record. But Crystal Geyser is allowed to piggy back on the same paperwork, accountable to no one but their shareholders, critics argue.
“The State of California has a limited role in regulating the bottled water industry, similar to its limited oversight of other beverage manufacturing,” Nancy Vogel, a spokesperson for California’s Department of Water Resources, wrote in an email to msnbc. “To date, California hasn’t singled out the bottled water industry for special data collection or regulation.”








