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5 SandBar 1 (2006-2007)

handle is hein.journals/sndbr5 and id is 1 raw text is: Legal Reporter for the National Sea Grant College Program

Volume 5:1, April 2006
Bottled Water Dispute Boils Over

Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation v. Nestle
Waters North America, Inc., 709 N.W.2d 174
(Mich. Ct. App. 2005).
Emily Plett-Miyake, 3L, Vermont Law School
On November 29, 2005, the Michigan Court of
Appeals decided a case brought by the Michigan
Citizens for Water Conservation (MCWC)
against Nestle Waters North America, Inc.
(Nestle). The court, affirming in part, and
reversing in part, held that the reasonable use
balancing test should be applied to disputes
between riparian and groundwater users and
that Nestl6's proposed withdrawal of groundwa-
ter for its bottling operations was unreasonable.

Background
In December 2000, the defendant's predecessor,
Great Spring Waters of America, a subsidiary of
Perrier Group of America, began taking steps to
construct a bottling plant in Mecosta County,
Michigan. Their first step was to purchase
groundwater rights to property located north of
the Osprey Lake impoundment known as
Sanctuary Springs. Osprey Lake impoundment
is a man-made body of water that was origi-
nally created by the damming of Dead
Stream in 1953 and expanded in 1980. Four
wells were installed on the Sanctuary Springs
site in 2001 to extract groundwater. The
defendants obtained permits from the Michigan
Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ)
See Nestle, page 16

California Court Trashes Plan to Reduce
Litter in the Los Angeles River

City of Arcadia v. State Water Res. Control Bd.,
38 Cal. Rptr. 3d 373 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).
Jim Farrell, 2, University of Mississippi School of
Law
The Los Angeles River has been steadily accu-
mulating trash over the past several years, but
surrounding cities, if a recent court case is any
indication, are not overly concerned. Several
months ago, these cities successfully chal-
lenged a new California plan with an aggres-
sive approach to eliminating trash, forcing
state water boards to continue fighting the

river's persistent trash problem with an inade-
quate plan.
Applicable Law
The Clean Water Act encourages states to reg-
ulate water quality within their borders. In
1969, California responded by passing the
Porter-Cologne Act, which created a regulatory
framework consisting of nine regional boards
under the supervision of a state board. Each
regional board is responsible for water quality
within its respective region and typically relies
on the National Pollutant Discharge Eli-
mination System (NPDES) permit process to
See California, page 14

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