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Grand Canyon Plastic Water Bottle Ban Abandoned After Talks With Coke

FELICIA FONSECA   11/10/11 07:18 PM ET  AP

GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. — A plan to ban the sale of plastic water bottles at the Grand Canyon was scrapped after talks with Coca-Cola, which is a donor to the national parks system and a bottled water distributor, a former park superintendent who worked on the plan said.

However, National Park Service spokesman Dave Barna said Thursday the plug was pulled on the ban after the agency's director determined it wouldn't solve the littering problem at the popular tourist spot and that the plan needed more work.

The Coca-Cola Co. was not the leading factor in the decision to dump the plan two weeks ahead of its scheduled Jan. 1, 2011, start, Barna said. Coca-Cola also denied trying to influence the decision.

Steve Martin, who retired as superintendent of Grand Canyon National Park earlier this year, said he worked to get employees, concessionaires and others on board with the plan to ban the disposable water bottles that make up as much as 30 percent of the park's solid waste.

Water-filling stations were installed around the park at a cost of more than $300,000 this year.

Martin said he had the approval of the regional office and had briefed officials at Park Service headquarters in Washington last year about the ban.

While Nestle first expressed concern about the ban, Martin said it wasn't halted until Coca-Cola spoke with the National Park Foundation, which raises money for the sites.

Martin said it's unsettling to think that the Park Service, which stands to be an environmental leader, might have sidestepped ethical duties to be free of corporate influence.

"Both the paper record is there for how widespread the understanding of what we were doing was, and the approvals," he said. "That's what makes it so extraordinary. Right as we're moving to the finish line on a really excellent program, because of Coke' s influence, it was scuttled."

Coca-Cola, which distributes water under the Dasani, Glaceau and Aquarius Springs brands, has donated more than $14 million to restore and renovate national parks, said company spokeswoman Susan Stribling.

At no time did Coca-Cola try to influence the Park Service's decision, she said. That was echoed by the National Park Foundation, which said Coca-Cola approached it late last year asking how to be part of the discussion.

Stribling and the foundation said Coca-Cola never threatened to pull financial support if the ban went into effect. Barna said the Park Service would not have responded favorably to Coca-Cola in that situation.

"We're not going to sell out the national park...," he said. "That's absurd."

Stribling said Coca-Cola focused on implementing a recycling program at the Grand Canyon to cut down on waste.

"Eliminating anything altogether is never really an answer; it's not a solution," she said. "You're taking away the ability for people to make their own choices about what they eat or drink."

Barna contends Martin didn't get the required approvals. And although the Park Service was aware of the ban in September and had discussed how to best publicize it, agency director Jon Jarvis didn't find out about it until mid-December when the foundation relayed a message from Coca-Cola, Barna said.

Zion and Hawaii Volcanoes national parks have instituted bans similar to the one proposed at the Grand Canyon, one of the most highly visited national parks in the country. A new concessionaire contract at Zion provided an opportunity to eliminate bottled water sales, Barna said. Doing the same at Grand Canyon would mean a hit of at least $300,000 to the concessionaire halfway through the contract and potentially leave the Park Service liable for the losses, he said.

"Taking plastic bottles out of the waste stream is unarguably our goal," Barna said. "This is what we want to do, but how we get there is critical."

The Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, which sought to discover the reason the ban was halted through public records requests, sued the Park Service and the foundation on Thursday, alleging the groups unlawfully withheld documents or failed to respond. Executive director Jeff Ruch said Jarvis' decision to reverse the ban is "highly questionable."

"Why in the world would the Park Service director swoop down at the last minute to veto a common-sense conservation measure that a park had spent significant taxpayer dollars to implement?" he said.

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GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. — A plan to ban the sale of plastic water bottles at the Grand Canyon was scrapped after talks with Coca-Cola, which is a donor to the national parks system and...
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. — A plan to ban the sale of plastic water bottles at the Grand Canyon was scrapped after talks with Coca-Cola, which is a donor to the national parks system and...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Melinda Brunner
09:40 PM on 11/23/2011
Remember glass bottles? When I was a kid, we searched everywhere for bottles that had 2,3, 5 cent deposits on them. Put a quarter deposit or more on every plastic bottle and you will never see one in the trash.
11:43 PM on 11/14/2011
This era will be known as the time when "Corporations Ruled the Earth."
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
08:22 PM on 11/13/2011
Well, so much for corporate responsibility. You can throw away the glossy BS in your annual report and just say it: You don't care about anything but money. It's OK, we are creating a 12 step program for you and other corporatists who insist on despoiling the environment and devastating the very people who buy your freaking product.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:20 AM on 11/13/2011
Corporations are people too, so why can't they carry out what they want us to pack in?
07:59 PM on 11/12/2011
Coca-Cola Admits That Dasani is Nothing But Tap Water; Published on Thursday, March 4, 2004 by Reuters
"Coca-Cola uses tap water from local municipal water supplies, filters it, and adds trace amounts of minerals, including magnesium sulfate (Epsom salt), potassium chloride and table salt (sodium chloride)."
"The bottled water industry has exploded in recent years, and enjoys annual sales of more than $35 billion worldwide."

is it any wonder why coke fought so hard to keep bottled water in the park?
what is so difficult for people to filter their own tap water and carry it is re-usable containers when they go some place like the Grand Canyon or other national parks. is it that much of a burden for them one or two days out of their lives to not have the "luxury" of running to the concession stand and buying a bottle of tap water at an exorbitant rate.
it's disgusting what coca-cola did and disgusting that the people responsible for our national parks are more concerned about corporate greed then PROTECTING our national parks and our EARTH.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
01:53 AM on 11/12/2011
If a decision goes against reason just follow the money.
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relians
the interconnectedness of all things
06:41 PM on 11/11/2011
first of all, the water is a stolen resource. nestle, owned by coke, takes water from our lakes, then sells it back to us. they were found to be damaging the lakes where they stole the water, and even after it was proven they just kept pumping water as until they were forced to stop. the plastic bottles besides being made from oil, are contaminated with a cancer causing chemical, so they are actually hazardous waste. coke has been linked to murders in south american countries where the workers tried to organize. hfcs is the main culprit in our child obesity epidemic. one company i completely boycott.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patman77
05:14 PM on 11/11/2011
beware the syrup peddlers
04:11 PM on 11/11/2011
So they wouldn't ban the plastic bottles because they accounted for only 30% of the solid waste?? Nearly one-third less garbage sounds like a significant reduction to me.
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pfz
My micro bio is empty but not without feelings.
02:10 PM on 11/11/2011
Sounds like someone got a big fat check.
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DJMarian
Rich is having money; Wealthy is having time
02:49 PM on 11/11/2011
Maybe he got a lifetime supply of Coke Zero
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Justdontgetit
Don't screw with old people, they will mess you up
12:31 PM on 11/11/2011
My husband and I had a lovely weekend stay at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon last year. Dinner in the restaurant was perfect, the view, breathtaking. We went back to the 2nd story cabin we were staying in. We were standing on the walkway, quietly looking out at the woods. When 3 employees came out of one of the bottom story rooms, crushed their beer cans and threw them into the forest. When we made our presence know the 3 young men ran. Because we could not give the front desk names of the young men, we were assured "someone" would be sent immediately to pick up the trash. We waited until the next day when we checked out and handed the beer cans to the check out desk and loudly asked if every guest had to pick up the employee's litter.
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
11:34 AM on 11/11/2011
I've been to parks before that had a bottle ban. If you wanted to drink your own beverage you had to bring it in a re-usable bottle. I had no problem with that in the least, and there was hardly any noticeable litter, which made the experience that much better.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edogg62
09:47 AM on 11/11/2011
NO ONE needs a diueretic while exercising outdoors... and you're right about "bottled" water... buy yourselves a filter and stop buying bottled water. What's next purified air pumped into our homes and autos? Wait... ignore me... I have to go apply for a patent real quick...
02:11 AM on 11/14/2011
Edogg62: Just have to put in my $.02 regarding diueretics........................I don't exercise but I have had a kidney transplant and need to take diueretic! I also need to consume a specific quantity of fluids.....i.e. water. I do take my own water and I carry my own container.
So SOMEONE needs a dieuretic even though I don't exercise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
09:04 AM on 11/11/2011
Got backpacks for my 2 dogs, so I could take them onto National Park lands. I carried everything we needed in my pack. The dogs carried garbage we had found in the park. I found it prevented any hassles from rangers. Some would begin with "You know there are leash laws" until I pointed out the packs and told them what was in them. I would say "They earn the right, more than do the people who throw this garbage here". Every time I got a "Have a nice stay."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PebbleBeachBum
Bentley for life
12:11 AM on 11/11/2011
those DUMB DONKEYS that crap all over the place do more damage. ban the donkeys.