Tree Hugger
Last
month, 17-year-old Hannah Rousey graduated from high school. She was
awarded a $1,000 ‘Good Science’ college scholarship, one of three
recipients nominated by teachers at the Fryeburg Academy in Fryeburg,
Maine. Rousey, however, is making headlines for her refusal to accept.
The money comes from the Poland Spring Bottling Company, a subsidiary of
Nestlé, that bottles spring water in Maine and sells it across the
northeastern United States.
Rousey is strongly opposed to bottled
water. She is also planning to study sustainable agriculture and
environmental protection law and policy at Sterling College in Vermont,
starting this fall. The source of the scholarship, therefore, did not
fit with her personal convictions, and so she wrote a letter to the
Poland Springs Bottling Company on June 2, part of which was published
in the Conway Daily Sun:
“I am grateful for the scholarship I
have been awarded, but I cannot in good faith accept money from a
company that does not exhibit sustainable and ethical practices… For me
to accept your scholarship would be hypocritical.
“On average,
Poland Spring is now allowed to take up to 603,000 gallons of water per
day from Fryeburg's aquifer. Poland Spring also taps water sources in
Poland, Hollis, Pierce Pond Township, Dallas Plantation, Kingfield and
Denmark. This water is then trucked to the largest bottling facility in
the world, located in Hollis, Maine. They offer monies to our towns,
schools and organizations to distract us from the fact that they robbing
us of our water.”
The term for this is ‘bluewashing’, when a
business, organization, or corporation touts its commitment to social
responsibility and humanitarian efforts, and then uses this perception
to improve public relations and make economic gains.
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