From Wenonah Hauter, Food & Water Action <[email protected]>
Subject 10 years ago today...
Date July 28, 2020 3:31 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
To view this email as a web page, go to the link below, or copy and paste it into your browser's address window.
[link removed]

John,

Ten years ago today, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution affirming that water and sanitation are fundamental human rights, “essential for the full enjoyment of the right to life.”

Our Food & Water Watch Board Chair, Maude Barlow, was an advisor to the UN on water issues. She shared a memory of that pivotal day:

I was in the balcony of the General Assembly July 28, 2010, when it overwhelmingly adopted this historic resolution, and I remember feeling that in defining water and sanitation as an issue of justice rather than charity, the human family had just taken an evolutionary step forward.

She’s absolutely right. But despite this step forward, in the United States, millions are denied access to water due to unaffordable water rates, water shutoffs or a lack of water infrastructure. The fact that this is still happening is simply unacceptable!

Water affordability is a national problem, and water shutoffs are a policy decision — which means this is an issue we can solve. Send a message to your Members of Congress asking them to co-sponsor the WATER Act.
[link removed]

The right to water is a pivotal argument that Food & Water Action has made to stop water shutoffs in U.S. cities. The human right to water is also the foundation of the WATER Act, which would help ensure that every person has access to safe clean water in the United States.

The Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity and Reliability (WATER) Act reinvests federal dollars to provide $35 billion a year to:

** Make water affordable by prioritizing grants and subsidies to disadvantaged communities.
** Support publicly owned water systems by providing funds for communities to control their water systems and exit water privatization contracts.
** Get the lead out by helping communities remove lead pipes and helping schools test for lead and replace lead fixtures.
** Address PFAS water contamination (the chemicals used to make non-stick Teflon and fire suppression materials) by updating treatment systems or finding alternative water sources when PFAS contamination is found.

Support the WATER Act
[link removed]

We know that industries like fracking and bottled water are diverting and polluting our dwindling water supplies. Millions around the world are threatened by drought. The UN warns that two-thirds of the global population could be living in water-stressed countries in just five short years.

Here in the U.S. drought is on the rise, as are water rates. And the COVID-19 pandemic has thrown a huge spotlight on the water crisis where two in five households struggle to pay for water — yet utilities continue to shut off water, leaving thousands with no place to wash their hands.

But there is something we can do to fight this injustice and make sure EVERYONE has access to safe, clean, affordable water. Let’s vow to fulfill the pledge taken by the nations of the world 10 years ago: Water is a human right. Tell your Members of Congress to co-sponsor the WATER Act.
[link removed]

Onward together,

Wenonah Hauter
Founder and Executive Director
Food & Water Action and Food & Water Watch

P.S. Our Food & Water Watch Board Chair, Maude Barlow, served as an advisor on water to the UN and was there 10 years ago today when the UN adopted a resolution affirming that water and sanitation are fundamental human rights. Read her blog post about her memories from this pivotal day here.
[link removed]




Food & Water Action and its affiliated organization, Food & Water Watch, are advocacy groups with a common mission to protect our food, water and climate.

This email was sent to [email protected] - and we're glad you got it, because it's one of the most important ways you can reclaim political power, hold elected officials accountable and resist corporate control.



Ready to fight like you live here?
Donate
[link removed]


We're so glad you're here and excited to keep working together to make an impact! But if you need to, you can adjust your preferences or unsubscribe.
[link removed]


[link removed]

[link removed]
  
[link removed]

Food & Water Action
[link removed]

1616 P St. NW Suite #300 . Washington, DC 20036  

202-683-2500

----------------------------------------

This email was sent by:
Food & Water Watch
1616 P St. NW Suite #300
Washington, DC, 20036, US

We respect your right to privacy - visit the following URL to view our policy.
( [link removed] )

----------------------------------------

Visit the following URL to manage your subscriptions.
( [link removed] )

Visit the following URL to update your profile.
( [link removed] )

Visit the following URL to unsubscribe.
( [link removed] )
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Food & Water Action
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Salesforce Email Studio (ExactTarget)