Don’t Drink the Water, This Is America’s Food Basket!
SEVILLE, Calif. Like most children, the students at Stone Corral Elementary School here rejoice when the bell rings for recess and delight in christening a classroom pet. But while growing up in this impoverished agricultural community of numbered roads and lush citrus orchards, young people have learned a harsh life lesson: No tomes el agua! Dont drink the water!
Seville, with a population of about 300, is one of dozens of predominantly Latino unincorporated communities in the Central Valley plagued for decades by contaminated drinking water.
It is the grim result of more than half a century in which chemical fertilizers, animal wastes, pesticides and other substances have infiltrated aquifers, seeping into the groundwater and eventually into the tap. An estimated 20 percent of small public water systems in Tulare County are unable to meet safe nitrate levels, according to a United Nations representative
Chris Kemper, the schools principal, budgets $100 to $500 a month for bottled water. He recalled his astonishment, upon his arrival four years ago, at encountering the ghost drinking fountains, shut off to protect students from weird foggyish water, as one sixth grader, Jacob Cabrera, put it. Mr. Kemper said he associated such conditions with third world countries. I always picture it as a laptop a month for the school, he said of the added cost of water.
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Communities like Seville, where corroded piping runs through a murky irrigation ditch and into a solitary well, are particularly vulnerable to nitrate contamination, lacking financial resources for backup systems. Fertilizer and other chemicals applied to cropland decades ago will continue to affect groundwater for years, according to the Davis study
http://www.balloon-juice.com/2012/11/14/dont-drink-the-water-this-is-americas-food-basket/