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Students and Celebrities Declare Love for Tap Water on Valentine's Day

Thu Feb 14, 2008 11:10am EST
Students 'Heart' Tap Water with National Student Video Contest, Actor Alec
Baldwin Among Judges

WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Valentine's Day students
from across the country will declare their love for tap water in the
celebrity-judged I Heart Tap Water student video contest. It is part of Food &
Water Watch's Take Back the Tap Campaign that encourages college students and
entire campuses to kick the bottled water habit and take back the tap. A panel
of judges representing the environment, students, and film will choose the
first-place winner of the contest, who will receive $1,500.

"Bottled water is not as environmentally friendly as people think it is," says
actor and celebrity judge Alec Baldwin. 

"We will need enormous public support to get Congress to dedicate the billions
of dollars needed to ensure safe and affordable water for future generations,"
stated Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter. "With this video
contest students are building support among tomorrow's leaders to make the
smart and healthy choice of tap water over bottled water."

The I Heart Tap Water contest challenges students to produce a one to two
minute video that includes the following elements:  a declaration of love for
tap water, some discussion about bottled water consumption, and why the
student's college or university should break the bottled water habit -- a
topic covered extensively in the Food & Water Watch report, Take Back the Tap.
According to the report, tap water is better for consumers' health, their
pocketbooks, and the environment. 

"Having worked on these issues for years, I've seen firsthand how young people
are taking the lead in addressing the global water crisis," said contest judge
Saul Garlick of the Student Movement for Real Change. 

"Our student groups got Coca-Cola off campus, and we got fair trade coffee in
the dining halls. Take Back the Tap is the logical next step for our
environmental and economic justice work. Ann Arbor already said it supports
tap water over bottled water, so it makes sense for our campus to do the
same," explained Emanuel Figueroa, a senior at University of Michigan. 

Submissions for the contest will be accepted until Monday, April 14th, and the
winner of the contest will be announced on Earth Day, April 22nd. For more
information and contest rules visit http://www.takebackthetap.org.


SOURCE  Food & Water Watch

Erin Greenfield of Food & Water Watch, +1-202-683-2457, news@fwwatch.org



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