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The United Church of Canada may ask its members to stop buying bottled water.

The request is part of a resolution against the privatization of water supplies that has been put before delegates at the church's general council this week in Thunder Bay.

Richard Chambers, the social policy co-ordinator with the national office of the church, said that water is a human right, and no one should profit from it.

"We're against the commodification, the privatization is another way to say it, of water anyway, anywhere," he told CBC News.

"And bottled water that we see being sold in Canada is just an example of that. The thin edge of the wedge of the privatization of water."

Chambers said congregations would be asked "to put their energies and their resources into making sure there is safe public access to water locally."

Ironically, the church's delegates are drinking bottled water this week at its meeting at Lakehead University. The conference facility was not equipped to provide drinking water.

Chambers said the church had asked for tap water at all functions, but a mix-up occurred.

Delegates are scheduled to vote on the private water resolution on Thursday.

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Blogger Avie said...
Once again, a church shows that it cannot stay out of things it has no business messing around with.

If people want to buy bottled water, it's their business, not the church's. If companies want to profit from people drinking water or even breathing air, that's for the people and/or the government to deal with, not the church.

Furthermore, if this church is so dead-set against drinking bottled water, they should sit there and dehydrate when tap water is not provided. Or, how about this? Bring their own tap water from home! How difficult is that? What a bunch of busybody hypocrites!


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