How Cascade Locks beat Nestlé

In 2016, dedicated community members in the small town of Cascade Locks championed a successful ballot measure to ban commercial water bottling in their county. We partnered with Local Water Alliance to tell the David and Goliath story of small town organizing that took on a multinational corporation and won.

people power

The Cascade Locks community responded to the threat of losing their cherished local spring to the water bottling giant Nestlé with a hard and dedicated fight. 

voting for change:

  • Hood River County voters approved a ban on commercial water bottling, blocking a $50 million bottling plant Nestlé hoped to build in the Columbia River Gorge
  • Sixty-nine percent of county voted to approve a measure that restricts the production and transportation of bottled water to less than 1,000 gallons a day from any Hood River County water source
  • That restriction effectively blocked Nestlé’s plans to build a plant in Cascade Locks that would bottle more than 100 million gallons of water a year.

how you can take action

Join our campaigns

Help us fight to Unbottle Water in San Bernardino, the Great Lakes, and beyond!

support our partners

Help us raise $10,000 for Save Our Forest Association and other local organizations on the ground.

community over corporation

Despite the clear message sent by this community and Nestlé’s claim to respect the democratic process, the company continued to look for loopholes and to push forward with plans to open the plant. In late 2017, Oregon’s Governor, Kate Brown, stepped up to defend the voices and the votes of this community. In a letter, the governor directed the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to stop an exchange of water rights that would have been crucial for the plant to move forward, ending Nestlé’s plans for good. The citizens of Cascade Locks stood up to one of the largest corporations on earth – and won!