Good news! The citizens of Shapleigh, Maine just passed an ordinance asserting 
their rights to protect the ecosystem while denying corporations the rights of 
personhood. Hopefully more towns across the nation will follow suit. The press 
release about it (below) was forwarded to me through 
[email protected] , which, by the way, is a very informative 
on-line community forum about gas drilling in Marcellus Shale. 

- Jan Quarles
www.backtodemocracy.org 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Lynne Bursic 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2009 9:35 PM
Subject: [nywellwatch-FORUM] Fwd: [MarcellusGasInfo] Relocalization . . .


I just received this from the marcellus shale info group...thought everyone 
should see it if they hadn't already.  What a great idea!!!
  Lynne Bursic


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Adrian/Kuzminski <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 6:08 PM
Subject: [MarcellusGasInfo] Relocalization . . .
To: sus <[email protected]>
Cc: marcellusgasinfo digest subscribers <[email protected]>


Maine Town Passes Ordinance Asserting Local Self-Governance and Stripping
Corporate Personhood
Submitted by Chip on Sun, 2009-03-01 18:08.

Maine Town Passes Ordinance Asserting Local Self-Governance and Stripping
Corporate Personhood | Press Release

Today the citizens of Shapleigh, Maine voted at a special town meeting to
pass a groundbreaking Rights-Based Ordinance, 114 for and 66 against. This
revolutionary ordinance give its citizens the right to local self-governance
and gives rights to ecosystems but denies the rights of personhood to
corporations. This ordinance allows the citizens to protect their
groundwater resources, putting it in a common trust to be used for the
benefit of its residents.

Shapleigh is the first community in Maine to pass such an ordinance, which
extends rights to nature, however, the Ordinance Review Committee in Wells,
Maine is considering passing one in their town. These communities have been
under attack by Nestle Waters, N.A., a multi-national water miner that sells
bottled water under such labels as Poland Springs.

Communities have opposed the expansion by Nestle Waters, but the corporation
will not take no for an answer. The town of Fryeburg, Maine has been in
litigation with Nestle for six years. Nestle wants to expand and the town's
people say no to the tanker trunk traffic which has disrupted their quiet
scenic beauty, so Nestle's tactic is to wear them down, and break their
bank.

Nestle is the world's largest food and beverage company and has very deep
pockets. However, we won't back down, we are the stewards of this most
precious resource water, and we want to protect it for future generations.

Activists in Maine are well aware that the Nestle Corporation is not just
interested in expanding for the purpose of filling their Poland Springs
bottles today, they are interested in the control of Maine's abundant water
resources for the future. They are expanding in many parts of this country
from McCloud, California to Maine. Nestle is positioning themselves to
capitalize on the emerging crisis of global water scarcity.

The right to water is a social justice issue and we believe that it should
not be sold to those who can afford it, leaving the world's poorest citizens
thirsty. Citizens will do a much better job of protecting this resource than
a for-profit corporation.

The concept of a rights-based ordinance was pioneered by environmental
attorney Thomas Linzey, founder of the Community Environmental Legal Defense
Fund of Gettysburg, PA. Linzey has assisted the town of Barnstead, New
Hampshire with their rights-based ordinance, which was passed in 2006 and
with another in Nottingham, New Hampshire, which passed in 2008.

To date there have been no legal challenges to these ordinances. Linzey also
crafted Ecuador's new Constitution, which also gives the ecosystem rights.
Ecuador is the first country in the world to protect its natural resources
from corporate exploitation.

Activists have learned the hard way that trying to protect their communities
and the environment by going the route of fighting a typical regulatory
ordinance, which is written by corporate lobbyists, will fail to protect
communities from harms done.

The multi-national corporation's allegiance is never to the communities
where they do business, as that could conflict with their fiduciary
responsibility to make a profit for stockholders.

People throughout the country are saying "enough is enough, large
corporations have too much power." Constitutional Rights were granted to
corporations from the bench in the 1800's and it is time to rectify a wrong!
People are saying let's dismantle the neo-colonial corporate power by
starting with their right to personhood.

In Maine, we are tired of Nestle behaving as if they are a Colonial power
with a right to our water resources. We decided that we will behave as if we
have the power and ignore the naysayers who said that people will never vote
to take rights away from corporations or to give rights to nature. We want
to encourage other communities join us. The time is now!

Copies of the The Shapleigh, Maine Town Warrant calling for a special town
meeting and The Shapleigh Water Rights and Local Self-Government Warrant are
available from the Contact Person, below.

For more information on attorney Thomas Linzey and the Community
Environmental Defense Fund, please visit: http://www.celdf.org

For more information about the battle to protect ground water in communities
in Maine, please visit: www.soh2o.org . Click on the LEGISLATION tab and go
to ORDINANCES to read the important new Shapleigh ordinance.

CONTACT PERSON: Jamilla El-Shafei Save Our Water steering committee member
and organizer steering committee member of the Maine Water Allies
(state-wide coalition) 603.969.8426 [email protected]


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