“At home we drink bottled water, we basically do all the stuff with bottled water” says 10-year-old
Hoosick Falls resident, Ashlynn Sagendorf, more than a year after
residents first learned they had been drinking water contaminated with
Perfluorooctanoic acid
(PFOA).
Environmental
Advocates of New York and EffectiveNY released two online ads today
featuring children affected by the water contamination crisis in Hoosick
Falls that make
the case for a state Constitutional amendment which would grant New
Yorkers the long overdue right to healthy drinking water, clean air, and
a safe climate.
Video #1 (Mikayla):
https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=UkKalorvO0A
Video #2 (Ashlynn):
https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=oKNKJ1JitSM
In
a 30-second testimonial named “Mikayla,” 14-year-old Hoosick Falls
resident Mikayla Baker says, “I think one of the highest priorities of
New York State should be to have
a healthy environment. It’s ridiculous that we should even have to ask
for the right of clean water and clean air.”
Peter
Iwanowicz, executive director of Environmental Advocates of New York
said, “If the role of government is not to ensure the basics—that kids
have water to drink and
air to breathe that doesn’t make them sick—then the priorities are
backwards. Kids like Mikayla and Ashlynn were drinking contaminated
water most of their lives, and no one told their families. Since then,
government has often covered for the polluters. It
has become clear that for New York to be a true leader, we are going to
need a Constitutional amendment to ensure the state proactively
protects our air, water, and climate, and responds with full force when a
crisis occurs.”
“Nobody
makes a more eloquent case for the obvious need for New Yorkers to have
a constitutional right to clean drinking water, fresh air, and a
healthful environment than
these two bright children, who are suffering the consequences of our
state not currently have these essential rights enshrined in our
Constitution,” said Bill Samuels, the founder of the good government
group EffectiveNY.
Governor
Andrew Cuomo is preparing his 2017 priorities which are expected to be
released in the first few weeks of 2017; a Constitutional right to clean
water and air should
be part of his agenda. If not, the responsibility lies with state
legislators to take the lead on introduction. A Constitutional amendment
must pass two successive Legislatures, as well as voter approval.
Both
spots direct viewers to text ‘OurWater’ to 52886 or go to
NYCleanWater.org to sign a petition in support of the effort to amend
the Constitution to include a new Environmental
Bill of Rights.
Source: Environmental Advocates of New York
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