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Putting Drinking Water First - the Reports
Polls show that people consider drinking water the most important public health and environmental issue, but environmental policies don’t always reflect this. Most water pollution is caused by human activities. Growing food, producing energy for electricity and transportation, making products and building communities — all are activities that impact water. You might think that these and other activities would be planned and manage to limit their risks to water. But that is not often the case. Instead, contamination and destruction of water resources are allowed to happen. Communities are left
Who We Are
Since our founding during the campaign to pass the landmark Clean Water Act in 1972, Clean Water Action has worked to win strong health and environmental protections by bringing issue expertise, solution-oriented thinking and people power to the table.
Plan de Reducción de Emisiones de Comunidades Locales: Lost Hills, Kern, CA
Durante un periodo de 18 meses, el Comité Directivo Comunitario de Lost Hills celebró aproximadamente 30 reuniones para desarrollar este Plan Comunitario Local de Reducción de Emisiones (LCERP). El Plan incluye información técnica y aportaciones de las comunidades sobre los impactos locales y la selección de estrategias para reducir las emisiones locales que se adapten mejor a Lost Hills.
Local Community Emissions Reduction Plan: Lost Hills, Kern, CA
Over a period of 18 months, the Lost Hills Community Steering Committee (LCSC) held approximately 30 meetings to develop this Local Community Emissions Reduction Plan, which includes both technical information and input from communities on local impacts and selection of strategies for reducing local emissions that are best suited to Lost Hills.
Clean Water Currents | Spring 2026
In This Issue: Looking Forward - A Message from Lynn Thorp, Clean Water Action President | Mobilizing Against the Polluted Water Rule | Clean Water Victory in Colorado | Protecting Our Communities from Toxic Chemicals | National Parks Reuse Project | 2025 Year in Review | State Updates