LA Aqueduct Is 100 Years Old, but We Don't Drink the Water

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In Los Angeles, drinking fountains are almost things of the past. They're either removed from city parks or they're hardly maintained. They've been replaced in public schools by sodas in vending machines. And, like more and more Americans, LA residents buy drinking water in plastic bottles. But why, when the Department of Water and Power provides it for free? There's now a movement to restore the drinking fountain, which claims DWP water is actually better, even if it does sometimes taste like chlorine. And, of course, plastic bottles are the scourge of the environment. Will restoring the drinking fountain help boost confidence in the municipal water supply?

Image-for-WWLA.jpgOn our rebroadcast of today's To the Point, elections in New Jersey, Virginia and Alabama contain signals of political change and messages for both political parties. Republicans are more divided than ever, but that could be bad news for Democrats. We look at yesterday's results around the country.

 

Banner image: Sean Dreilinger


 

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Warren Olney