Polish Spring is a water bottle brand manufactured in Poland, Maine. It is a subsidiary of NestlÃÆ'à © and sold in the United States. The spring was founded in 1845 by Hiram Ricker in the town of Alfred, Maine. Today the water comes from various sources in Maine country including Poland Spring and Garden Spring in Poland, Maine, Clear Spring in Hollis, Spring Evergreen in Fryeburg, Spruce Spring at Pierce Pond Township, White Cedar Spring at Dallas Plantation, and Bradbury Spring in Kingfield.
Poland Spring was America's best-selling spring brand in 2006. In 2007, the Polish Spring brand adopted 30% less plastic bottles, as did other NestlÃÆ' à © Waters North America brands.
Video Poland Spring
Origin
Spring begins in the late 18th century. In 1797, The Wentworth Ricker Inn opened in his household, Jabez Ricker. In 1844, Jabez's grandson, Hiram Ricker claimed that the tears of the property healed him from chronic dyspepsia. In 1861, the inn was enlarged and renamed The Mansion House. The Inn has evolved into a resort, and discussions with the guests make them also praise the drinking water. In this period, it is fashionable enough to "take water" for almost any disease, causing an increase in business. The Rickers immediately began bottling water. Expanded again into a luxury resort nicknamed locals as "Ricker's Folly", this inn was renamed the Polish Spring House and opened On 4 July 1876. This inn remained an important resort in the early 20th century, but the Ricker family lost control of the company during the 1930s. The resort is still operating on site.
Maps Poland Spring
Water sale
In 1891, the Bureau of Industry and Labor Statistics recorded 81 existing mineral springs. Twenty-three are used for commercial bottling, with total sales of $ 400,000. $ 200,000 from this sale by Poland Spring.
Today, Poland Spring sells most of its water in portable bottles 8, 12, and 20 oz; 500 ml, 700 ml, 1 L, and 1.5 L bottles, and also larger 5-gallon bottles that can be used at the office or at home water dispensers. 3 L, 1 gallon and 2.5 gallon bottles are also available for sale in most supermarkets, and for home delivery in the Northeastern United States. Other varieties of Polish Spring include luster, lemon, lime, and flute. They are also manufacturers of Aquapoda product line.
All Polish Spring products are sold in plastic bottles, for safety and economic reasons. Today, there is no portable Polish Spring bottle made of polycarbonate plastic number 7 containing Bisphenol-A (BPA). Large 5-gallon bottles are made of plastic number "1" and are also BPA-free, while a 3-gallon bottle is made of plastic number "7" and may contain CPA trace levels. Bottles made of PETE, which do not contain BPA (figures "1" or "2" or "4" at the bottom), begin to appear in 2013; in some areas there may be only these bottles. They can be recognized by different grip designs (separate parts of plastic rather than continuously formed elements).
In the summer of 2005, Polish Spring changed the color of a 1-gallon bottle cap from dark green to crystal clear. The reason for the color change is to remove the dye from the lid, which is more suitable for the recycling stream. The Polish Spring was later converted into a lighter bottle called Eco-Shape which uses 30 percent less plastic. New style created dÃÆ'à © but in November 2007.
Bottle shape is designed to save plastic and environmentally friendly.
Controversy
Several cities in Maine objected to the Polish Spring business practices and its parent company NestlÃÆ'à ©. In some cities, like Fryeburg, Maine, Poland Spring actually buys water (110 million gallons of water from Fryeburg a year) from another company, Fryeburg Water Co., and sends it to the Pol Spring bottling plant in Poland Spring. However, Fryeburg Water Co. also sell water to Fryeburg town.
The town of Fryeburg begins to question the amount of water the company sells to Poland Spring. In 2004, the city water temporarily stopped due to pump failure, but Polish Spring operations can continue. Group H 2 O for ME wants to make a tax on water drawn for commercial purposes. However, Poland's Spring said the tax would force the company into bankruptcy. State legislator Jim Wilfong proposed 20 cents per gallon of tax allowed to be elected in a referendum, but the size was defeated. He also believes that the law must be rearranged to limit the number of landowners who can pump out of their land.
The city of Sterling, Massachusetts, seeks to prevent Poles Spring (NestlÃÆ'à ©) pumping springs from restricted conservation city land. Nestlà © à © Waters North America (NWNA) has responded to an RFP issued by Clinton City to purchase the Wekepeke aquifer water rights belonging to the Town of Clinton located in Sterling.
In June 2003, Polish Spring was sued for false advertising in a class-action lawsuit alleging that their water is supposedly derived from a spring, actually a generalized mass-treated soil water. The lawsuit also states, the hydro-geologist hired by NestlÃÆ'à © found that other current sources for Polish springs near the original site are former trash and rubbish dumps, and under an illegal dump where human waste is sprayed as fertilizer for years.. The lawsuit was settled in September 2003, with the company not recognizing the allegations, but agreed to pay $ 10 million in charity donations and discounts over the next 5 years. NestlÃÆ' à © continues to sell the same Maine water as Poland Spring.
In August 2017, a class action lawsuit filed in Connecticut alleges that "Not a single drop of Polish Spring Water comes from a water source in accordance with the definition of the Food and Drug Administration 'spring." The famous Polish Spring in Poland Spring, Maine, claimed by the defendant as a Polish Spring Water label, dried up almost 50 years ago. "A Polish Spring spokesman replied that" Poland's Spring is 100 percent of the springs. "The claims made in the lawsuit are unfounded and a clear attempt to manipulate the legal system personal gain. " Scientist Peter Gleick says that "Most of Nestle's waters are pumped from the ground, but the bigger problem is that the definition of the rules on what is really considered a fountain is really weak.No one really looks over the shoulder of the bottled water company. "
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia