Did you know New York City's
drinking water ranks among the best tasting of major cities throughout the
world?
This trek involved much
more than 12 high school students taking a 3-week tour. These students became the agents for educating the public about the source and protection of
this drinking water supply and the vital and little-recognized connections
between the city and the upstate communities.
If you answered no to the
three questions above, get ready to learn more.


In
spring of 2007, six students from
New York Harbor School in
Brooklyn and six students from
Sidney High School, in Delaware County, prepared for their 3-week
summer trek tracing New York City's drinking water supply. They learned
how to become spokespeople for the water-supply system and they brought public
attention to the 10th Anniversary of the
Memorandum of Agreement, which brought together, for the first time in a long
and bitter history, all the stakeholders in the system. During their
preparation, the students met with lawyers, scientists, conservationists, park
rangers, and local officials to prepare them for what they encountered
on their trek. Throughout the 3-week trek, the students assessed the quality
of the water in streams, rivers and reservoirs, talked to public officials and
hosted press conferences to share with the public, from the trenches, what they
learned.
You can follow their trek
online and read the students' daily journal entries. And if you will
be in the New York City area in early 2008, stop by and see the
exhibit of their photographs and journal entries.

