Business
Environment: Company ends opposition after San Gabriel Valley officials cut project in half and aim it away from brewery.
Feb. 9, 1996
A $25-million project to turn sewage into drinking water for 1 million San Gabriel Valley residents could be headed down the drain.
Dec. 13, 1994
Beer made from recycled sewer water may not sound too tasty, but the Miller Brewing Co. plant in Irwindale may have to start making it.
Aug. 3, 1994
World & Nation
A retired record producer who lost more than $200,000 after a former U.S.
May 30, 1989
Re “Miller Brewery Fights Water Reclamation,” Aug. 18: Our public health is put at risk by taking water from sewage, inadequately treating it, inadequately testing it and injecting it directly into our drinking water supply.
Aug. 25, 1995
California
Water that once was flushed down a toilet doesn’t conjure up the same image as, say, Rocky Mountain spring water.
Dec. 12, 1993
Julie Vitale expressed a common reaction to the thought of her favorite beer being made with treated sewage water.
July 28, 1994
It must be made clear that Miller Brewing Co. emphatically supports water conservation and recycling projects.
Oct. 8, 1994
From “the land of sky-blue waters” to “pure, Rocky Mountain spring water,” the imagery of pristine lakes and streams has helped sell American beer for decades.
Sept. 14, 1994
The Miller Brewing Co. has filed a lawsuit to stop a plan by the Upper San Gabriel Valley Mulenicipal Water District to speed up the natural water recycling process and use that water to replenish an underground aquifer in the San Gabriel Valley (Sept. 14).
Sept. 26, 1994