Charter school has no water source

  • Peak to Peak Mountain Charter is ‘The Little Charter School that Could.’ It has weathered many changes over the past few years. These students were at a fitness day, before the drought had entered its third year. Now it is entering its fifth. [photo by Dionne Bolton]

    Peak to Peak Mountain Charter is ‘The Little Charter School that Could.’ It has weathered many changes over the past few years. These students were at a fitness day, before the drought had entered its third year. Now it is entering its fifth. [photo by Dionne Bolton]

By Patric Hedlund

This Saturday, April 11 at 10 a.m. the quarterly meeting of the Mil Potrero Mutual Water Company in the Pine Mountain community may become a symbol of what is taking place throughout the state of California.

MPMWC is thought to be on a separate aquifer from that serving the Mountain Community towns on the east side…(please see below to view full stories and photographs)

Photo captions:

Peak to Peak Mountain Charter is ‘The Little Charter School that Could.’ It has weathered many changes over the past few years. These students were at a fitness day, before the drought had entered its third year. Now it is entering its fifth, and the school is facing a challenge.

To see full stories with photos, please purchase a copy of the newspaper at many locations throughout the Mountain Communities.

Or, have your newspaper delivered via mail and include internet access! Just call 661-245-3794.

The e-Edition is available now with full photos and stories at The Mountain Enterprise e-Edition

(subscriber login required)

This is part of the April 10, 2015 online edition of The Mountain Enterprise.

Have an opinion on this matter? We'd like to hear from you.