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"In each of them, it was pretty obvious they were being impacted by pumping," said Mark Basch, head of the agency's water rights and use section. Under Indiana water law, the department will determine to what extent large users are responsible for nearby wells running dry and assess them a proportional share of the cost of the solution, Basch said. In Missouri, state officials said last month they would help farmers pay to keep wells pumping using deeper drilling or other means. Through the first week of August, they had agreed to spend more than $18 million on 3,700 wells. Many homeowners hire water haulers to deliver weekly shipments straight into their wells to temporarily restore the flow. Since June, Pamela Lashley has been paying $130 to $150 a week to sustain the four wells at Country Estate Kennel in Shiloh, Ill., about 15 miles southeast of St. Louis. The kennel owner has to spend the money to hose down dog runs, launder bedding and fill water bowls. "It certainly adds to our boarding costs," she said. "It's not something that I put on my clients. It's something that I absorb." She once considered connecting to a nearby municipal water system, but the initial hookup cost
-- $28,000 -- quickly changed her mind. In the short run, water hauling is far cheaper. Marion, who drives a water-delivery truck in the area around his home about 15 miles north of Springfield, charges $60 for 2,100 gallons, enough to refill many of the wells he serves for about a week. A typical American household uses up to 2,800 gallons a week, though the figure can vary widely by location and other factors, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Lawren Tucker of Petersburg, one of Marion's customers, is paying for water with money he would normally use to have his pasture mowed. But with the drought, there's no need for that. "We are no different than a lot of folks around here. A lot of the farmers in the area have been hauling their own water," Tucker said. "It's part of country life in a drought."
[Associated
Press;
Associated Press writer Rick Callahan in Indianapolis contributed to this report.
Follow David Mercer on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DavidMercerAP.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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