L.A.
County leaders wash cars two-three times a week amid drought: report
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[August 27, 2015]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Despite a
devastating four-year drought that has forced strict water conservation
measures across California, most Los Angeles County supervisors still
have their cars washed two or three times a week, a local newspaper
reported.
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The multiple weekly car washes carry on despite Governor Jerry
Brown's admonitions to Californians to take shorter showers and stop
watering their lawns and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti's own "Save
the Drop" campaign, according to the Los Angeles Daily News.
The five supervisors can either collect a car allowance or have the
county buy them a vehicle, which is washed, maintained and kept
fueled at taxpayer expense.
The Daily News determined through public service records that two of
the supervisors, Don Knabe and Michael Antonovich, have their SUVs
washed by county workers an average of twice a week and that a
third, Mark Ridley-Thomas, has his car cleaned three times a week.
The remaining two, Sheila Kuehl and Hilda Solis, wash their cars
about once a week, according to the paper.
It said Ridley-Thomas, Knabe and Antonovich actually increased the
frequency of their car washes after the governor
ordered the first statewide mandatory water restrictions in April,
directing cities and communities to reduce their water usage by 25
percent.
"The governor's executive order calls on every Californian to help
save water during this drought and it specifically includes limiting
car washing and making sure to wash with recycled water," said
George Kostyrko, a spokesman for the State Water Resources Control
Board.
"All over the state many Californians are rising to the challenge
and there's always more conservation work to be done, Kostyrko said.
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Unlike many commercial car washes, the county's facilities do not
use recirculated water, the Daily News said.
The supervisors declined to answer questions from the Daily News
about the car washing.
County public information officers and representatives for Garcetti
had no immediate comment when contacted by Reuters.
California is in its fourth year of a withering drought that has
killed 12.5 million trees, forced farmers to fallow a half-million
acres of land and left mountains bereft of snow that melts to
replenish streams and reservoirs.
Garcetti's "Save the Drop" campaign urges residents of America's
second-largest city to save water with ads on buses and trash trucks
and educational programs at libraries, and alerts them to programs
such as rebates for replacing water-gulping grass lawns with
drought-tolerant plants.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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