California ends mandatory water
conservation rules as drought eases
Send a link to a friend
[May 19, 2016]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
moved on Wednesday to dramatically roll back strict mandatory water
conservation rules imposed at the height of the state's multi-year
drought, after a wet winter eased conditions in parts of the state.
|
The water level of Folsom Lake is pictured near Folsom, California
February 11, 2016. REUTERS/Jane Lee |
The state Water Resources Control Board voted to end mandatory
conservation of up to 36 percent in many communities, moving instead
to a system under which only regions where a shortage of supply is
anticipated will have to conserve.
"We don’t want to cry wolf but we also don’t want to stick our heads
in the sand," said water board chair Felicia Marcus. "This is a
compromise."
The wet weather has eased but not ended a four-year drought that has
led farmers to idle land, made rivers too warm for salmon and caused
wells to run dry.
Under an order by Democratic Governor Jerry Brown last year to cut
water use by 25 percent statewide, Californians saved enough to
supply 6.5 million people for an entire year.
But storms powered by the El Nino ocean-warming phenomenon dumped
considerable precipitation in Northern California and much of the
Sierra Nevada, swelling reservoirs, building crucial snowpack in the
mountains and prompting consumers to complain that cutbacks were
unnecessary.
The new rules that go into effect June 1 will require utility
companies to estimate how much water they will have access to, and
how much they will need for their customers, over a period of three
years. Those facing a possible shortage will be required to
conserve, but those with plentiful supplies will not.
The board also voted to keep in place a rule requiring restaurants
to serve water only upon request.
[to top of second column] |
On May 9, Brown ordered water regulators to extend some drought
protections, such as a prohibition on irrigating lawns and landscape
so intensely that water runs down the sidewalk. He also demanded a
new plan for making conservation a way of life long term.
But Brown did not order a continuation of the mandatory cutbacks. In
response, water regulators released the proposal approved Wednesday,
which eliminates the cutbacks at least for the rest of this year,
while they develop a longer term strategy to cut water use in the
most populous U.S. state.
Going forward, the state hopes to reduce water use by 20 percent or
more as a way to guard against future droughts. A plan to achieve
that goal is expected to be released by the end of this year.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Diane Craft)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|