Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
August 28, 2008
1. Top Item -
Folsom mandates tough water-saving rules
Sacramento Bee – 8/28/08
By Matt Weiser – staff writer
Folsom on Wednesday ordered the
The measures are the most drastic Folsom has adopted since at least the last statewide drought, in the early 1990s, and perhaps even longer. And they reflect a growing sense that the drought now gripping
Folsom has about 19,500 customers and is entirely dependent on water stored in Folsom Lake. On July 25, city officials learned that the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation would cut deliveries from the shrinking lake by 25 percent.
And since Folsom water customers did not respond well to calls this summer for voluntary conservation, "we clearly need to step it up" with mandatory action, City Manager Kerry Miller said.
Starting Sept. 5, Folsom customers may water landscaping only on alternate days: Wednesday, Friday and Sunday for even street numbers, and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday for odd number addresses.
No irrigation is allowed on Mondays, and automatic sprinklers cannot be used between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. Penalties will be issued to those allowing water to flood sidewalks and gutters.
Also, restaurants can serve water only by request.
The
The Bay Area and
But the capital area could see further restrictions as the drought continues, said John Woodling, executive director of the Sacramento Regional Water Authority.
The state Department of Water Resources previously indicated that even normal weather this winter will not completely refill
"Without a wet winter, we'll be seeing a lot more of this next year and more stringent conditions," Woodling said.
There's little reason, so far, to expect relief this winter.
Long-range predictions by the National Weather Service, based on computer modeling, show no evidence of a wet winter. There also is no suggestion of either El Niño or La Niña conditions, which often bring drenching rains.
"It looks like the prognosticators are afraid to touch
Folsom
Over the past month, the lake has lost about 45,000 acre-feet and dropped in elevation by 7 feet due to demand.
Folsom buys its water – about 27,000 acre-feet per year – from the Bureau of Reclamation via Folsom Lake. The city learned in July it would be unable to tap into an additional 3,000 acre-feet from the lake.
In June Folsom urged customers to voluntarily save water. They did well at first, Miller said, but in July consumption returned to normal.
Mandatory conservation will last into winter, at least until rainfall patterns cause demand to drop off.
Ken Payne, Folsom utilities director, said the city's normal summer water demand is about 40 million gallons per day. In winter it drops to between 12 million and 14 million gallons per day. Most of the summer demand is driven by a desire to keep lawns green.
All but 5,400 of Folsom's water customers have had water meters installed, but all customers are still billed a flat rate. The city faces a 2012 legal deadline to meter the rest of the city and begin billing according to consumption.
The city will unleash "water waster" patrols to watch for watering violators, Payne said.
"We're not going to take a heavy hand, but where we have chronic violators, we will have measures in place to cite violators," said Miller.
First offenders will get warnings. For another violation, that customer will begin getting billed on a metered rate, Payne said. If that customer doesn't yet have a meter, one will be installed and metered billing will begin.
Folsom has the second-greatest per capita water consumption in the capital region: 381 gallons per day. That's more than double the statewide per capita average of 164 gallons per day.
Folsom residents can request a water consumption audit by calling (916) 355-7252. Customers of other area utilities can request an audit via the Regional Water Authority at (888) WTR-TIPS.#
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/1192150.html
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