|
Water conservation is always in season
By Gail Paparian
For the Record Gazette
Somebody took umbrage about something I
wrote in a recent column. I understand it was written off to the
fact that she's just “a cranky, old lady.” Hum. I am not cranky. I
do not feel old and I thank the man for considering me to be a lady
rather than a witch with a B.
If you really wanted to see my blood pressure rise and my hair stand
on end, you should have been with me the other morning. I was taking
the prodigal pooch for her daily walk. As I rounded a corner, water
was gushing down the street. Here it was again: a thoughtless
homeowner was watering the street.
I don't know how many thousands or hundreds of thousands of gallons
of water is needlessly wasted because people won't change their
watering patterns. In the not to distant future, I will not be
surprised that water conservation is mandated.
Back a few years ago, a Banning council member thought the city
should take a kinder, gentler approach and initiated codes
“compliance.” It didn't take long to figure out that the way most
people comply is to have the codes enforced. It is a difference with
a distinction and so it is with water conservation.
There was a gathering of about 800 people at the fifth annual
Riverside County Water Symposium held at the Morongo Casino. I would
have loved to have attended but couldn't afford the $150 entrance
fee. I would have to be satisfied with reading newspaper accounts
and picking the brains of people who attended.
I didn't have to attend the symposium to realize that we continue to
waste too much of a precious resource-- water. If the economy had
not slowed down and the area kept putting thousands of houses on the
building drawing board, radical actions would need to be taken to
assure and insure a stable water supply for existing homes as well
as new development.
Steve Robbins,
general manager of the Coachella Valley Water District is fond of
reminding people that we live in a desert. While residents in the
Pass area are at about 2,500-foot elevation; this is still a desert.
Statistics indicate that outdoor watering accounts for 60 to 80
percent of a home's water use.
I found myself falling victim to BBS
(Boiling Blood Syndrome) when I walked past one house where a man
was washing his car. I used to like washing my car until I realized
that taking it to a car wash is a better deal, as the car wash
recycles their water.
Anyway, if the guy was simply washing his
car I might have continued walking without making a comment.
Instead, he wasn't really washing his car he was letting the hose
run as he talked with his neighbor! The water was gushing down the
street accomplishing nothing.
I gritted my teeth and walked his way.
“Good morning,” I said behind a false smile. “I thought you might
want to know that May is water conservation month, so if you don't
mind, could you at least use it for something rather than just
washing the street?” I didn't wait for his response as I told Sandy
to make tracks.
Wanting to get his take on the symposium
and find out what was new with water in the city of Banning, I
contacted Jim Earhart, director of Banning Public Utilities. Earhart
is extremely busy handling the electric department and the water and
wastewater departments.
Earhart began our conversation by chiding
me about a figure I had used in a recent column. I had indicated
that the Sun Lakes Home Owners Association spent about $800,000 a
year irrigating the golf courses with drinking water. He asked me
where I had gotten this figure. I told him I received the
information from the previous water director. End of conversation.
Earhart informed me that Sun Lakes uses
about 169 million gallons of water annually. The cost is
approximately $341,000 and yes... it is drinking water as the City
of Banning is still not equipped to provide recycled water.
The City is seeking SRF (State Revolving
Funds) to help finance the upgrading of the wastewater treatment
plant which would allow tertiary treatment. “My goal is to get it in
as soon as possible and not just to Sun Lakes, but throughout the
city.” Earhart would like to see recycled water used at the high
school, the parks, the medians, Cal Trans
areas. “We would like to use all we can produce,” Earhart said.
Recycled water isn't cheap, as it is equal
to or more expensive than potable water. However, the reality is,
forward thinkers have to consider every kind of water available
including state project water, groundwater and recycled water.
Earhart is busy with several water related
projects including the repair of the flume. He is waiting for the
final agreements to be worked out between the City, SCE, Banning
Heights Mutual Water Company and the Pass Water Agency.
Every effort is being made to be able to
bring state project water to Banning. While the people of Banning
have been paying to bring state water in since 1961, it has arrived
in Beaumont/Cherry Valley; not quite to Banning. Who will ultimately
pay for it depends on whom you speak with. I would like to think the
cost will be borne by the Pass Water Agency rather than the
taxpayers who have been paying for years.
Conservation Tips
Before we are mandated as to how much and
when we use our water, good conservation habits are always in
season. Being logical allows you to be water smart. It is logical to
only run the clothes washer and dishwasher with full loads. It makes
sense to NOT let the water run when you are brushing your teeth or
shaving. It shows good planning to keep a pitcher of water in the
refrigerator instead of running the tap until water gets cold.
Plant during spring and fall when watering
requirements are lower. Water in early morning hours when
temperatures are cooler and winds are lighter. Here's a goody: Use a
broom instead of a hose to clean the driveway or sidewalk. It will
save about 80 gallons of water every time. There are some excellent
sites to answer just about any water/water conservation question.
Here is an example:
www.wateruseitwisely.com
Banning's
Earhart told me they are in the middle of the budget process. Like
they recently had to do with electric rates, water rates may have to
be looked at again. While there is currently no commercial water
rate in Banning, tiered rates are imposed, as in, the more you use
the more you pay. Rates, structures including commercial rates will
be evaluated, Earhart said.
I am hoping citizens will be the
beneficiaries of rebates for wise water use as rebates are available
through the electric department and the public benefits programs. I
look forward to the time when Banning gets to offer the same types
of programs that Las Vegas did, when you received a rebate every
time you got rid of a foot of grass.
I would replace my backyard lawn with
waterless grass and cap off my sprinklers in a heartbeat if I could
afford it and Sandy found it to her satisfaction. While
Councilmember John Machisic is fond of saying something might
happen... just not in his lifetime, I would like to think that city
leaders and homeowner's association electeds
get the picture and get on the bandwagon of water conservation. It
can only help.
Gail and her husband Bill Paparian created
a service called Writing Solutions in 1996. Gail has also written
for a number of local and national magazines and newspapers over the
years.
Currently, she provides public relations
consulting services for the Banning Unified School District. She can
be reached at
info@WritingSolutions.com.
Print this story
Email this story |