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New California Law Limits How Much Water People Can Use to 50 gallons


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2018 Jun 2, 10:57pm   13,010 views  67 comments

by just_passing_through   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

The people in our government are insane. On the bright side this will drop property prices...

Some youtube videos claim the eventual goal is only 30 gallons per day and that they'll be cutting people off by way of smart meters.

http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2018/05/31/california-water-limits/

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) – There will soon be more focus on flushes and scrutiny over showers with a new law signed in by the governor.

California is now the first state in the nation to enact tough new water-efficiency standards. The controversial rules limit how many gallons a person can use inside their home per day.

RELATED: Sacramento Looks To Ease Farmers’ Groundwater Use With Wastewater

“So that everyone in California is at least integrating efficiency into our preparations for climate change,” said Felicia Marcus, Chair of the State Water Resources Control Board.

So, what are the new rules?

In 2022, the new indoor water standard will be 55 gallons per person, per day. by 2030, it will fall to 50 gallons.

“With a child and every day having to wash clothes, that’s, just my opinion, not feasible. But I get it and I understand that we’re trying to preserve…but 55 gallons a day?” said Tanya Allen, who has a 4-year-old daughter.

Just how many gallons do household chores take?

ALSO: 12,000 New Homes In Folsom Ranch Project Raise Water Supply Worries

An 8-minute shower uses about 17 gallons of water, a load of laundry up to 40, and a bathtub can hold 80 to 100 gallons of water.

“She likes to bathe three times a day and she does laundry all day,” said Rocka Mitchell from Texas.

He and his wife Ginger are living in Sacramento for work and say it would be hard to conserve.

“I couldn’t do it. My family is way too large,” she said.

Retrofitting homes with water-efficient fixtures could help cut back.

“I think the average new home is 35 gallons per person per day, so we are not talking emergency conservation here,” Marcus said.

Greg Bundesen with the Sacramento Suburban Water District says they already assist customers.

RELATED: California Water Year Below Average, Reservoirs Benefit From Last Year’s Record

“We offer toilet rebates, we offer complementary showerheads, we offer complementary faucets,” he said.

The new laws also require water districts to perform stress tests of their water supply and curb loss due to leaks.

“Right now we lose up to 30 percent of urban water just to leaks in the system,” Marcus said.

Agencies believe fixing those leaks and educating residents is the key.

“Some people may not be aware that you’re going to use a lot more water in a bath and you wouldn’t shower and it’s our job to make sure they’re informed,” Bundesen said.

Water districts who don’t comply face fines up to $10,000 a day.

The ultimate goal is to make conservation a way of life in California. Outdoor water use is also covered by the new laws.

Standards will be based on a region’s climate and other factors instead of just one standard for the whole state.

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64   RWSGFY   2018 Oct 3, 5:21pm  

WookieMan says
what the landscape would look like prior to the development of the area?


Pasture with grass brought over by Spaniards. The type which goes completetly dry and yellow by early May and back to green in mid-December. Forest (either redwood or oak) before that. It's not a desert and never was.
65   RWSGFY   2018 Oct 3, 5:24pm  

WookieMan says
At some point the water will be more expensive compared to getting an A/C unit or watering the lawn to keep temps lower.


In CA all prices are artificially skewed: power, water, gasoline... There is no telling what will be more expensive when.
66   just_passing_through   2018 Oct 3, 8:01pm  

Have to agree with Strat that we use too much on agriculture - the wrong kind of agriculture. Anyone ever see Chinatown with young Jack Nicholson? A lot of that is true and sadly was recapitulated since then. I seem to remember a single almond mafioso involved?

Just don't take away my avocados which are perhaps the worst.

We need lots and lots more desal and reservoirs but the econazi's want us to actually move backwards on that front. We (in SD) should plan to wean off of the colorado if for no other reason the Salton Sea is drying up (faster than ever after the very recent water deal we made) and once that goes the air around here will be shit. It's already fucking up the Imperial Valley and blowing into the LA area.
67   just_passing_through   2018 Oct 3, 8:03pm  

Does anyone think that after this law actually goes into effect it won't either be:

1. quickly reversed
2. eventually reversed after demoncrats are voted out of Sac

Long ago I would have said (1) or (2) but these days I really don't think so.

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