Legislative package to address California’s water and environmental needs

August 6, 2008 by Editor  
Filed under Advocacy

NRDC, SACRAMENTO, CA (July 14, 2008) –
California Senate President pro Tem Don Perata and Assembly Speaker Karen Bass today announced their intention to send critical water conservation legislation to Governor Schwarzenegger this year. AB 2175, a water conservation bill, is co-authored by Assembly Members John Laird and Michael Feuer, and sponsored by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). The legislation directs the state to reduce per capita urban water use 20 percent by 2020 and would require agricultural water users to implement efficient water management practices.
California can be smarter and more efficient in the way we use water,” said Ronnie Cohen, senior policy analyst at NRDC. “Water efficiency can help assure safe and reliable drinking water supplies, save consumers and businesses money, and help us build a stronger economy. Increased water conservation will be particularly important as we face the likely impacts of global warming on California’s water supply.”
Also in the legislative package announced today is SB 1xx (Perata), which appropriates more than $800 million from existing bonds to improve water supply reliability, water quality, flood management, conservation, and ecosystem restoration.
“Improving California’s water management requires smart investment now,” said Cohen. “Thanks to the generosity of California’s voters, the state already has real money available to take action. SB 1xx is needed to make a difference now.”

For more information on water conservation, visit www.nuprana.com

The Water Shortage Myth

August 6, 2008 by Editor  
Filed under US Water, Water Saving Solutions

FORBES– California is perpetually portrayed as suffering from a shortage of water. Case in point: Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger recently declared a statewide drought, telling citizens to prepare for rationing. But the state’s problems are not a result of too little water.

The real problem is that the price of water in California, as in most of America, has virtually nothing to do with supply and demand. Although water is distributed by public and private monopolies that could easily charge high prices, municipalities and regulators set prices that are as low as possible. Underpriced water sends the wrong signal to the people using it: It tells them not to worry about how much they use.

Low prices lead to shortages. Water managers respond to them with calls for conservation. But this often fails. Residents in San Diego County, for example, were asked in June 2007 to cut their water use by 20 gallons a day. They used more. When voluntary conservation fails, water agencies impose mandatory rationing, which is unfair and inefficient because people who have historically been water misers are cut back by the same percentage as water hogs.

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Source: Forbes.com

For more information on water conservation, visit www.nuprana.com

Farmworkers rally for water solutions

August 6, 2008 by Editor  
Filed under Advocacy, The Southwest

SACRAMENTO– With farmers fallowing their fields and abandoning their crops due to water shortages, farmworkers and their families are feeling the domino effects of the state’s drought as they find themselves without work or getting smaller paychecks.

Hundreds of them descended on the state Capitol to urge lawmakers to do something about the current water crisis. Waving signs in Spanish and English that said “Water Means Jobs,” “Fix the Delta,” and “Water Is Food,” most of them came from the parched San Joaquin Valley, where reduced water deliveries have forced some farmers to cut their work force and lay off employees.

The July 23 rally was organized by the California Latino Water Coalition, which supports a $9.3 billion water bond proposal that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein unveiled last month. The plan calls for new water storage, conservation, improved conveyance and other updates to the state’s water system.

Joining other legislative and community leaders on the Capitol steps, the governor told the farmworkers that their voices are being heard “loud and clear.”

“Every one of us knows how important water is to everything that we do in California,” Schwarzenegger said. “This is why it is important that we work and fight for water for our farms, for our families, for our environment, for our future, for our developments, for our businesses and the list goes on and on and on.”

California’s current water system is no longer working, he added, and the state has not been able to provide an adequate water infrastructure. Two consecutive dry years and court-ordered restrictions on water pumping in the delta have caused the state’s reservoirs to be 50 percent to 75 percent lower than they should be, he said.

“Our farmers are cutting back and letting fields sit empty because they can’t guarantee adequate water,” said Schwarzenegger. “Developments can’t move forward, prices are going up on water and we are now water rationing all over the state of California.”

Water shortages have also damaged the state’s economy. Whole communities have suffered because of lack of irrigation water for Central Valley farms. Crop losses totaled $245 million as of July 11, with Fresno County suffering the largest amount at $73.5 million and Kern County at $69.5 million, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

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Source: California Farm Bureau Federation

For more information on water conservation, visit www.nuprana.com

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