CALIFORNIA DROUGHT: RESIDENTS PANICKING OVER WATER SHORTAGE
WILLITS,
Calif. (AP) — In this small logging town in Northern California's
redwood country, small blue signs urging water conservation are
almost everywhere you look
5
February, 2014
Just
south of Willits, in one of the state's most verdant corners, crows
and other birds peck at dry ground that should be covered in water at
the city's Centennial Reservoir, which is less than a third full. The
creek that feeds it has slowed to a trickle.
"It's
common at this time of year for the water to be going over the cement
wall right here. In fact, we'd be standing in water," said Bruce
Burton, a Willits city councilman, gesturing toward the small cement
dam in the creek. "In the 20 years I've been in local
government, we've never experienced this kind of condition."
While
rain is predicted through the weekend in the north and central parts
of the state, California remains in the midst of an historic drought.
The state's Department of Public Health says 17 rural areas including
Willits — a town of about 5,000 that usually sees about 50 inches
of rain a year — are dangerously low on water, and officials expect
that number to grow.
In
addition to declaring a drought emergency, California has canceled
water deliveries from the state's water system to farms and thirsty
cities and shut down fishing in dozens of streams to protect
imperiled salmon and steelhead.
The
emergency has become a disruption to everyday life in Willits, a
Mendocino County locale known as the final resting place of the
racehorse Seabiscuit. City leaders have banned lawn watering and car
washing, mandated all residents cut water use dramatically and asked
restaurants to serve the precious resource only upon request and to
conserve, such as by using paper plates.
While
California sees cycles of drought normally, scientists say the dry
weather since Oct. 1 appears to be unique in its severity.
"According
to tree ring records, this water year, which began Oct. 1, really
stands out as one of the worst single years in the last 500 years,"
said Lynn Ingram, author of "The West Without Water" and a
University of California earth science professor.
"This
year, the drought is impacting places more than we've ever seen, at
least that I've come across in my research," she added.
Of
the 17 water-starved rural agencies, three are in rainy Mendocino
County and are districts that rely largely on rainwater to fill their
reservoirs. Other areas include parts of Fresno, Kern and Santa Cruz
counties.
After
a record dry 2013, Mendocino County leaders were the first in
California to declare a drought emergency, which they did on Jan. 7.
Things
are so scarce that the sheriff's office is on alert for water
bandits. During the 2009-10 drought, authorities caught thieves
pumping water from Lake Mendocino into trucks. The reservoir is
currently about 37 percent full, according to county officials.
"Water
theft is a big concern, so we're doing public announcements and have
a line to call for reports to the sheriff's department," said
Carre Brown, a Mendocino County supervisor. "All deputies are on
the watch."
Unlike
many of the other communities facing water woes, Willits doesn't have
readily accessible groundwater.
Officials
are racing to develop two groundwater wells within city limits, but
the water in both sources is polluted by naturally occurring arsenic
and other minerals, so the city needs an expensive treatment facility
to make it potable. The state public health department is testing the
water to help determine what kind of treatment is needed.
Ron
Owens, a spokesman for the state public health department, said
officials are helping struggling towns like Willits identify other
water options, like connecting with other water systems if need be.
It also has some emergency funding available.
Meantime,
officials say people in the bucolic town seem to be following the
mandatory conservation orders.
Even
the local coin-operated car wash is only offering recycled water.
"We
have been rationing severely. No plants get watered. That's over.
Turned off the toilet. I haven't washed my hair for two weeks,"
said Willits resident Andrea Onstad, who was washing her car Monday
afternoon.
A
few blocks down at Gribaldo's diner on the city's Main Street,
customers sat at tables with no water glasses. A sign on the wall
warned of the drought emergency — water was only available upon
request.
The
water shortage has changed everything for people in Willits — even
how they spend their free time at home.
At
Jim Harden's house, his lawn is splotched with brown spots, and empty
flower pots usually stuffed with colorful annuals are stacked high.
He's even unhooked his drip irrigation system.
"We're
very concerned. If we totally run out of water, what are we going to
do? Go to another community?" Harden, 78, said, standing in his
small greenhouse. "It's frightening."
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