When the water stops coming out of the taps
Some California wells run dry amid drought
Some California wells run dry amid drought
EAST
PORTERVILLE, Calif. (AP) — Hundreds of domestic wells in
California's drought-parched Central Valley farming region have run
dry, leaving many residents to rely on donated bottles of drinking
water to get by.
AP Photo: Scott Smith
In this Monday, Sept. 15, 2014 photo, Elva Beltran, director of the Porterville Area Coordinating Council, is shown in the charity’s warehouse filled with donated water in Porterville, Calif. Beltran normally works part time helping poor residents pay their power bill or fill up their car with gas so they can make it to a doctor’s appointment. But now Beltran says she is working full time to help people of East Porterville whose wells have run dry amid the state’s historic drought.
MSN,
21
September, 2014
Girl
Scouts have set up collection points while local charities are
searching for money to install tanks next to homes. Officials truck
in water for families in greatest need and put a large tank in front
of the local firehouse for residents to fill up with water for
bathing and flushing toilets.
About
290 families in East Porterville — a poor, largely Hispanic town of
about 7,000 residents nestled against the Sierra Nevada foothills —
have said their shallow wells are depleted. Officials say the rest of
Tulare County has many more empty wells, but nobody has a precise
count.
Other
Central Valley counties also report pockets of homes with wells gone
dry and no alternative water service.
"When
you have water running in your house, everything is OK," said
East Porterville resident Yolanda Serrato. "Once you don't have
water, oh my goodness."
With
California locked in its third year of drought and groundwater levels
dropping, residents and farmers have been forced to drill deeper and
deeper to find water. Lawmakers in Sacramento passed legislation to
regulate groundwater pumping, which Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law
this past week.
Three
days later, Brown signed an executive order that provides money to
buy drinking water for residents statewide whose wells have dried up,
while also directing key state officials to work with counties and
local agencies to find solutions for the shortages.
The
State Water Resources Control Board had already allotted $500,000 to
buy bottled water for East Porterville residents, said Bruce Burton
of the board's Drinking Water Program.
But
many East Porterville residents, like Serrato, say all they want is
to get a glass of water from the kitchen sink. Her well dried up
nearly two months ago, she said, making life challenging for her
husband and three children.
To
bathe, they each have to fill a bucket from a 300-gallon tank in the
front yard, carry it inside and pour water over their heads with a
cup. They've lived in their home for 21 years, she said. "It's
not that easy to say, 'Let's go someplace else.' "
East
Porterville sits along the Tule River, which starts high in the
mountains and runs through the unincorporated town. Typically, river
water permeates the sandy soil under the community, filling up wells
as shallow as 30 feet deep. Not this year. Drought has caused the
river to run dry, along with the wells.
AP Photo: Scott Smith
In this photo taken Monday, Sept. 15, 2014, Vickie Yorba, 94, stands next to a water tank in front of her home in East Porterville, Calif., where she has lived for 66 years. Hers is one of 290 East Porterville wells that ran dry in the state’s historic drought. Since February, she has had to rely on friends, relatives and charities for water to drink and bathe.
AP
Photo: Scott Smith
Tulare
County spokeswoman Denise England said East Porterville needs to get
connected to the nearest water main in neighboring Porterville. That
could cost more than $20 million and take up to five years, if the
project didn't hit political snags, she said.
England
said counting the number of dry wells is difficult because people
don't come forward fearing their children will be taken away if their
home lacks a safe water source, or they believe that their home would
be condemned, making them homeless.
Officials
have had to combat these rumors, she said, adding, "We're
blindly feeling our way through this."
In
the meantime, charities have stepped up. Local schools, businesses
and a religious group in Cincinnati, Ohio, donated water to the
community.
Elva
Beltran's Porterville Area Coordinating Council has provided 46 homes
with 300-gallon tanks, which are filled each week. The group has
pallets of donated bottled water and stacks of blue buckets waiting
to be distributed.
Beltran
said every day a new family comes in seeking help. "They're
hurting," she said. "We need water like we need air."
A
local bank donated $50,000 to Self-Help Enterprise, so the housing
nonprofit can provide more homes with water tanks.
Community
development program director Paul Boyer said people have been
creative, using solar bags to heat water for bathing and putting
tanks in trees to increase water pressure. Boyer said it will be more
difficult when it turns cold this winter.
"Families
every night dream about water," Boyer said. "Every day
they're thinking about how they're going to deal with water."
The
well belonging to Vickie Yorba, 94, dried up in February. She now
relies on a donated water tank in front of her small home that she
and her late husband bought 66 years ago. A neighbor with a deeper
well ran a garden hose to Yorba's home.
She
is proud of how sparingly she uses water, likening it to the little
used during trips she and her husband took years ago to the
mountains.
"It
isn't hard," she said. "Not if you know how to camp."
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