The Greatest Water Crisis In The History Of The United States
14
May, 2015
What
are we going to do once all the water is gone?
Thanks to the worst drought in more than 1,000 years, the western
third of the country is facing the greatest water crisis that the
United States has ever seen. Lake Mead is now the lowest that
it has ever been since the Hoover Dam was finished in the 1930s,
mandatory water restrictions have already been implemented in
the state of California,
and there are already widespread reports of people stealing water in
some of the worst hit areas. But
this is just the beginning.
Right
now, in a desperate attempt to maintain somewhat “normal” levels
of activity, water is being pumped out of the ground in the western
half of the nation at an absolutely staggering pace. Once
that irreplaceable groundwater is gone, that is when the real crisis
will begin. If this multi-year drought stretches on and becomes
the “megadrought” that a lot of scientists are now warning about,
life as we know it in much of the country is going to be
fundamentally transformed and millions of Americans may be forced to
find somewhere else to live.
Simply
put, this is not a normal drought. What
the western half of the nation is experiencing right now is highly
unusual. In fact, scientists tell us that California has not
seen anything quite like this in
at least 1,200 years…
Analyzing tree rings that date back to 800 A.D. — a time when Vikings were marauding Europe and the Chinese were inventing gunpowder — there is no three-year period when California’s rainfall has been as low and its temperatures as hot as they have been from 2012 to 2014, the researchers found.
Much
of the state of California was once a desert, and much of it is
now turning
back into a desert. The
same thing can also be said about much of Arizona and much of
Nevada. We never really should have built massive, sprawling
cities such as Las Vegas and Phoenix in the middle of the desert.
But the 20th century was the wettest century for western North
America in about 1,000 years, and we got lulled into a false sense of
security.
At
this point, the water level in Lake Mead has
hit a brand new record low,
and authorities are warning that official water rationing could soon
begin for both Arizona and Nevada…
Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the US, has hit its lowest level ever. Feeding California, Nevada and Arizona, it can hold a mind-boggling 35 cubic kilometres of water. But it has been many years since it was at capacity, and the situation is only getting worse.
“We’re only at 38 percent full. Lake Mead hasn’t been this low since we were filling it in the 1930s,” said a spokeswoman for the US Bureau of Reclamation in Las Vegas.
If it gets much lower – and with summer approaching and a dwindling snowpack available to replenish it, that looks likely – official rationing will begin for Arizona and Nevada.
And
did you know that the once mighty Colorado River no
longer even reaches the ocean?
Over 40 million people depend upon this one river, and because the
Colorado is slowly dying an enormous amount of water is being pumped
out of the ground in
a crazed attempt to carry on with business as usual…
The Colorado River currently supplies water to more than 40 million people from Denver to Los Angeles (as well as Las Vegas, Phoenix, Tucson, San Diego, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque, and Santa Fe—none of which lie directly on the river). According to one recent study, 16 million jobs and $1.4 trillion in annual economic activity across the West depend on the Colorado. As the river dries up, farmers and cities have turned to pumping groundwater. In just the last 10 years, the Colorado Basin has lost 15.6 cubic miles of subsurface freshwater, an amount researchers called “shocking.” Once an official shortage is declared, Arizona farmers will increase their rate of pumping even further, to blunt the effect of an anticipated sharp cutback.
The
same kind of thing is going on in the middle part of the
country. Farmers
are pumping water out of the rapidly shrinking Ogallala Aquifer so
fast that a major crisis in the years ahead is
virtually guaranteed…
Farther east, the Ogallala Aquifer under the High Plains is also shrinking because of too much demand. When the Dust Bowl overtook the Great Plains in the 1930s, the Ogallala had been discovered only recently, and for the most part it wasn’t tapped then to help ease the drought. But large-scale center-pivot irrigation transformed crop production on the plains after World War II, allowing water-thirsty crops like corn and alfalfa for feeding livestock.
But severe drought threatens the southern plains again, and water is being unsustainably drawn from the southern Ogallala Aquifer. The northern Ogallala, found near the surface in Nebraska, is replenished by surface runoff from rivers originating in the Rockies. But farther south in Texas and New Mexico, water lies hundreds of feet below the surface, and does not recharge. Sandra Postel wrote here last month that the Ogallala Aquifer water level in the Texas Panhandle has dropped by up to 15 feet in the past decade, with more than three-quarters of that loss having come during the drought of the past five years. A recent Kansas State University study said that if farmers in Kansas keep irrigating at present rates, 69 percent of the Ogallala Aquifer will be gone in 50 years.
At
one time, most of us took water completely for granted.
But
now that it is becoming “the new oil”, people are starting to
look at water much differently. Sadly,
this even includes
thieves…
With the state of California mired in its fourth year of drought and a mandatory 25 percent reduction in water usage in place, reports of water theft have become common.
In April, The Associated Press reported that huge amounts of water went missing from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and a state investigation was launched.
The delta is a vital body of water, serving 23 million Californians as well as millions of farm acres, according to the Association for California Water Agencies.
The AP reported in February that a number of homeowners in Modesto, California, were fined $1,500 for allegedly taking water from a canal. In another instance, thieves in the town of North San Juan stole hundreds of gallons of water from a fire department tank.
In
case you are wondering, of course this emerging water crisis is going
to deeply affect our food supply. More than 40 percent of all
our fruits and vegetables are grown in the state of California, so
this drought is going to end up hitting all of us in the wallet one
way or another.
And
this water crisis is not the only major threat that our food supply
is facing at the moment. A horrific outbreak of the bird flu
has already killed more
than 20 million turkeys and chickens,
and the price of eggs has
already gone up substantially…
The cost of a carton of large eggs in the Midwest has jumped nearly 17 percent to $1.39 a dozen from $1.19 since mid-April when the virus began appearing in Iowa’s chicken flocks and farmers culled their flocks to contain any spread.
A much bigger increase has emerged in the eggs used as ingredients in processed products like cake mix and mayonnaise, which account for the majority of what Iowa produces. Those eggs have jumped 63 percent to $1.03 a dozen from 63 cents in the last three weeks, said Rick Brown, senior vice president of Urner Barry, a commodity market analysis firm.
Most
of us are accustomed to thinking of the United States as a land of
seemingly endless resources, but now we are really starting to bump
up against some of our limitations.
Despite
all of our technology, the truth is that we are still exceedingly
dependent on the weather patterns that produce rain and snow for us.
For
years, I have been warning that Dust Bowl conditions would be
returning to the western half of the country, and thanks to this
multi-year drought we can now see it slowly happening all around us.
And
if this drought continues to stretch on, things are going to get
worse than this.
Much
worse.
California’s
Drought Could Upend America’s Entire Food System
BY NATASHA GEILING
5
May, 2015
On
April 1, California Governor Jerry Brown stood in a field in the
Sierra Nevada Mountains, beige grass stretching out across an area
that should have been covered with five feet of snow. The Sierra’s
snowpack — the frozen well that feeds California’s reservoirs and
supplies a third of its water — was just eight percent of its
yearly average. That’s a
historic low for
a state that has become accustomed to breaking
drought records.
In
the middle of the snowless field, Brown took an unprecedented
step, mandating that
urban agencies curtail their water use by 25 percent, a move that
would save some 500 billion gallons of water by February of 2016 —
a seemingly huge amount, until you consider that California’s
almond industry, for example, uses
more than twice that
much water annually. Yet Brown’s mandatory cuts did not touch the
state’s agriculture industry.
Agriculture
requires water, and large-scale agriculture, like that in California,
requires large amounts of water. So when Governor Brown came under
fire for exempting farmers from the mandatory cuts — farmers use 80
percent of the state’s available water — he was unmoved.
“They’re
not watering their lawn or taking long showers,” he told ABC’s
“The Week” the Sunday after he announced the restrictions.
“They’re providing most of the fruits and vegetables of America
to a significant part of the world.”
Almonds
get a lot of the attention when it comes to California’s
agriculture and water, but the state is responsible for a dizzying
diversity of
produce. Eaten a salad recently?
Odds are the lettuce, carrots, and celery came from California. Have
a soft spot for stone
fruit?
California produces 84 percent of the country’s fresh peaches and
94 percent of the country’s fresh plums. It produces 99 percent of
the artichokes grown in the United States, and 94 percent of the
broccoli. As spring begins to creep in, almost half of asparagus will
come from California.
“California
is running through its water supply because, for complicated
historical and climatological reasons, it has taken on the burden of
feeding the rest of the country,” Steven Johnson wrote in
Medium, pointing out that California’s water problems are actually
a national problem — for better or for worse, the trillions of
gallons of water California agriculture uses annually is the price we
all pay for supermarket produce aisles stocked with fruits and
vegetables.
Up
to this point, feats of engineering and underground aquifers have
made the drought somewhat bearable for California’s farmers. But if
dry conditions become the new
normal,
how much longer can — and should — California’s fields feed the
country? And if they can no longer do so, what should the rest of the
country do?
“It’s Not Just A California Drought Problem, It’s A Problem With Our Whole Food System”
In
2014, some 500,000
acres of
farmland lay fallow in California, costing the state’s agriculture
industry $1.5
billion in revenue and
17,000 seasonal and part time jobs. Experts believe the total acreage
of fallowed farmland could
double in 2015 —
and that news has people across the country thinking about food
security.
“When
you look at the California drought maps, it’s a scary thing,”
Craig Chase, who leads the Leopold Center for Sustainable
Agriculture’s Marketing and Food Systems Initiative at Iowa State
University, told ThinkProgress. “We’re all wondering where the
food that we want to eat is going to come from. Is it going to come
from another state inside the U.S.? Is it going to come from abroad?
Or are we going to grow it ourselves? That’s the question that we
need to start asking ourselves.”
The
California Central Valley, which stretches 450 miles between the
Sierra Nevadas and the California Coast Range, might be the single
most productive tract
of land in the world. From its soil springs 230
varieties of
crops so diverse that their places of botanical origin range from
Southeast Asia to Mexico. It produces two thirds of the nation’s
produce, and, like Atlas with an almond on his back, 80
percent of
the world’s almonds. If you’ve eaten anything made with canned
tomatoes, there’s a 94
percent chance that
they were planted and picked in the Central Valley.
Some
crops will always be grown in California. The Napa Valley, where a
history of earthquakes has resulted in 14 different microclimates
perfect for wine, is a truly
unique place for
growing grapes. The maligned
almond is
a great
crop for California —
it needs brief, cold winters and long, dry summers, and produces more
value than it uses water, something rare for
crops. Realistically, there aren’t many places in the world better
suited to growing almonds than California.
But
a lot of the things that California produces in such stunning numbers
— tomatoes, lettuce, celery, carrots — can be grown elsewhere.
Before the 20th century, the majority of produce consumed in the
United States came from small farms that grew a relatively diverse
number of crops. Fruit and vegetable production was regional,
and varieties were dictated by the climate of those areas.
“There
may be reason for the citrus and some of the nuts that are uniquely
suited to the Mediterranean climate, but there’s no real reason
that you have to produce all the fruits and vegetables. Those were
grown other places before California came in,” John Ikerd,
professor emeritus of Agricultural & Applied Economics University
of Missouri Columbia, told ThinkProgress.
Ikerd,
who taught agricultural economics before becoming an advocate for
sustainable farming, grew up in rural Missouri, where he estimates
that the majority of the food he ate came from within 50 miles of his
home. At that time, the Midwest was still covered with small and
mid-sized farms growing a diverse portfolio of crops. Ikerd described
a tomato cannery in the town where he grew up, built to process the
tomatoes grown in the farms from the surrounding area. Orchards, too,
were once plentiful throughout the Midwest, growing apples and fruit
for markets both local and national.
But
the tomato canneries and the orchards that Ikerd remembers have
largely disappeared, replaced by fields upon fields of corn and
soybeans, commodity crops that government subsidies help make the
quickest, fastest way to profit in the Midwest. From 1996 until the
most recent version of the Farm Bill, farmers that grew commodity
crops like corn and soil were actually prohibited from also growing
specialty crops like fruits and vegetables on their land. Anyone who
grew a specialty crop on land meant for subsidized commodity crops
would have to forfeit
their subsidy and pay a penalty equal
to the market value of whatever specialty crop they grew, a policy
that did little to discourage farmers in the Midwest from becoming
large producers of one or two commodity crops. The U.S. government
spent almost $84.5 billion dollars subsidizing corn between 1995 and
2012, and a good portion of corn crops does not make it to a plate,
instead used as ethanol or feed for livestock.
Of
the corn that is intended for consumption, much of it ends up as high
fructose corn syrup, which is now so ubiquitous it encourages
maximizing the yield of corn at the expense of agricultural
diversity. From 2002 to 2012, the amount of land dedicated to growing
the nation’s top 25 vegetables fell
from 1.9 million acres to 1.8 million.
In the same amount of time, corn production grew from 79 million
acres to 97 million.
“The
deeper people look at it, they’ll see it’s a deeper part of the
whole,” Ikerd says. “It’s not just a California drought
problem, it’s a problem with our whole food system.”
A
map showing where various crops are grown across the U.S.
CREDIT: BILL
RANKIN
In
2010, the Leopold Center at Iowa State University ran
some numbers to
figure out what would happen if a small stretch of Midwestern
farmland — just 270,000 acres — was used to grow vegetables
instead of corn or soybeans. They found that diversifying even that
small amount of land — basically the amount of cropland in an
average Iowa county — across six Midwestern states would yield
almost enough produce to supply all the residents of Indiana,
Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota for the entire
year.
But
that conversion is easier said than done, according to Chase. Farming
corn requires a completely different infrastructure than farming
produce, and he doesn’t see farmers jumping to replace their crops
and machinery with California still capable of producing fruits and
vegetables. Equipment for corn or soy farming can cost upwards of
$100,000, a financial commitment that encourages farmers to grow
crops that are easy to plant and harvest with the machinery.
“It’s
not a land issue and it’s not a soil quality issue,” Chase said.
“A lot of it is an infrastructure issue or a labor issue,
particularly with those products that are so extremely labor
intensive.”
Matt
Kroul, co-owner of Kroul
Farms in
Mt. Vernon, Iowa, explains that for farmers — stereotypically a
stubborn bunch — changing what’s grown can be difficult. Kroul
farms 1,200 acres that have been in his family since the 1800s; for
decades, his grandfather and grandmother farmed corn and soy, but the
farm crisis of 1980 forced Kroul’s father to diversify their
enterprise. Today, the farm produces a mix of commodity crops and
seasonal produce, which it sells both directly to consumers via
markets and a farmstand, and to local restaurants. Kroul feels
fortunate that the farm was both small enough to be able to adapt to
new crops and well-connected enough within the community to find a
consumer base, but he acknowledges that in Iowa, this isn’t the
case for everyone.
“You’d
love to see it change, you’d love to see consumers drive that
market to push more local foods,” Kroul said, but he worries that
large-scale commodity farmers won’t want to change what they’ve
always done. “Farmers are going to continue to grow what they’ve
always grown. It’s a slippery slope in their mind to turn some
acres over to vegetable and other growth.”
But
Ikerd believes that the system can — and must — adapt to changing
conditions. He remembers a time when fruit trees dotted the Midwest,
and he also remembers watching as they were steadily replaced by
large operations growing corn or soy or both. The system we have now,
Ikerd says, was all built in the last 50 years. And he thinks a more
sustainable system could be put in place just as quickly.
“This System Was A Fantasy”
Why
do we grow so much of our produce in one place? And why California?
“There’s
plenty of good soil elsewhere,” Richard Walker, professor emeritus
of geography at the University of California, Berkeley, told
ThinkProgress. “But it’s the ability to put water on [that soil]
over a long, dry summer that allows you to get very quick results.”
When
it comes to irrigation, California is a powerhouse. Some 9
million acres of
farmland are irrigated each year, making California the state with
the second-largest amount
of irrigated land (behind Nebraska).
But
it wasn’t always like that. Back in the early days before
California’s modern agriculture — during the mining boom of the
mid-1800s — the state’s primary crops were wheat
and corn.
Farmers grew the grain without irrigation, finding that California’s
short, rainy winters, long, hot summers, and nutrient-rich soil
created the perfect growing conditions without the need for extra
water. By the 1890s, however, the intense grain industry had depleted
the soil, and California’s farmers were forced to find another
crop.
With
a Mediterranean climate, California has always been particularly
well-suited to growing produce. Toward the turn of the 20th century,
fruit and vegetable production in the state exploded in growth,
helped along by the transcontinental railroad, which could carry
California’s produce — fresh, frozen, or canned — to East Coast
markets where it fetched a handsome price. Between the 1880s and the
1930s, the amount of cropland dedicated to fruits and vegetables
increased ten times over — and most of that depended on irrigation.
At
first, irrigation projects were small, created by organizations of
farmers banding together to build small local dams on small local
rivers. By the 1930s, Walker says, all the best, most naturally
fertile land had been developed — but demand for dependable
year-round produce was
only increasing, thanks to the rise of supermarkets and shrewd
advertising from
California agribusiness. So, farmers turned their eyes to something
bigger.
“A
water system grew with the rise of the state to economic prominence,
from individual projects to irrigation districts and colonies to
state-engineered projects,” Steven Stoll, associate professor of
history at Fordham University, told ThinkProgress. “Their rising
political power ensured that they would get the water they needed —
no matter what.”
These
big projects — sponsored by both the state and federal government —
brought water to unexpected places, like the Westlands,
a barren area southwest of Fresno that has historically received
around eight inches of rain annually. By most accounts, the Westlands
could be classified as a desert.
It was instead transformed into farmland by funneling water in from
San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta to meet the demands of industry.
“But
here is the point — the water existed. It flowed out of the Sierra
up and down the Central Valley. It only needed to be captured,
stored, and directed,” Stoll says.
The Westlands
became farmland at
a certain point in the history of California agriculture where
massive engineering projects were the solution to any problem. As
long as water continued to flow from the Sierras, human ingenuity —
and water from the Sacramento and Colorado Rivers — was all that
was needed to bring that water to the fields.
“Human
societies for the last 10,000 years have arisen on that same
assumption — climatic stability, the continuation of certain trends
indefinitely,” Stoll says. “No one could have known, or only few
did, that fossil fuels had the capacity of changing those
conditions.”
As
Walker sees it, California agribusiness, for a long time, has dealt
with problems through engineering. But now — after a century of
diverting rivers — there’s simply less
surface water to
work with.
“It
turns out that you can’t overcome all the problems with
engineering,” Walker says. “You don’t even need climate change
to know that this system was a fantasy.”
Alongside
surface water, farmers can access groundwater,
natural aquifers that have been soaking up water that falls in
California — as rain or as snow — for thousands of years. Within
the complicated web of water rules in California, groundwater is a
complete free-for-all — anyone who taps it can use it.
In
an average year, water from underground aquifers supplies California
with 30 to 40 percent of the state’s water supply — in drought
years, that number jumps to 60 percent. This year, that number could
be as high as 75 percent.
But
groundwater takes thousands of years to fill up, and California
farmers are being forced to drill deeper and deeper — sometimes
thousands of feet into the Earth — to find groundwater for their
farms. That deep drilling is beginning
to mar the California landscape,
lowering water tables and causing the ground to sink.
Shallow wells
are being sucked dry by those with the resources to drill deeper, and
communities are being deprived of their groundwater safety
nets. According
to the
New York Times, the depletion of groundwater has terminally damaged
California’s soil, lessening its ability to reabsorb and store
water in the future.
Last
fall, the California legislature addressed the problem of overpumping
groundwater, passing a bill that forces communities to regulate the
extraction of water from underground aquifers. It was a
big moment,
the first time in the state’s history that anyone had dared to
place restrictions on groundwater use. But it was also a bill that,
in a lot of ways, fell short of actually fixing the problem: communities are given years, decades even, to formulate their plans
for replenishing and conserving groundwater, meaning that many of the
effects of the bill won’t be felt until 2040.
“There’s
no more water in the system,” Walker says. “That’s what they
have to realize. Where’s the water you’re going to pump this
year? It’s not there.”
Taking Pressure Off California With A Regionalized Food System
In
2013, the USDA published a report looking at the impact of climate
change on the United State’s agriculture — a comprehensive
overview of available literature meant to serve as an input to the
National Climate Assessment. Climate change, the report concluded,
would fundamentally alter the way that crops and livestock are raised
in this country. Crops that depend on irrigation would be especially
vulnerable as both increasing temperatures and changing precipitation
patterns place stress on water reяources.
“Some
U.S. agricultural systems, such as those currently operating at their
southern marginal limit or those that currently depend on irrigation,
will have to undergo more transformative changes to remain productive
and profitable,” the report read.
California
has a finite amount of water to split between a seemingly infinite
number of needs: from drinking water to residential lawns, swimming
pools to protected streams, almond trees to alfalfa sprouts. For
decades, irrigation and ground water have been enough to transform
otherwise unsuitable areas into productive farmland. The Midwest
could specialize in commodity crops because specialty crops could be
— and were — grown easier elsewhere.
Climate
change is altering that balance. Though evidence connecting the
current drought to climate change is the subject of debate, studies
show that man-made climate change certainly won’t help the
situation. A recent
study out
of Stanford found that human emissions increase the probability of
the low-precipitation, high-temperature conditions that have made
this drought so tough. Another study from NASA also found that if
emissions continue to increase, the American Southwest has an 80
percent chance of facing a multi-decade
megadrought from
2050 through the end of the century.
Mike
Hamm, director of the Michigan State University Center for Regional
Food Systems, hopes that those projections — of more frequent and
longer-lasting droughts — don’t come true. He hopes that
California can still produce as many fruits and vegetables in 30
years as it does now — but he also thinks that, to safeguard our
food system, we need to move toward a more regionalized system of
production.
“We
need California production as long as and as much as it can be
contained, and we need to regionalize production of fruit and
vegetables as much as we can, in part to take water pressure off of
California and in part to take pressure off of developing countries
where we get fruits and vegetables from,” Hamm told ThinkProgress.
Michigan, Hamm says, is already fairly well-situated for regional,
diverse produce. Places like Iowa, that have seen their land consumed
by large commodity farms, would face a more difficult transition.
“They
neither have the land that is producing it, nor do they have the
human capital,” Hamm says. “On the other hand, historically, in a
place like Iowa, they had a very diverse agriculture with a lot of
fruits and vegetables, which says that they have the climatic and
environmental capacity to do it.”
To
switch from a single crop to a diverse portfolio might seem daunting,
but it’s change that has already begun to happen elsewhere. Thirty
years ago, late spring would have signaled the beginning of the
growing season for the most predominant crop in western North
Carolina: tobacco, which had been grown in the region since the late
1600s.
Federal quotas instated as
part of the New Deal assured farmers a minimum price for their
product in exchange for a set yield, a program that gave small
farmers a measure of security for growing a high-value but
labor-intensive crop. In 2002, the tobacco industry in North
Carolina accounted
for $800 million —
roughly 12 percent of the state’s agricultural revenue.
That
all changed in 2004, when quotas were phased
out as
part of a President George W. Bush’s American Jobs Creation Act.
“It
was a big change, like a hurricane coming through,” Charlie
Jackson, executive director of the Appalachian Sustainable
Agriculture Project (ASAP), told ThinkProgress, explaining that three
decades ago, western North Carolina had some 7,000 tobacco farms —
according to the 2012 census, that number is down to 94.
But
farming didn’t disappear in western North Carolina — instead, it
transitioned, diversifying to produce fruits and vegetables for local
markets with the help of ASAP. From 2002 to 2012, the number of farms
in the area fell from 12,212 to 10,912, but the number of farms
selling produce directly to the local community increased from 740
farms to 1,190. Instead of sales dropping with the decline of the
tobacco industry, sales to consumers actually grew over $5,000 during
that time. According to an ASAP report, by switching from tobacco to
produce, farmers in the southern Appalachia’s could provide local
communities with almost
40 percent of
their yearly fruit and vegetable needs.
If
the tobacco quotas had remained in place, Jackson says, the switch to
regional produce farming might have been slower. “My guess is that
there would still be a lot of farms growing tobacco,” he said.
Western
North Carolina, in a way, was already primed for the transition to
supplying diverse produce to the region. Because of the area’s
mountainous geography, farms were already small, and they occupied
different climatic regions, from 1,000 to 5,000 feet in altitude.
Farmers in North Carolina hadn’t invested hundreds of thousands of
dollars in specialized farming infrastructure, so they were more
free, in a sense, to adapt to the changes ushered in by the end of
tobacco quotas.
“It’s
really an interesting thing, where something that could have been
disastrous ends up being transformative,” Jackson said.
So
will the California drought be disastrous, or transformative? Ask
John Ikerd what he thinks, and he leans toward transformation.
“I’m
not really pessimistic. If we decide we want to change agriculture, I
think it’s quite conceivable that we can recreate this whole food
system,” he said. “We just need to wake up to the fact that we’ve
got a problem and start working on it. Once we do that, the solutions
are there.”
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