The cities included in Drop
by Drop: Seven Ways Texas Cities Can Conserve Water are: Arlington,
Austin, Beaumont, Brownsville, College Station, Corpus
Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Garland, Houston,
Huntsville, Katy, Laredo, Lubbock, Pasadena, Plano,
San Antonio, and Tyler.
Jennifer Walker and Lacey McCormick announce the
release of a new water conservation report 'Drop
by Drop' published by Lone Star Chapter Sierra Club
and Naitonal Wildlife Federation -- Watch
the Video
For
Immediate Release, Monday, March 8, 2010 Contact:
Lacey McCormick, 512-476-9805 /
mccormick@nwf.org or
Jennifer Walker at 512-477-1729 / 627- 9931 (cell)
/
jennifer.walker@sierraclub.org
Drop by Drop: Seven Ways Texas
Cities Can Conserve Water
What 19 cities around
the state are and are not doing to use water
wisely
(Austin,
TX) The National Wildlife Federation and
the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club
released a joint report today recommending
seven common-sense water conservation measures.
The report reviews 19 cities around the state
to see where these measures are in place
and concludes that, with some exceptions,
most of the cities surveyed are not doing
enough to make the most efficient use of
existing water supplies.
"The best and cheapest source of
water is the one thats already on tap," said
Ken Kramer state director of the Sierra
Club. "The key measure of success
for any water conservation program is reducing
water use on a per person basis and we
recognize that takes time. In this report,
we looked at some measures cities can be
using right now to see if they are moving
in the right direction. Our review makes
it clear that while a handful of cities
are working to maximize their water-use
efficiency, most cities are doing little
to make the best use of existing water
supplies."
Texas is the fastest growing state in the union;
demographers predict the states population will
double by mid-century.
"Our population is growing, but our water
resources are essentially finite," said
Myron Hess, Manager of Texas Water Programs for the
National Wildlife Federation. "We are going
to need to continue to get smarter and smarter about
how we use water in the 21st century. Unfortunately,
with only a few exceptions water use in Texas cities
remains far too high. There is nothing smart about
failing to take advantage of these tried and true
ways of increasing water-use efficiency."
The cities included in the report are: Arlington,
Austin, Beaumont, Brownsville, College Station, Corpus
Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Garland, Houston,
Huntsville, Katy, Laredo, Lubbock, Pasadena, Plano,
San Antonio, and Tyler. The cities represent
a diversity of population size, water sources, and
geographic location; but they share one thing in
common: all were required to submit new or revised
water conservation plans to the State of Texas in
2009. Those plans, augmented by additional research,
provided a major source of information for the new
report.
The report describes and recommends seven efficiency
measures that have a proven track report at reducing
water use. The cities surveyed were rated on several
of those measures.
The measures include: Water Pricing Structure: The report
recommends a strongly tiered rate structure with
affordable prices for those who use water efficiently
and effectively higher water rates for customers
who use excessive amounts of water. Austin was the
only city whose residential use pricing structure
earned a Strong rating, while Beaumont, Lubbock
and Plano all had rate structures that, when assessed
as an effective rate, offered significant discounts
for high users, thereby encouraging wasteful water
use.
Water Savings Goals: Texas cities
are required to create conservation plans with five-
and ten-year water use reduction goals, however many
cities set easily-achievable but not very impressive
targets. Dallas, for example, had the highest rate
of per capita water use in our review and committed
to just a modest reduction. On the other hand, San
Antoniowhich has already achieved impressive reductions
in per capita water usecommitted to continued reductions.
Toilet Replacement: New high-efficiency
toilets can save 12,000 gallons annually over older
models, but only six cities in the review had active
programs encouraging the replacement of inefficient
toilets.
Conservation Funding: Most of Texass
biggest cities now have reasonably well-funded conservation
departments. The city of Houston was the only major
city in the state without a conservation department
or any significant specific funding for conservation.
Outdoor Watering: In Texas, a significant
amount of treated drinking water is used for watering
lawns. The Texas Water Development Board estimates
that over half this water is wasted due to overwatering
or run-off. Only two cities in our survey, El Paso
and Austin, had Strong outdoor watering ordinances
while ten cities placed no restrictions at all on
outdoor watering.
The report notes that one caveat to the review of
water conservation plans is that the programs and
components of these plans must be implemented, and
implemented effectively. "Water suppliers
required to submit water conservation plans to the
State will now have to submit annual reports on how
they are doing in carrying out their plans and meeting
their water savings targets, and the first reports
are due May 1 of this year," noted
the Sierra Club's Kramer. "Texans need to
take a close look at how their city water suppliers
are doing in achieving more efficient use of water
supplies. We shouldnt be spending huge amounts of
ratepayer and taxpayer money for new water supplies
if existing supplies are not being used efficiently."