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Drought Background
The Georgia Environmental Protection Division Director, Dr. Carol
Couch convened the Drought Response Committee last Wednesday, June
21 in response to below average soil moisture, rainfall, and stream
flow conditions. That Committee recommended that a Level I drought
be declared throughout the state, and Dr. Couch issued that directive
later that day. The Drought Response Committee includes representatives
from state and federal agencies, local government associations,
water provider associations and one representative – Georgia
Conservancy president Jim Stokes – from the environmental
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Under a Level I drought, the following water restrictions apply statewide:
- No watering is permitted between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
- Odd numbered addresses may water on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday.
- Even numbered addresses can water on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- No watering is allowed on Friday.
- Some individual counties and cities have implemented stricter guidelines
so please be sure to check with your local officials.
Dr. Couch stated that she would take action to remove the drought declaration
only when favorable conditions exist for at least four consecutive months.
Conservation pricing
Conservation pricing is an important tool in for water conservation. Considering
the current drought declaration, it is more important than ever to support
water conservation measures like conservation pricing, because without
these, Georgia will not be able to meet its future water supply needs.
Conservation pricing is a rate structure that encourages consumers to
reduce water use by charging more for increased water use. Increased water
rates have proven to be a strong incentive for water users to reduce excessive
outdoor water use.
Under a conservation pricing rate structure system, the customer is charged
more per unit of demand. For example, customers might be charged $2.00
per 1000 gallons for the first 10,000 gallons of water used, $4.00 for
the next 10,000 gallons, and so on. While most of the counties and larger
cities in Atlanta use this pricing structure, there are many utilities
in Georgia that have declining or decreasing block rate structures that
actually discourage conservation by charging lower rates per incremental
volume of water used. A uniform rate can be used as an interim step for
utilities that are working toward conservation pricing (the same charge
for all customers at all levels of consumption).
After leak detection, conservation pricing has been estimated to provide
the greatest water savings potential in the 16-county Metropolitan North
Georgia Water Planning District (the District). Within the District, an
estimated 20.1 million gallons per day (mgd) can be saved through conservation
pricing alone.
Conservation pricing is a critical conservation measure that will help
to ensure enough clean water is available for all Georgians. If we don’t
carefully manage and protect our water, we risk losing this resource,
and with it, the Georgia way of life we treasure.
Click here
for water conservation tips.
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