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posted by martyb on Monday August 17 2015, @08:14AM   Printer-friendly
from the taking-a-bath-on-water-rates dept.

An Anonymous Coward writes in with this story from the Press Examiner:

In the state's latest drought-conservation measure, California regulators Wednesday adopted stricter low-flow standards for showerheads in a move designed to save billions of gallons of water annually.

Standards adopted today require that all showerheads sold not exceed 2.0 gallons per minute maximum flow rate as of July 2016.

The commission predicts that the new standards will save more than 2.4 billion gallons of water in the first year and 38 billion gallons after full stock turnover in 10 years. The California Energy Commission voted Wednesday to phase in shower-head efficiency standards, limiting them to just 1.8 gallons a minute after July 2018.

In related news, the San Diego Metropolitan Water District is thanking San Diegans for saving so much water during the shortage that they will need to raise water rates:

San Diego water customers could see their bills climb about 17 percent in the next year under a proposal that would raise rates.

A proposal that city utility officials presented Monday to the Independent Rates Oversight Committee called for overall rate increases of 9.8 percent on Jan. 1, 2016, and another 6.9 percent on July 1, 2016. The increases will cover costs including the increasing price of imported water, and lower sales expected as customers slash water use 16 percent.


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @09:31AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @09:31AM (#223831)

    What they had not allowed for was that people showered far more often than they used to bath - up to 4 showers a day instead of one bath a week.

    Then it started being considered icky and socially unacceptable for hair to have almost a week's worth of visible grease. Previously when hair pompade was the norm, no-one would have even noticed.

    Sure, people could wash their hair separately but given the time and effort to do that, you might as well have an extra shower anyhow.

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  • (Score: 2) by Nuke on Monday August 17 2015, @12:16PM

    by Nuke (3162) on Monday August 17 2015, @12:16PM (#223891)

    I always wash my hair separately. For one thing, I use a medicated shampoo that really needs to be kept out of the eyes. There is little control of that in a shower.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @02:12PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @02:12PM (#223942)

      Actually I have more control of that in the shower. I don't take medical shampoo, but I sure as hell don't like shampoo in the eyes. It's trivial to me to achieve that in the shower: Just hold the head back while washing the hair, and wash the shampoo out before continuing with the rest of the body. When washing my hair separately, I have to hold my head forwards, so I'm almost guaranteed that something runs into my eyes.

    • (Score: 1) by ncc74656 on Monday August 17 2015, @08:03PM

      by ncc74656 (4917) on Monday August 17 2015, @08:03PM (#224066) Homepage

      For one thing, I use a medicated shampoo that really needs to be kept out of the eyes. There is little control of that in a shower.

      Most of us learned to keep shampoo out of our eyes when we were little. It's called "keeping your eyes shut."