Severe drought and mandatory water cuts are pitting communities against each other in Arizona:
As the climate crisis intensifies, battle lines are beginning to form over water. In Arizona -- amid a decades-long megadrought -- some communities are facing the very real possibility of losing access to the precious water that remains.
Outside the city limits of Scottsdale, where the asphalt ends and the dirt road begins, is the Rio Verde Foothills community. Hundreds of homes here get water trucked in from Scottsdale, but those deliveries will end on January 1, 2023.
That's because last summer, for the first time ever, drought conditions forced the federal government to declare a tier 1 water shortage in the Colorado River, reducing how much Arizona can use.
[...] "We are what I call the 'sacrificial lamb' for the bigger areas," Irwin told CNN. "In my opinion, look somewhere else -- we need to be able to sustain ourselves."
The scarcity of water in the state is pitting small towns against fast-growing metropolitan communities.
[...] Arizona's population growth and extreme drought have increased demand for water in limited supply. Kathleen Ferris, a senior research fellow with the Kyl Center for Water Policy in Arizona, says water scarcity in the state has resulted in the "haves" and the "have nots," and likened the coming water battles to the days of the Wild West. "Once you have your water rights, you defend it," Ferris said. "That's the way it works."
(Score: 2) by drussell on Friday April 01 2022, @08:50AM (1 child)
Apparently, places that are so incredibly short on water that their state governments prohibit citizens from "messing with the watershed" etc. as it is so heavily controlled and "precious" that you capturing some of it and it not naturally running off into a river or soaking into the ground or being doled out and taxed by your local authority is a BIG no-no...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 01 2022, @02:59PM
That was actually the original idea, but it turns out that not catching rainwater is actually pretty stupid. Most of it just evaporates, or winds up in the sewage. Meanwhile, the amount of water use it would save would more than make up for the tiny trickle that somehow finds its way into a stream somewhere. But it's very hard to displace an entrenched, stupid idea (see also for example daylight saving time, or the tax filing system).