Can we do it? Unprecedented water cuts will require sacrifices for Southern California
In less than a month, residents in large portions of Southern California will be under unprecedented water restrictions due to a worsening drought that has severely limited water supplies.
The biggest change is the requirement from the Metropolitan Water District that local water suppliers in those areas, from Ventura County to northwestern L.A. County to parts of the Inland Empire, limit outdoor watering to once a week.
But behind that is a big cut in water use needed to avoid even more serious measures. Can we do it? Here's what we know:
How much water do we now use?
Currently, the average potable water use across the MWD’s service area — including residential, commercial and industrial water use — amounts to 125 gallons per person per day.
But those numbers vary by water agency. Ellen Cheng, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, said customers average about 111 gallons per person per day.
How much water will those in targeted areas need to use to hit savings numbers?
80 gallons per day — or a 35% drop.
How do officials expect us to get there?
The focus right now is on outdoor water use.
Under the new rules, MWD will require suppliers to limit watering times on the one day when outdoor watering is allowed for each customer. The details will be left to each supplier, but some water agencies have already said sprinklers should run no more than eight minutes. That alone should achieve significant savings, since outdoor watering accounts for as much as 70% of residential use in the region, according to the MWD.
What will the impact of that be on the landscape?
Officials expect yellow and brown lawns due to less water.
“We cannot afford green lawns,” said Adel Hagekhalil, the MWD’s general manager, last week.
There are exceptions to the new rules, however. Those exceptions are meant to protect the region’s trees, which provide valuable shade and help stave off dangerous heat health effects.
“The fact is, we don’t want to see our beautiful and ecologically important tree canopy suffer because of these restrictions,” said Deven Upadhyay, the MWD’s chief operating officer. “People should be able to continue to hand-water their trees.”
What about watering?
Shorter showers. Fewer flushes. Use of water-efficient appliances. But as you go about trimming your water usage at home, experts say the biggest potential for shrinking water use lies outdoors in our yards. That's why officials focused on cutting outdoor water use.
Shahzeen Attari, an associate professor at Indiana University in Bloomington, said that focusing the restrictions on a specific activity — outdoor watering — instead of a per-capita number makes sense from a policy perspective, at least for the time being.
“If I say you’re only allowed to use water on a particular day, on a Tuesday for example, then anyone who’s watering on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, it’s easy to say you’re not in compliance,” said Attari. “But if I say you’re allowed to use 10 gallons any time during the week ... it’s really hard for me to know whether you’ve reached your quota or not.”
Am I covered by the restrictions?
The rules will target areas that rely heavily or entirely on the State Water Project, a Northern California water supply that officials say has just 5% of full water allocations available this year. Water supplies in reservoirs across the state have shrunk dramatically over the past three years during the extreme drought, which is being significantly worsened by higher temperatures caused by climate change.
Areas that receive water from the Colorado River and other sources will be spared, at least for now.
The affected agencies include: Calleguas Municipal Water District, Inland Empire Utilities Agency, Las Virgenes Municipal Water District, Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Three Valleys Municipal Water District and Upper San Gabriel Valley Municipal Water District.
It will fall to each member agency to determine how best to implement the restrictions.
According to MWD, all or part of the following cities and communities are dependent on water from the State Water Project and will be affected by the new restrictions:
Agoura Hills
Arcadia
Avocado Heights
Azusa
Baldwin Park
Bassett
Bradbury
Calabasas
Camarillo
Canoga Park
Chatsworth
Chino
Chino Hills
City of Industry
Claremont
Covina
Culver City
Duarte
El Monte
Encino
Fontana
Granada Hills
Hacienda Heights
Irwindale
La Puente
La Verne
Los Angeles
Mission Hills
Monrovia
Montclair
Moorpark
Newbury Park
North Hills
North Hollywood
North Whittier
Northridge
Oak Park
Ontario
Oxnard
Pacific Palisades
Pacoima
Panorama City
Playa del Rey
Playa Vista
Point Mugu NAWC
Port Hueneme
Port Hueneme CBC Base
Porter Ranch
Rancho Cucamonga
Reseda
Rialto
Rosemead
San Gabriel
Sherman Oaks
Simi Valley
Somis
South El Monte
South Pasadena
Spy Glass Hill
Studio City
Sun Valley
Sunland
Sylmar
Tarzana
Temple City
Thousand Oaks
Tujunga
Universal City
Upland
Valinda
Valley Village
Van Nuys
Venice
West Covina
West Hills
West Hollywood
Westlake Village
Whittier
Winnetka
Woodland Hills
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.