![]()
|
|||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Water
manager urges conservation Black Butte Ranch
began metering its water to all residents this month. A note in the most
recent issue of Tollgate's Homeowners newsletter raised concerns about exceeding
the subdivision's water permit.
Does all this indicate the
area is running out of water?
Not really, according to Lynn
Lounsbury, Distribution Water Manager for Tollgate.
Lounsbury is also Utilities
Manager at Black Butte Ranch and the Distribution Manager of the Indian
Meadow Water Company and he is considered to know as much about underground
water in this area as anyone.
Tollgate, like all other water-using
entities from an individual rancher or homeowner on a well, must have
a permit from the State of Oregon Water Resources Department.
"Tollgate is nearing the maximum
usage," he said. "The problem here is that with 38 lots -- approximately
10 percent of Tollgate -- still undeveloped, we could exceed our water
rights unless we take other courses of action.
"The easiest and most obvious
is conservation," said Lounsbury. "We try to do that with our plan for
alternate days of lawn watering; half the area waters lawns on even days
the other half on odd days. We are trying to do this now, but not too
successfully."
Tollgate is not on water meters.
"Let me clear up an issue
that seems to be confusing to people in Tollgate," Lounsbury said. "The
work that started a couple of years ago, and will be finished this year,
of installing 'backflow devices' has nothing to do with our usage of water.
This is a quality question. Keeping our water clean and pure."
At Black Butte Ranch, on the
other hand, metering of water actually commences this month.
"Several years ago, when Black
Butte Ranch needed additional water rights from the state, a second application
was filed," Lounsbury explained. "The first, original, stayed in effect
and the second asked for another fixed amount, over and above the amount
allowed in the first water rights permit.
"A condition of this second
permit was the requirement that water That changes now.
"However, starting this month,
for the first time, Black Butte Ranch There are no immediate plans
for water meters in Tollgate, but it could happen.
"Oregon Water Resources does
have a lot of power over water consumption in Tollgate and could mandate
meters unless we stay within our allotment," Lounsbury said.
Fortunately for residents,
staying within the allotment should be fairly easy to do -- if people
don't use water wastefully.
"It is a fact that Tollgate's
permit limits the amount of water that can be used each year. It is not
unlimited but is sufficient to allow everyone enough to meet all necessary
needs. Unless the vast majority use water wastefully, Tollgate's limit
won't be exceeded," Lounsbury said.
"As long as we are trying,
really trying, to set up conservation standards and as long as we do not
exceed our present water rights allocation -- and raise 'red flags' --
we probably will not be bothered by the state to put meters in Tollgate,"
he said. |
|
|||||||