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Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Calif. Officials Impose ‘Water Budgets’ on Wealthy Suburbanites, Restrict Flow for Overuse

'It appears there has been a lackluster response to the water emergency...'

(Headline USA) In a wealthy enclave along the Santa Monica Mountains that is a haven for celebrities, residents are now facing more aggressive consequences for wasting water.

The Las Virgenes Municipal Water District northwest of Los Angeles hopes to spur water savings by making it easier to fine households that go over their allotted “water budgets” and threatening to vastly limit water flow to customers who repeatedly fail to conserve.

The district offers a bold example of how local authorities across drought-stricken California are trying to get people to use less water—voluntarily, if possible, but with the threat of punishment if they don’t comply.

Despite having more coastline than many other US states, California’s troubled history with water conservation seems to parallel the deep-blue state’s lack of planning in other areas, such as crime-prevention.

The famed 1974 movie Chinatown notably depicts a water-usage dispute in Los Angeles during the early 20th century, turning the conflict between Los Angeles’s growing urban population and agricultural interests into a film-noir-style murder mystery.

After two exceptionally dry years that left the state’s reservoirs at or near record lows, a string of recent winter storms improved conditions. But most of the state is still in severe drought.

In July 2021, Gov. Gavin Newsom went public begging citizens to conserve water voluntarily by cutting their usage up to 15%.

While he and his fellow Democrats blamed “climate change,” critics argued that Newsom had recklessly allowed the state’s reservoir supply to be depleted by niche industries.

“They let too much of the water out of the system for industrial agriculture users,” said Barbara Barrigan–Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta. “Our water resources and public trust resources like salmon fisheries have been squandered for almonds and other unsustainable crops.”

Now, however, with the problem continuing to grow and water usage declining by only 6% as of November, Newsom’s strictly voluntary conservation practices are beginning to give way to the more authoritarian variety.

Las Virgenes officials hope their approach will be a wakeup call for residents of the affluent neighborhoods, where most of the water goes toward outdoor use like landscaping and pools.

“What we’re trying to do is conserve water now so that we can stretch the limited supplies we have available,” said Dave Pederson, the district’s general manager.

The state water board last month imposed a series of mild restrictions, such as waiting two days after a storm to water lawns. It could take more significant steps later in the year if the drought intensifies.

In California, local districts provide water service, regulate use and enforce penalties. Las Virgenes serves about 75,000 people in Agoura Hills, Westlake Village, Calabasas and Hidden Hills, an area that in recent years has attracted a growing number of celebrities, including Kim Kardashian and Will Smith.

Like much of inland Southern California, Las Virgenes rarely sees rain outside the winter months, and during summer the average high temperature is in the mid-90s Fahrenheit. It’s wealthier than most places—a typical home in Calabasas sells for more than $1.5 million, according to the online real estate marketplace Zillow.

Despite calls for conservation, water customers there increased use in August and September, then exceeded the 15% reduction goal in October before again missing the target in November. Collectively, customers greatly exceeded their water budgets last year.

One of the district’s biggest issues is “the ability for affluent customers to significantly exceed their water budgets consistently since money is not a deterrent,” said Michael McNutt, the district’s spokesman.

He declined to share the names of the district’s biggest water users.

About 70% of water in the district goes to outdoor uses, and many are willing to pay a higher water bill to keep their lawns and gardens lush and pools filled.

“It appears there has been a lackluster response to the water emergency,” said Calabasas Mayor Mary Sue Maurer, who thinks restricting water flow could provide the wakeup call some people need.

Due to dry conditions, California regulators said in December they would not provide any water from state supplies beyond what was needed for essentials like drinking and bathing.

That could change in the coming months, but allocations likely won’t go up significantly unless it’s a very wet winter. The uncertainty is particularly stressful for Las Virgenes, which gets about 80% of its water from state supplies.

The district’s new approach to spur conservation is part carrot, part stick:

The agency is installing an advanced water metering system that will show customers in real time how much water they’re using. It’s designed to help people spot when they are exceeding the limit and adjust their behavior, rather than waiting until the monthly bill arrives to realize they overused. They’ll be installed district-wide by April except for customers who opt out, which few have done.

Every household has a “water budget,” something used by many California water districts, based on the number of residents and property size. Starting this month, customers will face fines if they go 150% over their monthly budget.

Previously, the fine threshold kicked in at 200%, and about 15% of the district’s customers were fined, Pederson said. People get only a warning the first time they go over budget.

But fines aren’t the harshest penalty; households fined three times could have a flow restrictor put on their water system, slowing what comes out of their faucets or hoses to a trickle. Previously, the district could add the restrictors after five fines but never did.

Richer Californians did not conserve as much as others during the last drought, even when the state mandated it, said Mehdi Nemati, an assistant professor at the University of California, Riverside. He works with water agencies on conservation programs but not Las Virgenes.

Las Virgenes’ approach of advanced metering, fines and the threat of flow restrictors, stands out among the state’s more than 400 medium to large water agencies, he said.

Only a few dozen districts have the advanced metering systems because they are expensive to install, and few use penalties against residents who overuse. Instead, many districts increase the cost of water as customers use more.

Such a method alters behavior for some but is not very effective at changing it for wealthy people, he said. Las Virgenes also uses such a structure, then adds penalties on top.

It’s even rarer for a district to threaten flow restrictors, which are typically reserved for customers who consistently don’t pay their bills. Nemati guessed Las Virgenes’ policy would invite lawsuits.

“The agency’s pretty brave if they really want to do that,” he said.

Las Virgenes doesn’t want to be heavy-handed with fines or restrictors, said Pederson, the general manager.

Fines start at $2.50 and go as high as $10 for every 748 gallons over the 150% threshold. The average house in the district uses 19,448 gallons of water per month, the majority of it outside.

District officials acknowledged that many customers do stay within their water budgets.

“Our system helps us to target the message to the people who are really, frankly, the problem,” Pederson said.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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