Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

IE golf courses make changes to conserve water

The Lakes at Hemet West, several others switching to recycled water

- By Monserrat Solis msolis@scng.com

Golf courses use a lot of water and during a drought that can be cause for concern, but when that water is recycled, the emphasis is water conservati­on.

The latest in the Inland Empire to make a change to using recycled water is The Lakes at Hemet West’s ninehole golf course. The Lakes retirement community recently made the change to using recycled water to irrigate the course and drought-tolerant landscapin­g in some areas.

Glenn Miller, golf course consultant for The Lakes, said the sustainabl­e change will preserve the 50-year-old lakes and “allow us to continue to live in a comfortabl­e environmen­t.”

Part of that change was partnering with the Eastern Municipal Water District, which has converted about 10 other courses in the area including, Golf Club at Rancho California in Murrieta, Cherry Hills

Golf Course in the Sun City area of Menifee, and Canyon Lake Golf and Country Club to recycled water for irrigation over the last few years.

Before, The Lakes used 250 acre-feet of drinkable water every year and after the water-conserving changes they’ll use approximat­ely 70 acre-feet of drinkable water and 110 acre-feet of recycled water each year, said Joe Mouawad, Eastern’s general manager.

“During the historic drought, golf courses have been under scrutiny,” said Mouawad, “We are adamant about reverting nonfunctio­nal turf but golf courses are recreation­al.”

This is especially important, he said, as we see the effects of the drought such as limiting water consumptio­n for consumers and the state’s reservoir water loss.

Some parts of Riverside and San Bernardino counties are going through severe and extreme drought,

according to a weather drought indicator from the California Water Watch, which provides state water data. And some in San Bernardino and L.A. counties already have water restrictio­ns in place.

Other golf courses in the Inland Empire use recycled water, too.

The 18-hole General Old Golf Course, off Van Buren Boulevard near March Air Reserve Base, switched in 2015 to recycled water through Western Municipal Water District’s recycled water program, district spokespers­on Grace Cardenas said.

Over at the 18-hole Yucaipa Valley Golf Course, they’ve been using recycled water for the past 15 years on top of using their groundwate­r wells, which is drinkable water, said Yucaipa Valley Water District General Manager Joseph Zoba.

“Even in times of drought, to have school and golf courses connected to recycling water … it improves quality of life,” Zoba said.

Experts and water districts said using recycled water is a good water-saving solution during the drought.

“Using recycled water as an alternativ­e option alleviates the pressure on limited available freshwater supplies in Southern California,” said Amir Haghverdi, associate professor of agricultur­e and urban water management at UC Riverside, via email.

Drought-tolerant plants are also part of the solution.

Removing and converting grass to a droughttol­erant turf is the most water conscious change someone can make to reduce water usage, according to bewatersma­rt.com, Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California, the state’s regional wholesaler, website.

Emergency restrictio­ns

In 2015, then-Gov. Jerry Brown imposed the state’s first mandatory water-use restrictio­n that affected homeowners, farmers and other businesses — including golf courses.

With that 2015 restrictio­n, water-saving solutions started to take effect including higher fees for high-volume water users, bigger rebates for watersavin­g alternativ­es and limited lawn watering.

Restrictio­ns continue this year.

The State Water Resource Control Board announced a statewide ban on watering nonfunctio­nal commercial and industrial landscapes that took affect June 10.

About 6 million residents from Los Angeles, Ventura and San Bernardino counties were warned at that time by Metropolit­an General Manager Adel Hagekhalil that all outdoor watering could be banned by September if enough water isn’t conserved.

Although Metropolit­an doesn’t directly enforce water restrictio­ns, the wholesaler requires its agencies like Inland Empire Utilities Agency and Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to enforce such restrictio­ns.

Agencies that don’t meet the water limits would face additional fees.

State funds

As of June 30, the state’s fiscal 2023 budget will provide $2.8 billion more for drought response, adding to the $5.2 billion threeyear investment from the fiscal 2022 budget.

The funds would help communitie­s and fish and wildlife receive state grants for clean water projects, drought-relief projects, fish and wildlife protection and financial assistance for low-income families.

 ?? PHOTOS BY TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? John Wuerth, Eastern Municipal Water District Recycled Water Program analyst, oversees the recycled water irrigation conversion project at Hemet West Resort in Hemet on July 21.
PHOTOS BY TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER John Wuerth, Eastern Municipal Water District Recycled Water Program analyst, oversees the recycled water irrigation conversion project at Hemet West Resort in Hemet on July 21.
 ?? ?? The Lakes at Hemet West's nine-hole golf course and ponds now are using recycled water as grass near homes has been replaced with drought-tolerant landscapin­g.
The Lakes at Hemet West's nine-hole golf course and ponds now are using recycled water as grass near homes has been replaced with drought-tolerant landscapin­g.
 ?? TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Recycled water is now used to water Hemet West’s golf course as the course has been converted to recycled water for irrigation as part of Eastern Municipal Water District’s recycled water irrigation conversion project at Hemet West in Hemet on July 21.
TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Recycled water is now used to water Hemet West’s golf course as the course has been converted to recycled water for irrigation as part of Eastern Municipal Water District’s recycled water irrigation conversion project at Hemet West in Hemet on July 21.

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