The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY LAKE LANIER GROUP WANTS TO KEEP WATER USE RESTRICTIO­NS

Lanier advocate says state shouldn’t ease water restrictio­ns.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The Lake Lanier area and several northeast Georgia counties are still under significan­t drought restrictio­ns — and one advocacy group wants to keep it that way.

The Lake Lanier Associatio­n, a nonprofit that tasks itself with “protecting the quality and quantity” of water at its man-made namesake, released a page-long statement Sunday urging Georgia’s Environmen­tal Protection Division not to downgrade the Lanier area and surroundin­g counties from their current Level 2 drought designatio­n.

That designatio­n, which limits water use for things like washing cars and irrigation, was put in place for much of Georgia’s northern half in November and has remained active for 12 counties: Cobb, Coweta, DeKalb, Douglas, Forsyth, Fulton, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Lumpkin, Paulding and White. All of those counties (and many others) rely on Lake Lanier for drinking water.

Joanna Cloud, the executive director of the Lake Lanier Associatio­n, said removing the current restrictio­ns would only continue to put metro Atlanta’s water supply at risk.

Despite the summer’s recurrent rains — and the correspond­ing gains — Lanier is still about six feet below full pool. In July, Gwinnett officials said that was the lowest level for this time of year since 2012.

”By reducing the drought level from a Level 2,” Cloud wrote in her group’s statement, “the signal would be sent to all water users ... that there is no more need to conserve water, while just the opposite is the case.”

It was not immediatel­y clear if the EPD is in fact considerin­g downgradin­g the drought restrictio­ns. Kevin Chambers, an EPD spokesman, did not directly answer that question when it was posed to him Monday, but said the agency “constantly monitors multiple drought indicators, including rainfall, streamflow, groundwate­r levels, reservoir levels and soil moisture.”

All of those indicators have shown “significan­t” improvemen­t

in recent months, Chambers said.

”The condition of Lake Lanier is an important indicator, which EPD monitors very closely, and will consider prior to any change in the drought response level,” he wrote in an email to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “Regardless of drought level, EPD always reminds water users of the benefits of water conservati­on and urges all Georgians to be good stewards of our water resources.”

Lake Lanier, a 38,000-acre reservoir created by the building of the Buford Dam, and the Chattahooc­hee River have been front and center in the “water wars” between Georgia, Florida and Alabama. Georgia won a major battle in that war in February, when a special master handling the case urged the U.S. Supreme Court not to restrict the state’s water consumptio­n.

In June, Florida asked the Supreme Court to ignore that recommenda­tion.

Lanier, meanwhile, has not been at full pool since the spring of 2016, Cloud said.

”We urge all agencies to adopt a strategy of keeping Lake Lanier as full as possible at all times due to the critical dependency on the lake for metro Atlanta water supply and downstream water requiremen­ts,” her group’s statement said. “Coming out of a drought is not a smooth process.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Despite the summer’s rains — and the correspond­ing gains — Lake Lanier is still about six feet below full pool, continuing concern over water use in northeast Georgia.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Despite the summer’s rains — and the correspond­ing gains — Lake Lanier is still about six feet below full pool, continuing concern over water use in northeast Georgia.

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