Toronto Star

No end in sight for southern drought

Shortages lead to restrictio­ns on water use as towns fight to save drinking supplies

- JEFF MARTIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA— Beaver dams have been demolished, burbling fountains silenced, and the drinking water in one southern town has taken on the light brownish colour of sweet tea.

Though water shortages have yet to drasticall­y change most people’s lifestyles, southerner­s are beginning to realize that they’ll need to save their drinking supplies with no end in sight to an eight-month drought.

Already, watering lawns and washing cars is restricted in some parts of the South, and more severe water limits loom if long-range forecasts of below-normal rain hold true through the rest of 2016.

The drought arrived without warning in Chris Benson’s bathroom last week in Griffin, Ga.

“My son noticed it when he went to take his bath for the evening,” said Benson, 43. “The water was kind of a light brown colour and after we ran it for a while, it actually looked like a light-coloured tea. A little disturbing.”

The problem was that Griffin’s reservoir is nearly eight feet below normal, leaving “a high level of manganese” in the remaining water, but not making it unsafe, city officials told residents in a Nov.16 “water discolorat­ion update.”

Benson watched that water turn from brown to “kind of a light green tint” before clearing up, he said.

It’s no better in Tennessee, where about 300 of the state’s 480 water systems serve areas suffering moderate to exceptiona­l drought, the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency said.

Across the soutern U.S., communitie­s relying on depleted watersheds can’t afford to waste what they’ve got left, said Denise Gutzmer at the National Drought Mitigation Center in Lincoln, Neb.

“For some of these small communitie­s, they are in trouble and they will need to be very careful about their water use to conserve,” Gutzmer

“That really underscore­s the desperatio­n of the situation, like ‘OK, we’ve got to clear the beaver dams.’ ”

DENISE GUTZMER

NATIONAL DROUGHT

MITIGATION CENTER

said. “Just like when a bank account gets low, you become much more conscienti­ous about how you spend the remaining dollars you have to spend.”

Gutzmer collects the most granular consequenc­es of the United States’ weather for the Drought Impact Reporter. She logged the complaints of a hay producer in Winchester, Tenn., whose spring has run dry “for the first time in over a hundred years,” and the rescue of 64 endangered Barrens topminnows, one of the world’s last remaining wild population­s, from a drying stream in Coffee County, Tenn.

She also tracked a mass mussel die- off caused by low water in southweste­rn Virginia, and described how hundreds of volunteers removed beer bottles and car parts from the bottom of Alabama’s Lake Purdy, which has six metres of water, threefourt­hs of its capacity. She even heard how workers dismantled beaver dams to increase water flow in west Georgia’s Tallapoosa River.

“That really underscore­s the desperatio­n of the situation, like, ‘OK, we’ve got to clear the beaver dams,’ ” Gutzmer said.

In Beech Mountain, N.C., some 10,000 skiers take over the town on winter weekends when the slopes are open. But there’s been no snow this year and the drought has drained the town’s sole water source, Buckeye Lake. The surface is now about six feet below what town manager Ed Evans calls “full pond,” meaning he’s about 45 to 60 days from buying water from somewhere else.

Evans said the town’s 340 residents are being encouraged to conserve, and carwashing is banned.

Similar rules are in effect in Georgia, on a much larger scale. Gov. Nathan Deal recently announced “level 2” water restrictio­ns for about a third of the state’s 159 counties, limiting outdoor water uses to two days a week.

There’s no “doomsday clock” that could count down the days until taps run dry, said Kevin Chambers of the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division.

“Stream flows are getting very low. Reservoirs are dropping,” Chambers said. “So we’re hoping our level 2 response will be sufficient to get us through the winter.” Some water sources are more drought-resilient than others, said Jac Capp, chief of watershed protection for the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division. “These systems almost always have interconne­ctions with neighbours,” he said, “so they’re getting some of their water from their neighbours while their source is strained.”

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers manager observes receding water levels on Georgia’s Lake Lanier last month.
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers manager observes receding water levels on Georgia’s Lake Lanier last month.

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