Los Angeles Times

The water hog

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Re “Untouched by drought,” Column, Oct. 7

Steve Lopez has been hoofing it all over Los Angeles for years, painting insightful word portraits of the idiosyncra­sies of life in Southern California. In my view, he nearly always gets it right. In this column, he does it again. His search for the No. 1 residentia­l water user in California — who lives, apparently, in some walled fortress in Bel-Air consuming 1,300 gallons of water an hour — highlights the rampant increase in wealth inequality we have seen nationwide over the last three decades.

Too many of the wealthy live their profligate, high-consumptio­n lifestyles isolated from the rest of us and devoid of even a modicum of social conscience.

Roger Gloss, Rancho Santa Margarita

Lopez’s column made my blood boil.

I am one of millions of California­ns who have reduced my water usage.

At my house, I turn off the shower when soaping, I turn off the tap when brushing my teeth.

I do shorter, fuller loads of laundry and of course, I am letting the lawn turn brown.

Then when you see someone like the person in Bel-Air getting away with such blatant water usage, I, like most of your readers, am thinking:

“Why should I bother?”

Steve Bachman

Costa Mesa

I always enjoy reading Lopez, including his recent column on the unknown Bel-Air water guzzler in which he ends by asking readers to “drop a dime” and identify the amazing water user.

However, I wonder how many readers understood his request, which was based on a 10-cent payphone call that disappeare­d decades ago.

The idea of inserting (or dropping) a dime in a pay phone to make a call to anonymousl­y tip off authoritie­s to the identity of an evildoer may not register with a lot of readers — but it is the kind of literary imagery that makes reading Lopez so entertaini­ng. Charles M. Weisenberg

Beverly Hills

Anyone who can afford to buy an estate costing more than $100 million can also afford (and should be required to provide) a rainwater cistern and gray water system.

Also, off-grid solar power and LEED-compliant building materials.

Plus a hefty fee for a low-income-housing constructi­on fund.

Linda Kranen

Carlsbad

I routinely chastise our teenage daughters for taking 20-minute showers.

Then, I read about the Bel-Air water usage, including a single resident apparently using 1,300 gallons per hour.

Girls, I apologize.

Konrad Moore

Bakersfiel­d

 ?? Myung Chun Los Angeles Times ?? COLUMNIST Steve Lopez recently searched in Bel-Air for the state’s biggest residentia­l water user.
Myung Chun Los Angeles Times COLUMNIST Steve Lopez recently searched in Bel-Air for the state’s biggest residentia­l water user.

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