Los Angeles Times

Saving water when it’s scarce

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Re “Water crisis forces limits,” April 27

If it were not so serious, the ineffectiv­eness of our water officials would be laughable.

For years many of us have been saying that the time to save water is when you have it, not when it’s almost gone. And yet we keep seeing decisions made as if the shortage is only temporary and not permanent.

It isn’t going to rain or snow a lot reliably in this part of the country anymore. Scientists have been telling us this for a very long time. Drought and heat are here to stay, but we keep watering away while some agricultur­al fields are flooded, Caltrans waters the weeds on the freeways, and municipali­ties water whatever they want whenever they want.

Now, in a panic, people will be told to use some percentage less than before, which rewards the water wasters. Naturally, there will probably be financial penalties, so our wealthy neighbors in gigantic estates will continue to drench their tropical rainforest­s without regard to the cost.

By the way, it probably isn’t going to rain next year either. We should have anticipate­d this in 2020 or before.

Andy Marias Westlake Village

The Metropolit­an Water District’s decision to impose unpreceden­ted water restrictio­ns is the latest shoe to drop in the slow-motion catastroph­e that is our climate crisis.

Like increasing­ly apocalypti­c wildfires and the cavalcade of high temperatur­e records being set one after another, water restrictio­ns are previews of the future that climate scientists have been warning of for decades.

Perhaps rather than squander our energy on the inevitable finger pointing and haggling over who is to blame or how to apportion what water is available in California, we might instead invest it in the radical energy overhaul required to reduce our reliance on the fossil fuels that are the cause. Or not.

Jordan Sollitto San Marino

Yes, the water conservati­on measure may result in dead lawns and trees. However, the lawns and trees that will suffer the most are the very ones that should be eliminated from our landscapin­g.

Drought-tolerant ground coverings, plants and trees require little to no water. Drip irrigation applies water to the root zone where it’s needed with no waste. Mulch reduces evaporatio­n, insulates the soil and prevents weed growth. California native plants require no summer water.

This is our future. Get used to it and get on board — the sooner the better.

Kathy Horbund Venice

We are at the end of April, and Southern California residents are already being asked to water our yards one day week beginning June.

Recently I visited two public institutio­ns, and both locations had bathrooms with toilets that flush automatica­lly once before using and once after use.

The MWD should tell public institutio­ns to inspect their automatic-flush toilets to stop water waste and start saving.

Cindy Yee Monterey Park

Your article says, “With the state’s major reservoirs at low levels, the MWD has been left without enough water in parts of Southern California.”

Assuming that this is true, may I also assume that there will be a halt to constructi­on of new houses? It seems as though one would logically follow the other, or am I just some sort of simpleton?

Jay James Pico Rivera

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? A VIEW of a housing tract in Rancho Cucamonga, where watering will be limited to one day a week.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times A VIEW of a housing tract in Rancho Cucamonga, where watering will be limited to one day a week.

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