San Francisco Chronicle

Persistent drought plagues Deep South

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ATLANTA — Six months into a deepening drought, the weather is killing crops, threatenin­g cattle and sinking lakes to their lowest levels in years across much of the South.

The very worst conditions — what forecaster­s call “exceptiona­l drought” — are in the mountains of northeast Alabama and northwest Georgia, a region known for its thick green forests, waterfalls and red clay soil.

“Here at my farm, April 15 was when the rain cut off,” said David Bailey, who had to sell half his cattle, more than 100 animals, for lack of hay in Alabama’s scorched northeast corner.

“We’ve come through some dry years in the ‘80s, but I never seen it this dry, this long,” Bailey added. “There’s a bunch of people in a lot of bad shape here.”

The drought has spread from these mountains onto the Piedmont plateau, down to the plains and across 13 southern states, from Oklahoma and Texas to Florida and Virginia, putting about 33 million people in drought conditions, according to Thursday’s U.S. Drought Monitor.

In Mississipp­i, a man died when his farm field burned out of control, authoritie­s said Friday. In Alabama, blazes have charred more than 12,000 acres in the past 30 days.

“There are places getting ready to set records for most numbers of days in a row without rain. It’s a once-in-100year kind of thing for this time of year,” said John Christy, Alabama’s state climatolog­ist.

The South has historical­ly enjoyed abundant water, which has been fortunate, because much of its soil is poor at holding onto it. But the region’s booming growth has strained this resource. A legal battle between Georgia and Florida over water from rivers and their watersheds goes before a federal court official Monday, and the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to review his recommenda­tions.

The dry weather is only making things worse.

“We’re 10 days away from a drought at any given time,” Christy explained. “Unlike the Midwest and other places in the country, we are closer to a drought than almost any place else.”

Parts of northern Georgia and Alabama have now seen their driest 60 days on record, Thursday’s national drought report showed.

If the drought persists, authoritie­s said it could lead to the kinds of water use restrictio­ns that are common out West, but haven’t been seen in parts of the South in nearly a decade.

During a major drought in Georgia in 2007, police in Atlanta’s suburb of Alpharetta were given the power to criminally cite anyone watering their lawns. In Alabama that year, people were fined for watering on the wrong day and many homes became infested by thirsty ants and cockroache­s.

At the height of the 2007 drought, then-Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue prayed for rain with hundreds of residents at the state Capitol. The Georgia Department of Agricultur­e is reviving the practice: It has announced plans for a Monday “Pray for Rain” gathering with the state agricultur­e commission­er and Republican U.S. Rep. Doug Collins in the northeast Georgia town of Lavonia.

In west Georgia this month, the Tallapoosa River dropped below the intake the Haralson County Water Authority uses to provide water to at least four small towns. Some major cities are spending big to prevent future water shortages: Atlanta has begun a $300 million project to store 2.4 billion gallons of water — a month’s water supply — and pipe it under the city.

This summer was particular­ly hot as well as dry, with 90degree temperatur­es day after day that evaporated what little moisture the soil had left, said Bill Murphey, Georgia’s state climatolog­ist.

This summer was the second-hottest on record in Atlanta, where seasonal rains still haven’t arrived: During the past 30 days, just over two-tenths of an inch of rain has fallen in Atlanta, 94 percent below normal, and in Cartersvil­le, about 45 miles northwest of Atlanta, the weather service has recorded no rain at all.

 ?? David Goldman / Associated Press ?? U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett stands on the shore of drought-ravaged Lake Lanier in Buford, Ga.
David Goldman / Associated Press U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett stands on the shore of drought-ravaged Lake Lanier in Buford, Ga.

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