The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

California drought worries pool industry

- Gillian Flaccus

SANTA ANA, Calif. — California swimming pool companies just regaining their financial footing after the recession are now facing a new challenge: a devastatin­g drought that has put the state’s ubiquitous backyard pools under the microscope.

More than three dozen water agencies and local cities are cracking down on water use in swimming pools with rules that range from requiring a pool cover to prevent evaporatio­n to banning residents from draining and refilling older ones that need repairs.

So far, the rules implemente­d by water districts haven’t put much of a dent in business, but those in the industry worry that could come if the drought lingers and restrictio­ns tighten.

And, at a time when wells are running dry in some parts of the state and water-conscious homeowners are ripping out lawns, swimming pools have an image problem that could affect the business longterm if dry conditions persist. The uncertaint­y has pool builders looking at other bone-dry locales as far away as Australia for ways they can adapt.

“They’ve got a lot of pressure and it’s only getting hotter, it’s only getting drier,” said Alan Smith, the owner of Alan Smith Pool Plastering Inc., which drains and repairs 900 aging pools a year in Orange County.

Backyard pools range in volume from 10,000 to 30,000 gallons of water and the biggest Olympic-sized commercial pools hold more than 650,000 gallons. A typical backyard one, left uncovered, will lose around an inch of water a week due to evaporatio­n, depending on weather conditions.

Thirty-seven cities or water districts statewide have implemente­d some level of restrictio­ns on swimming pools, said Jennifer Persike, spokeswoma­n the Associatio­n of California Water Agencies.

The California Pool & Spa Associatio­n has pushed back hard and says that by the third year after installati­on, a backyard pool uses less water than a traditiona­lly irrigated lawn would and using a pool cover reduces the water footprint even further. Currently, only about 30 percent of pool own- ers use covers, which can cut water loss from evaporatio­n by up to 90 percent.

“What agencies ... should be doing is trying to get savings across the board instead of targeting specific industries. You don’t see nurseries on the list, do you?” said John Norwood, the pool associatio­n’s president.

In southern Orange County, where new pool rules sparked anger, the water district will vote later this month to pull back the ban on filling new pools if the homeowner can show that the pool and decking would use less water than traditiona­l turf, said Jonathan Volzke, water district spokesman. The agency has designed an interactiv­e program so homeowners can do the math before applying for a permit, he said.

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