The Sun (San Bernardino)

La Verne restricts lawn watering to once per week

Council approves limit starting June 1

- By Javier Rojas jrojas@scng.com

La Verne residents may struggle to keep their lawns green when once-a-week outdoor watering restrictio­ns start June 1, a measure enacted in response to an emergency order from the region’s largest water wholesaler last month.

In a unanimous vote Monday, the City Council adopted its own emergency ordinance to cut outdoor watering to one day a week and ask residents to slash water usage by 20%. Beginning June 1, watering will be permitted 6 p.m. Tuesday to 10 a.m. Wednesday for addresses that end in even numbers and 6 p.m. Thursday to 10 a.m. Friday for those ending in odd numbers.

Hand watering of trees is exempt from the oneday-a-week restrictio­n, as are drip-irrigation systems, according to the city.

Establishe­d fire-hazard zones north of Baseline Road are exempt from the one-day-a-week watering restrictio­n, but must comply with a

mandated 20% reduction in overall water consumptio­n.

Due to the worsening state drought, the Department of Water Resources announced a decreased allocation from the State Water Project from 15% to 5% in March. The water project supplies about 30% of the water used in Southern California, including 75% in La Verne.

In April, Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California declared a water shortage emergency, ordering outdoor watering restrictio­ns for about 6 million State Water Project-dependent people in parts of Los Angeles, Ventura and San Bernardino counties.

Three Valleys Municipal Water District, an MWD agency that provides water to La Verne and other communitie­s in the San Gabriel and Inland Empire, last month adopted an emergency conservati­on program that will result in the enforcemen­t of watering limits in La Verne and Claremont, both dependent on the State Water Project.

If the cities fail to meet the district’s guidelines, they face fines of $2,000 per acre foot of water beyond their limitation or a ban on outdoor watering on Sept. 1. The restrictio­ns will be in place through June 30, 2023, unless the Three Valleys board lifts the emergency declaratio­n before that date.

Claremont’s water is delivered by the Golden State Water Co. while La Verne operates its own distributi­on system.

The Claremont City Council is expected to vote on an ordinance similar to La Verne’s on Tuesday. If approved, Claremont’s water restrictio­ns would go into effect May 31 and enforcemen­t would start June 1, city spokespers­on Bevin Handel said in an email on Wednesday.

While La Verne officials have called for the use of less water inside households, outdoor watering is one of the biggest uses of water, contributi­ng to worsening drought conditions. The average resident uses 135 gallons of water per day in La Verne, according to a city staff report.

In July, Gov. Gavin Newsom asked California­ns to voluntaril­y cut water use 15%. But they fell short, reducing water consumptio­n by only 5.8% between July and February.

Last month, Newsom signed an executive order requiring water agencies to begin limiting landscape watering and proposed imposing financial penalties to discourage violations.

La Verne Council Member Robin Carder said Monday the ordinance will result in much of the city’s landscape “not being as green as residents are used to.”

This is the reality residents will have to get used to, Council Member Rick Crosby said. “This is not something that everyone will enjoy, it’s just the state we are in.”

MWD will offer a rebate of $2 per square foot for grass that’s replaced with water-efficient landscapin­g. Meanwhile, rebates are available from other local water agencies.

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