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We even have a contractor registry for in-home television repairmen... when's the last time you called a repairman to fix your TV? I'm sure they don't exist, and the agency never noticed the lack of applicants...
This is a great read...
http://www.ca.gov/Apps/Agencies.aspx
The right answer is to make them pay the full amount. Let food production move to Kansas or Nebraska, which suffer from periodic floods rather than droughts.
I anticipate another huge lawsuit over water rights to the Colorado river.
It might be more productive to ship truckloads of bottled water from the central states. And I hear it's begun to happen (though for some reason Arrowhead is still being allowed to bottle water in CA and ship it elsewhere -- go figure). I'll bet Wal-Mart saves the day, just as it did after Katrina.
I just finished editing:::
http://www.amazon.com/Unsustainable-Tuck...
-- j
This is what happens when you have air headed politicians who look to their own re-election, manipulate the voters, bring in millions of unauthorized people, just to stay on top and continue to be the idiotic gasbags they are.
I am waiting for the wagon trains to start showing up in Oregon, or California to try to annex us.
As pointed out, this is not a one size fits all problem, but the idiots we elect can only think in one size metrics. Add to that their arrogance and total living in their fantasy world, and you have disaster. First of many to come...
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/2b...
1.) $1 billion state bailout.. not a penny for desalinization. Why? The "shortage" is in southern California, which is a desert, we ship water from northern CA to southern via the California aqueduct 24x7x365. San Francisco gets its water from Hetch Hetchy (larger than Yosemite) and is fine, Sacramento has the confluence of the Sacramento and American rivers and is fine.
The elephant in the room is California agriculture, which uses 80% of the water, but is 2% of the state's economy, but is unfortunately the lion's share of fresh produce for the entire country. However, I've never seen them use a hose.. only open-ditch irrigation with a wastefulness of at least 50% to ground & air loss compared to what gets to the crop.
2.) The ground water has been depleted so greatly by the ag industry, that the 'ground' in the Central Valley has subsided, as much as 7 feet in some places (it has dropped). In Sacramento, we pump water down into the aquifer from the river to try and recharge it some times of the year, but it seems like pumping desalinated water from the Pacific into the aquifer would work just peachy too I would think...
3.) They like to say its "climate change" - no, there is a ton of rain coming on from the coast, we have just had a high pressure zone hovering off the coast for a couple of years and its diverting rainfall north & south of California . Not a lack of rain, just not falling on us.. interestingly, we got a ton of rain, tornadoes, hail and snow yesterday - more than we had all winter I would think. If the high pressure zone subsides, we might get the tail end of the pineapple express in the jet stream for a month or so and make up for the dry winter.
4.) The last reservoir was built in the 60's, the population has gone from under 20 million to over 40 million in the same period of time. 'Buff said.
Nonetheless, my pool is green from all the dry air/wind & pollen. I'll need to drain & pressure wash it. Oh well on the drought.
California, on the other hand, has neglected responsible water resource management, and as you point out, haven't paid attention to crop management adjustments. The Santa Clara valley used to be one of the nation's best sources of fruits, but now it's become "Silicon Valley", with zero agricultural industry.
I suspect we'll see some kind of Federal bailout for California, with a near-permanent FEMA-managed "Drought Disaster" team in place. Be prepared for "smart" water meters that will cut off your supply when you've exceeded your monthly allotment.
I suspect the heat in the summer, we usually have about 30-40 days that are over 115 here.
And Is strongly suspect that management of the water supply has come under the "it'll last until tomorrow" school of thought. One cannot help but recall Dagny's question in AS: "but what about the day after tomorrow?"
Perhaps it is approaching, or already here.
On the other side of the coin, there is an astonishing business opportunity here for anyone with the means to build large scale desalination plants.
Yes. Desalination plants. Residents would have to pay, but a market would be created and provide a solution. The major cities are near the ocean they have 840+/- miles of coastline. Of course the government has no foresight, will probably regulate the profit out of the investment and they would apparently rather ration and fine people for taking showers than provide incentive for a permanent solution to living in what was naturally more of a desert... Of course governor moonbeam will call the drought a result of global warming geologic history notwithstanding. http://www.monolake.org/mlc/outsidebox
And yet they see no conflict with putting out the welcome mat, including issuing drivers license to untold thousands of illegal immigrants to share what little water they have remaining... http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/imm...
Respectfully,
O.A.
voters' IDs before long. -- j
I just finished editing:::
http://www.amazon.com/Unsustainable-Tuck...
-- j
p.s. this book actually proposes a solution to the
renewal of the U.S.!