Texas Town That’s Run Out of Water Was Shipping It Out Just Weeks Before Well Went Dry
source: http://margotbworldnews.com/News/Feb/Feb9/water.html
-
-
- circlesquared
- added this
In a Texas town of 1,100 people, the well has run dry. Now all the water needed for drinking, washing and bathing must be trucked in from other areas. But a new report has discovered that up until just weeks before the well went dry, the local water provider was selling off water up until the last weeks before the well ran out.
Spicewood Beach, Texas, has been enduring a drought so bad they've had to start trucking in drinking water on a regular basis.
Spicewood is the first place in what is a drought-stricken state to deplete its aquifer to the point that it can no longer draw enough ground water for its 1100 residents. But in an ironic twist, the Lower Colorado River Authority, the public agency that manages the water, was selling the city's water and trucking it out of town, even as the well ran dry. To be clear, there's nothing illegal or even necessarily improper about that. And it's not like they were taking it out to dump in the desert, either.
Mose Buchele, reporter for StateImpact, an environmental reporting project affiliated with the University of Texas in Austin, said the LCRA was selling the water from the town's well to water haulers, who resold it to homes outside of town, as well as businesses and construction projects.
"It's not an uncommon practice here," Buchele said. "It was happening very close to the point where the water runs out."
The LCRA is the actual owner of the town's water, not the city. So when these haulers backed up to the well to fill up, they weren't violating any rules at all. And they weren't paying a whole lot, either. About $32 for 4,000 gallons.
Buchele said there's a lot of confusion among the town's residents, a lot of anger, because the town must now pay about $200 for each 4,000 gallon load it imports to replace the well water.
"They're paying more than they were selling it for," Buchele said.
The current situation, trucking in water and paying high rates for it, will persist until the drought in Texas ends, or it goes on long enough that some other, long-term solution has to be developed.
The situation in Spicewood Beach is a first, but is likely not the only place on the verge of running out of water. The state estimates 13 public water systems will run out of water within the next 180 days, if something doesn't change, Buchele said.
"If we don't get rain soon we're going to see more and more situations like has happened to this one community," Buchele said.
-
-
PeteLeS33
-
This is the Texas/Conservative mentality. Sell the warter that we DON'T have and then buy the warter we need. A perfect example of profiet over people. Arent dat rally smart..............
- 3 months ago
-
PeteLeS33
-
-
jim_b
-
It is Texas - they will pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
- 3 months ago
-
jim_b
-
-
ilikeike
-
Now theyre paying 200 for 4,000 gallons? Why would anyone jump to the conclusion that the water company was dumping water? Why would a for profit company speed the loss of a towns well water so that they would have to pay through the nose to some other completely unconnected company is totally beyond comprehension. hahaha noooo capitalism isn't that evil.....
- 3 months ago
-
ilikeike
-
-
circlesquared
-
ilikeike:
guessing it's the same people profiting on both ends
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
northernexpat
-
Nothing like cutting your nose off in spite of your face.
- 3 months ago
-
northernexpat
-
-
Leen61
-
"Texas Town That’s Run Out of Water Was Shipping It Out Just Weeks Before Well Went Dry" How stupid! And a place with a drought problem. They didn't have a way to measure how much water was left in the well? Idiots!
- 3 months ago
-
Leen61
-
-
circlesquared
-
Leen61:
they had to know and I am sure profit was and is the guiding light
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
Leen61
-
circlesquared:
Probably, STC.
- 3 months ago
-
Leen61
-
-
Anonmaly
-
LMAO.... Just so some company can get rich selling pretty little bottles of water....
(I'd take it up with whoever decided to sell that company my water, maybe the company too....)
- 3 months ago
-
Anonmaly
-
-
JanforGore
-
Businesses? Yes, probably oil and fracking businesses.
- 3 months ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
circlesquared
-
JanforGore:
that would be my bet as well.
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
remanns
-
oops.
- 3 months ago
-
remanns
-
-
unimatrix0
-

-
What is it about Texas and the South? To be so irresponsible and foolish with such a vital public resource is unbelievable.
Maybe Gov Perry will issue another "Days of Prayer for Rain in Texas" proclamation and make it all better.
- 3 months ago
-
unimatrix0
-
-
bailey78
-
Well I can say first hand that things are bad. The area I live in just had a little rain fall About six inches filling a few small ponds that were dry. But we are still over two feet short on what we need. These folks that are profiting from the misery of others is just wrong.
- 3 months ago
-
bailey78
-
-
circlesquared
-
"The state estimates 13 public water systems will run out of water within the next 180 days, if something doesn't change"
Texas is screwed
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
circlesquared
-
wonder if the same company that sold the towns water so cheap is now profiting by selling the water from some other town's aquifer?
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
kennymotown
-
circlesquared:
Good point!
- 3 months ago
-
kennymotown
-
-
circlesquared
-
kennymotown:
also wonder who actually got that water so cheap...used to have a 1500 gallon cistern about 10 years ago....cost to fill was about $50 then if we didn't get any rain
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
jimstoner
-
circlesquared:
Sure. And they will be buying it for $32 for 4,000 gallons.
- 3 months ago
-
jimstoner
-
-
remanns
-
circlesquared:
+^d good question
- 3 months ago
-
remanns
-
-
circlesquared
-
remanns:
my guess would be they are gaining their profit by being able to control where the water flows....homes outside of town as well as businesses and construction projects....hmmmm. Should they continue to build in an area there is no more of the most important resource on Earth? Kickbacks ya think?
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
circlesquared:
Profits from water... your comments just made me think of the turtle in Rango.
- 3 months ago
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
-
circlesquared
-
$32 for 4,000 gallons...are you kidding me? Insanely short sighted...if you know you haven't been getting rain conservation of your resource is the only option.
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
circlesquared:
That was 8/10ths of a cent per gallon, that less then ALOT of municipal water departmens charge to pump water directly into your home. I really hope the people of this town and all of Texas for that matter view this company as a criminal enterprise looking to profit off the misery of good people.
- 3 months ago
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
-
circlesquared
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas:
i hope so as well...I know I do
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
-
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
circlesquared:
I would bet that this same company LCRA or whatever is now profiting by being the company that is trucking water back into town.
- 3 months ago
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas
-
-
cmc101
-
The_Wanderer_Kansas:
you took the words right out of my mouth
- 3 months ago
-
cmc101
-
-
circlesquared
-
cmc101:
mine too
- 3 months ago
-
circlesquared
