Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Rain barrel auction to benefit farmers

This Friday, Raleigh's Whole Foods Market is hosting a silent auction of nine rain barrels painted by local artists to raise money for an emergency farm assistance fund. The 30-gallon barrels will be auctioned off during a wine and cheese reception, with live music by The Paul Bomar Trio. The event begins at 6 p.m. at 3540 Wade Ave. The barrel pictured here will be among those up for bid.

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Community forum to address Wake County's water woes

WakeUP, an organization of Wake County citizens concerned about growth and development issues, will be holding a public forum this Saturday, Feb. 23 on regional water supply challenges. The event will take place from 9:30 a.m. to noon at N.C. State's McKimmon Center at the intersection of Western Boulevard and Gorman Street in Raleigh. Scheduled speakers include Tommy Esqueada, director of Wake County Environmental Services; Rob Jackson, director of the Duke University Center on Global Climate Change; Chris Goudreau of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission; David Moreau, chair of the UNC Water Resources Research Institute and the Environmental Management Commission; Bill Holman, a senior fellow at Duke University; and Mary Brice, co-chair of the Raleigh Water Conservation Task Force. For more details, including an agenda, click here.

Labels: ,

Monday, February 18, 2008

Raleigh water conservation specialist offers drought insights

This evening I attended the monthly meeting of my local Citizens Advisory Council (I live in the East Raleigh CAC) where the featured speaker was Ed Buchan, water conservation specialist with Raleigh's Public Utilities Department. Buchan gave an informative overview of the city's drinking water system and how it's been impacted by the ongoing drought, which he described as being "of biblical proportions."

I'm not going to recount the entire presentation here, but I'll highlight some particularly interesting points that came up:

* Raleigh has a built-in conflict of interest when it comes to promoting water conservation. The maintenance and expansion of the city's water system is paid for through an enterprise fund that's separate from the regular budget -- and financed by selling water. That means if the city is successful in encouraging residents to conserve, it stands to face a revenue shortfall. "It's a challenge for a system like ours to go into conservation mode," Buchan said.

* Buchan said Raleigh's current mandatory conservation ordinance "doesn't have a lot of teeth" when it comes to large water users -- that is, industrial customers like Pepsico and Ajinomoto. The only way they could cut water use significantly would be to cut production, which would "go over like a lead balloon," he said. Meanwhile, Raleigh has shut down car washes that failed to recycle water -- about half of all car washes in the city -- but that has "hardly affected peak demand," Buchan reported.

* Unlike Charlotte, Raleigh still has not moved to a tiered-rate billing system, in which customers who use more water pay more. One reason, said Buchan, is that financiers like the certainty of a flat rate and get nervous when cities impose tiered structures, which could affect the city's bond rating.

* Another reason Raleigh hasn't moved to a tiered-rate structure is because its billing system simply can't handle it. When asked who the Charlotte-based contractor was who handled billing for the city (as you may have noticed, we mail our water payments to the "City of Raleigh" in "Charlotte, N.C"), Buchan couldn't say. I don't know, either. If someone out there does, please send an e-mail to sue at raleigheconews.com dot com, or leave a comment here. Thanks.

* Buchan takes a dim view of programs providing low-cost or free gadgets to encourage water conservation. Incentives, he said, have "never worked," though he considers rebates a better alternative. However, the city recently acquired 5,000 faucet aerators and 5,000 low-flow shower heads, and it's now figuring out how to distribute them. This will probably be done through the Community Services department. Buchan noted that the city of Boston sent staff door to door to change out wasteful shower heads, but he said Raleigh lacked the capacity to do that.

* One of the city's biggest water customers is Pepsico, which bottles Falls Lake water that it purchases at the same rate as residential customers and sells at a dramatic markup: While a gallon of Falls Lake water costs $.0022, Pepsi sells its Aquafina product at more than $4 per gallon -- one of the reasons Durham City Councilman Eugene Brown has called for a boycott of Pepsi products. But at the same time, the city can't release information to the public about Pepsico's water usage without opening itself to litigation. For more details, read this Independent Weekly article by N.C. State professor Cat Warren:
Raleigh, meanwhile, refuses to reveal exactly what amount Pepsi or their other largest users are pulling out of the municipal system—citing an exemption in the public records law. "The records you requested are enterprise billing records and not available to the public," wrote Raleigh City Attorney Thomas McCormick.

This is what it means to be in the water business: the conflict of interest between the notion of water as a public trust, and water as an enterprise, income for the city's wallet. Notes North Carolina Press Association General Counsel Amanda Martin: "We are in the middle of an extreme drought, and we are not even entitled to know which users are consuming inordinate amounts of water. It's a travesty, if you ask me, but unfortunately it is the law."
The scheduled guest for Raleigh East's March CAC meeting is Mayor Charles Meeker. I expect we'll have an interesting discussion.

Labels:

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

As drought intensifies, Raleigh gets ready for tougher restrictions -- but no development freeze

This Friday, Feb. 15, Raleigh will move to mandatory Stage 2 water conservation measures. The move comes as Falls Lake, the city's main water source, has fallen to 30 percent of its capacity, with only about 107 days of water left if no significant rains come.

According to the city's official announcement about the Stage 2 rules, they ban the use of public water for irrigation and prohibit home car washes. They also prevent builders from using fresh public water to conduct the tests of new water connections that must occur before newly built homes and businesses can be legally occupied.

However, the rules do allow testing of connections using city water that's then captured, hauled to the treatment plant on Falls of the Neuse Road, and placed back into the raw water supply. So new development will still be able to continue under the Stage 2 restrictions.

Which raises some questions: If Raleigh doesn't have enough water to sustain its current population in the face of continued dry weather, how can it allow new development to continue? Even if the builders aren't testing connections with potable water, won't the new arrivals inhabiting those homes further drain Falls Lake?

Labels:

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Raleigh, drought, and development

Anyone interested in Raleigh's mounting water woes -- and our mayor's insistence that they have nothing to do with development -- should read the excellent ongoing analysis by Lunsford Lane over at the Below the Beltline.

Labels: ,

Friday, January 11, 2008

Science Café to address drought crisis

Want to learn more about the drought and what we as a community can do to conserve water? Come to January's Science Café, a monthly gathering sponsored by the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences and local chapters of Sigma Xi, a scientific research society.

The event will be held Tuesday, Jan. 15 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Irregardless Café at 901 W. Morgan St. in Raleigh. A talk by State Climatologist Ryan Boyles will begin at 7 p.m. followed by a question-and-answer session. To attend, RSVP to katey ahmann@ncmail.net. For more details, contact Ahman at 919-733-7450, ext. 531.

Labels: ,