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CAWCD Views Renaming as Ploy to Destroy Lake Powell

Perceiving an ulterior motive in the request, the Board of Directors of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District has taken a stand against efforts to rename Lake Powell to Glen Canyon Reservoir.

The Coalition to Rename Lake Powell submitted the renaming request to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names.

In a letter to BGN objecting to the renaming, the CAWCD board stated “... it is clear to us that the effort to rename Lake Powell is part of a larger effort to decommission Glen Canyon Dam and drain Lake Powell.”
The letter further stated, “The name ‘Glen Canyon’ denotes the reach of the Grand Canyon that environmental groups want to restore. The word ‘reservoir’ denotes a man-made feature. ... To put it simply, it would be easier to drain a ‘Glen Canyon Reservoir’ than a ‘Lake Powell’. The proposal to rename the Lake in the name of linguistic purity masks a deeper motive to remove Glen Canyon Dam and eliminate Lake Powell from the face of the earth.”

As part of National Water Education Day, Sept. 26, Project WET (Water Education for Teachers) conducted Arizona Water Festivals in Safford and Surprise. The above students at the Safford festival are engaged in activities with the Rolling River Trailer, to learn about their communities location within the Gila River watershed. Participating in the event were fourth grade students in the Safford, Thatcher, Fort Thomas, Duncan, Pima, Morenci, Alpine and Bonita school districts. Arizona’s Project WET is a Water Resources Research Center program at the University of Arizona. (Photo: Ashley Klein)

Among the reasons the coalition included on its renaming request was BGN duplicate naming policy. According to this policy the board will not approve a duplicate name in the same state or an adjacent state in close proximity. BGN does not consider this an issue since the other Lake Powell, although in adjacent Colorado, is located 300 miles away and thus not in close proximity. The coalition also noted that “lake” is not an appropriate generic name for what is in fact a reservoir. The BGN, however, has no policy recognizing official definitions of generic terms. Roger L. Payne, BGN executive secretary, stated, “The Geographic Names Information System includes almost 70,000 entries classified as reservoirs, of which about 23,000 use the generic lake, about 22,000 use the generic reservoir. And there are other generic terms such as tank with about 15,000 entries.”

The board will not be addressing the issue soon. Payne says routine requests take a minimum of 4 months. “This one given its high-profile nature will take lot longer because we want to be sure we get all of the comments from interested parties.”


Bugs, Goats Combat Invasive Plant Species

New Mexico is fielding a new weapon in its fight against the invasive salt cedar, a plant taking its toll of waterways throughout the West including Arizona. A small, brown leaf beetle that eats the pinked tipped branches of the salt cedar is being released along infested waterways in the state. The first release occurred in August when the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released about 600 beetles along the Pecos River near Artesia.

The beetles have proven themselves in Nevada where they ate the green off a 400-acre patch of the fast-growing salt cedar. Beetle test sites are also in Texas, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and California.
Arizona has been at an impasse in its battle against the salt cedar, and Ed Northam, noxious weed coordinator for the Arizona Department of Agriculture, explains why. “We have been stymied by the willow flycatcher.” With Southwestern willow flycatchers nesting in salt cedar, efforts to control the invasive plant threatens the endangered bird.

New Mexico officials, however, hope to release the beetle along the Rio Grande in areas of nesting flycatchers. Their expectations are that with the salt cedar gone, native grass and willows will return and provide the birds with nesting areas.

Northam is unsure whether beetles will work in Arizona. He says from information he has received southern Arizona might be too hot for the beetle. He says, “Any new work we do will probably be with moths.”
Meanwhile several efforts are underway in Arizona to biocontrol invasive and nuisance species. The salvinia weevil, a pinpoint-sized bug, has been introduced in segments of the lower Colorado River to combat the spread of giant salvinia, a rapidly growing aquatic fern that threatens to choke the river’s flow. Also the Central Arizona Project is experimenting using 450 goats to eradicate weeds, including salt cedar, at its recharge basins.

EPA Tells Small Systems to Test Water

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is turning its regulatory attention to small water systems that hitherto have received more lenient treatment than larger utilities. The agency has put 22 small systems within Arizona on notice that they must test their drinking water for copper and lead to comply with provisions of the 1992 Clean Water Act. If not in compliance by the end of the year, they could face steep fines.

With most large and medium sized utilities in compliance, EPA is turning its attention to smaller utilities, those serving between 25 to several hundred customers. Small suppliers in Arizona who have received recent

EPA notices serve about 2,800 people. Areas served by the utilities include Strawberry, Buckeye, Sonoita and Douglas.

EPA is requiring that the utilities test water coming from a sampling of home water pipes. The source of most lead and copper contamination in the West is home distribution systems, often from lead pipes or copper soldering.

Cost has been a factor to discourage small utilities from undertaking the testing. The cost for an in-home test is about $30. The fine for not complying with the regulation can be as much as $27,000 a day.

 

EPA Takes Action to Promote Water Conservation

EPA Considers Water-Efficient Product Labeling
It its effort to raise public awareness about wise water use, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is considering establishing a water-efficient product labeling program based on its Energy Star program. An Energy Star, which has consumer recognition value, is earned by an electric-using product if its energy use meets certain EPA standards.

What Energy Star does for efficient energy use the proposed program is expected to do for water conservation.

Tom Babcock, water conservation coordinator for the Phoenix Water Services Department, says “We have been pushing for a long time for some sort of similar standard, a promotional icon, if you will, for water efficiency. A lot of players have been involved to get somebody at the federal level to initiate this, and the Office of Water at EPA was the first to move forward and say this may be a good idea.”

“Our little mechanical friend ... part of my family”

This quote is from an owner of a Whirlpool washing machine describing her family’s relationship with the appliance. Touchingly sentimental, the attitude complicates Los Angeles Department of Power efforts to encourage consumers to replace their conventional washing machines with a water saving-type of machine. Warm fuzzy feelings aside, LADP programs have resulted in the purchase and installation of more than 24,000 high-efficient washing machines in homes and business since 1998, saving about 415 million gallons of water. The above quote is from Michael J. Silverstein book “Trading Up,” a book describing consumer preferences of contemporary Americans.

Many Arizona water providers have been promoting the program including the Tucson and Phoenix water utilities. The Conservation Committee of the American Water Works Association has taken the lead nationally to coordinate support for the program.

In setting water use standards for such a program, EPA has the option to review and possibly adopt the standards already existing in other federal programs. For example, the Energy Policy Act of 1990 includes water-using standards for certain types of products and appliances, with the rationale that energy is required to pump, treat and deliver water.

Babcock says, “We managed to get standards into federal code through the energy side, and now EPA is looking to do something on the water side.”

A water efficient product labeling program, however, will go beyond setting and listing of such standards to include their promotion, with consumers encouraged to look for a designated symbol or logo when purchasing a water using appliance. What water consuming information is currently provided often is included within fine print and/or is expressed in a formula difficult for the layperson to decipher.

Sheila Frace of EPA says at this point nothing is chiseled in stone. “We will be meeting with stakeholders, conducting research of product areas and product lines and doing some of the marketing research that is part and parcel of a labeling program. ... We want to be sure we are hearing all the pros and cons, all the pitfalls to avoid in the design of such a program.”

Australia might provide a model for the U.S. effort. It has recently taken steps to implement an efficiency labeling system for appliances that is expected to reduce domestic water use by five percent and save $600 million a year.

EPA to Promote Tenant Wise Water Use

EPA is proposing a regulatory change intended to encourage apartment dwellers to conserve water by having them billed for actual water usage. This seemingly obvious strategy is discouraged by present regulations that may impose a burden on apartment building owners who install submeters and bill tenants separately for water.

The present EPA policy derives from enforcement of the Safe Drinking Water Act. Under the SDWA, national primary drinking water regulations apply to public water systems (PWS) having their own water sources, or if they treat or sell water.

EPA has previously issued guidance stating that building or property owners who meet the definition of a PWS and receive water from a regulated public water system, with their tenants billed separately for the water, are in fact selling water. They are thus independently subject to safe drinking water requirements.
Applying a basic water conservation tenet, that consumers use less water if they are billed for what they actually use and not on just a flat rate, is thus discouraged

The EPA now proposes to change the policy to have a more limited application to submetering and the direct billing of residential tenants, thereby better promoting full cost and conservation pricing, with the result that more water will be conserved.

About 15 percent of Americans are apartment dwellers.

The proposed policy change is undergoing a 60-day comment period which began with an announcement in the Aug. 28 Federal Register.

Seventy-five volunteers from seven European countries were recruited and assigned the task of washing dishes. Each volunteer washed a typical family load of 140 pots and plates coated with hardened egg, spinach and margarine. They found that handwashing used between about five and 86 gallons of water compared to the water consumption of a conventional European dishwasher that uses about four to five gallons of water.

(Americans were not included in the study, but the American Water Works Association web site provides information about hand washing dishes in this country. According to AWWA information an automatic dishwasher uses approximately nine to 12 gallons of water while hand washing dishes can use up to 20 gallons.)

The German study noted differences among nationalities in dish washing methodologies. Professor Rainer Stamminger, author of the study, states, “Whether it be a housewife or househusband, a Spaniard or a Turk, they all have different ways of doing the washing up.”

He noted that German and British handwashers did the job more economically than did their Spanish and Turkish counterparts, though the Spaniards ended up with the cleanest dishes. The Germans produced surprising results. Despite their reputation for cleanliness, their dishwashing performance was merely mediocre.

Stamminger’s tips for environmentally friendly hand dishwashing include prevent the food from hardening on plates, soak dishes prior to washing and use a main hot water bath followed by a cold wash rinse.


 
 

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