July 26, 2009 7:27 AM

Drought-Stricken Texas Pushes Conservation

(AP)  Off-duty police officers are patrolling streets, looking for people illegally watering their lawns and gardens. Residents are encouraged to stealthily rat out water scofflaws on a 24-hour hot line. One Texas lake has dipped so low that stolen cars dumped years ago are peeking up through the waterline.

The nation's most drought-stricken state is deep-frying under relentless 100-degree days and waterways are drying up, especially in the hardest-hit area covering about 350 miles across south-central Texas. That's making folks worried about the water supply - and how long it might last.

"The water table's fallin' and fallin' and fallin,' like a whole lot of other people around here," said Wendell McLeod, general manager of Liberty Hill Water Supply Corp. and a 60-year resident of the town northwest of Austin. "This is the worst I can recall seeing it. I tell you, it's just pretty bleak."

There are 230 Texas public water systems under mandatory water restrictions, including those in and near San Antonio, Dallas, Houston and Austin. Another 60 or so have asked for voluntary cutbacks. Water levels are down significantly in lakes, rivers and wells around Texas.

Liberty Hill's Web site urges its 1,400 or so residents in all-red letters to stop using unnecessary water with this plea: "If we follow these strict guidelines, we may have drinking water." The town's shortage eased some with the arrival this week of 35,000 gallons a day from a nearby water system, but residents are still worried.

According to drought statistics released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 77 of Texas' 254 counties are in extreme or exceptional drought, the most severe categories. No other state in the continental U.S. has even one area in those categories. John Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas state climatologist at Texas A&M University, said he expects harsh drought conditions to last at least another month.

In the bone-dry San Antonio-Austin area, the conditions that started in 2007 are being compared to the devastating drought of the 1950s. There have been 36 days of 100 degrees or more this year in an area where it's usually closer to 12.

Among the most obvious problems are the lack of water in Lake Travis and Lake Buchanan near Austin, two massive reservoirs along the Colorado River that provide drinking water for more than 1 million people and also are popular boating and swimming spots. Streams and tributaries that feed the lakes have "all but dried up," according to the Lower Colorado River Authority.

Lake Travis is more empty than full, down 54 percent. All but one of the 12 boating ramps are closed because they no longer reach the water, and the last may go soon. The receding waters have even revealed old stolen cars shoved into the lake years ago, authorities said.

There's no threat to the area's drinking water supply, said Bob Rose, a meteorologist with the river authority. But there are increased boating hazards from the "sometimes islands" that pop up when the water's low, increased risk of wildfires, and more interactions between humans and wildlife.

"We're seeing deer and armadillo and other animals in places we don't typically see them," he said. "They're starving for water and food."

At the Oasis, a popular restaurant with a deck overlooking Lake Travis, the islands are even starting to grow heavy vegetation.

"You can see all the white on the rocks where the waterline used to be," said Becca Torbert, a server at the restaurant who says the boat traffic is down, but the water's down even more.

San Antonio, which relies on the Edwards Aquifer for its water, is enduring its driest 23-month period since weather data was recorded starting in 1885, according to the National Weather Service. The aquifer's been hovering just above 640 feet deep, and if it dips below that the city will issue its harshest watering restrictions yet.

The city's not just sitting around, though. A total of 30 off-duty officers and other employees are working overtime to patrol the city looking for people illegally watering. Since April, about 1,500 people have been cited and ordered to pay fines ranging from $50 to over $1,000. Residents also are encouraged to rat out water scofflaws on the 24-hour Water Waste Hot Line.

"We don't go out in a car with sirens blazing or anything like that, but we do take the report and send out a letter saying 'You've been reported for not following water rules,"' said Anne Hayden, spokeswoman for the San Antonio Water System.

There have been smatterings of light rain in the area this week, but not enough to make much difference. But hopefully, the end is in sight. Victor Murphy, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said an El Nino system is developing in the Pacific Ocean. That phenomenon is usually followed by increased rainfall in Texas in the fall.

McLeod, from Liberty City, hopes his little town can hang on till then.

"I don't know how we can," he said. "I try not to look too far ahead."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 33 Comments
by differnet July 27, 2009 9:39 AM EDT
Hmmm... wasn't this the state that a few months ago wanted to succeed from the USA? Well, I guess now that they need federal dollars they are singing another tune.
Reply to this comment
by Dgunner July 27, 2009 9:31 AM EDT
Definition of karaoke= A
texan on his way home with two oklahomans under each arm.
Reply to this comment
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 6:13 PM EDT
TUCKER!......TUCKER!.....ARE YOU STILL ALIVE? : )
Reply to this comment
by cs4466 July 26, 2009 4:33 PM EDT
Droughts in TX? God must be angry.
Reply to this comment
by ffoulkes-2009 July 27, 2009 2:38 AM EDT
Droughts in Texas? Who'da thunkit.
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 2:17 PM EDT
by beaumuff July 26, 2009 8:09 AM EDT
looks like Gore got you suckered in also. If he is so concerned why doesn't he unplug some of his heated swimming pools? His mansion uses enough energy to power a city block,at our expense. Is it global warming or "make more for Gore"?


by BeckieBest July 26, 2009 8:33 AM EDT
Mongoloid,

Gore is just exposing what SCIENTISTS all over the world have been trying to tell us. Global warming is real, happening now, caused by man, and the consequences will be catastrophic.



Yes, it's amazing how stupid people are. Everyone thinks that Gore made this all up to make money. Scientists have been trying to get this out for YEARS. David Suzuki, a scientist, wrote a book 10 years ago, and in it he stated that we were almost at the point of no return. He said that scientists had been trying to get the media to get the message out for years, but they wouldn't do it. They were more interested in printing crap about CELEBRITIES. They said they printed what people wanted to hear, and that was about "CELEBRITIES". Pretty sad when that's the most important thing, isn't it?
Reply to this comment
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 2:22 PM EDT
Al Gore is just the messenger.
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 2:30 PM EDT
AND when the media finally got their sh*t together and decided to get it out, Bush hired a lawyer to block them.
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 2:01 PM EDT
by BeckieBest July 26, 2009 7:33 AM EDT
GLOBAL WARMING

by HowVeryFunny July 26, 2009 10:28 AM EDT
Well, NO, not global warming...just typical Texas weather cycles...



"This is the worst I can recall seeing it. I tell you, it's just pretty bleak."


What's funny is how brain dead you are. The statement above kinda says it ain't "typical". Do you ALWAYS lie? Are you a compulsive liar? You seem to have this need to say the exact opposite of whatever is said. It doesn't seem to matter what it is.
Reply to this comment
by ffoulkes-2009 July 27, 2009 2:37 AM EDT
I have lived in Texas for 40+ years. I have seen far worse dry spells than this. The rains will come, and probably everything will flood again...like it usually does after a dry spell. Then all will be normal for a few more years, and the cycle will re-start.
by eclecticman1 July 26, 2009 1:46 PM EDT
Climatolgists have warned tha climate change will result in certain areas drying up as the sub tropic areas go north or south towards the poles. They have looked at the Middle East, Australia, and the South West, including Texas, as where drought and desertifcation will occur. So far these three areas are suffering as the climatologists said they would. There are those who would say the climatologists are wrong, and climate change is not happening. But if scientists make a prediction and it starts to happen, just maybe they know what they are talking about. Obviously this has to happen over a number of years before it stops being weather and becomes climate. However, I think all these areas had better start preparing for the long haul, just in case.
Reply to this comment
by ffoulkes-2009 July 27, 2009 2:35 AM EDT
What prediction? Texas has always had droughts...ofttimes far more serious than this one.
by american_11-2009 July 26, 2009 1:39 PM EDT
The flood of immigrants drives wages and living conditions in our central cities toward those of the Third World & has already destroyed Calif..

This tidal wave imposes sprawl, gridlock, pollution, and environmental damage on our metropolitan areas & Nation.

Immigrant families needing services overwhelm our schools, taxpayer-funded health care facilities, and other public agencies.

Those requiring services don?t assimilate and, instead, expect to be served in their native languages.

American civic culture frays as each ethnic group establishes its own grievance lobby and pushes for preferences.

Communicable diseases such as tuberculosis (new, drug-resistant strains) return & New diseases like Mexican Swine flu break out!

Shortages of water and other resources loom, especially in immigration-blitzed Southwest.

Most that come across our open borders come from countries where, Crime, Corruption, Poverty, Misery, Anti-education, and hate for Americans has existed for centuries and is normal. Should anyone be surprised they bring those same family values across the border with them?
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by 4-texas-water-wells July 26, 2009 1:15 PM EDT
I have an old Water Well Drill that's in need of some repair. It's been sitting for some years, I need to get rid of it. Use . in stead of - on my log in name,
e-mail me at gmail-com
Reply to this comment
by pollroller1 July 26, 2009 11:53 AM EDT
I know this is serious, but I couldn't help laughing when I read about the stolen cars dumped in the lakes.
Reply to this comment
by docpeter1953 July 26, 2009 1:55 PM EDT
Why?

You think that only in Texas there are stolen cars dumped in lakes?

Better think again and get ready to ROFLFAO. Maybe your water supply is next.
by erasmus111 July 26, 2009 2:04 PM EDT
Yes, there are stolen cars in everyone's lakes. BUT, I bet there are more in TEXASS. : )
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