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Current
water shortages
Together,
the lack of scientific information and the absence of state water
supply oversight are causing water shortages and high management
costs in many parts of the state. In Saginaw and Kent counties,
for instance, wells are running dry.
Kevin Datte,
director of the Saginaw County Department of Public Healths
Environmental Health Services Division, describes a troubling situation
in his January 2001 ìReport On Groundwater Withdrawal Conflicts.
In several Saginaw County townships, he writes, groundwater supplies
no longer meet the cumulative needs of farmers, business interests,
and residential users.
Saginaw County
traditionally had more than enough groundwater to supply community
need. Water demand rose noticeably after 1994, however, because
of a growing and increasingly large-scale agricultural industry,
as well as new commercial uses, such as golf courses. Problem wells,
dry wells, and the high cost of drilling new wells have now forced
the county and local residents to take court action against one
large agricultural user.
Mr. Datte
estimated that, since 1994, at least 140 residents in several townships
experienced changes in both water quantity and pressure because
of intense water use nearby. Many residents resorted to replacing
their wells, a service that can cost as much as $2,850, according
to Mr. Datte. Several Saginaw County townships have limited further
development by placing moratoria on the drilling of new irrigation
wells. The state is now spending $100,000 to study the regions
aquifers and try to solve the problem ó after the fact.
In the Grand
River watershed, citizens in Cannon Township, north of Grand Rapids,
experienced problems in 2000 pumping groundwater for showers, car
washing, and lawn care. Residents of the Hunters Ridge subdivision
reported their wells were losing pressure and, at times, sucking
sand. The reports came shortly after the city of Rockford switched
its municipal public water supply from the Rogue River to a local
underground reserve. Despite independent hydrological studies that
found continued pumping would likely compound the problem, the city
was unwilling to accept responsibility or adjust withdrawal rates.
It had followed state law on well construction to the letter. In
fact, it had followed state law so closely that, like state law,
it failed to consider effects on connected waters.
The price
of water waste
It
takes ever larger and more expensive pumping, purification, and
distribution systems to keep up with demand when users ó and state
government ó pay little attention to water efficiency.
The Detroit
Water and Sewerage Department, the third largest water utility in
the nation, has access to a robust water supply out of Lake St.
Clair, for example. But its capacity to meet demand is taxed by
an aging infrastructure, virtually unchecked suburban growth, and
wasteful water use. ìPeople are over-watering. Theres no doubt
about it, Macomb Township Director of Public Works David Koss
told the Detroit News. ìYouve got people watering pavement.
And that pavement
is growing. Development around Detroit now spreads faster than the
city can extend water service. In the face of record water demand,
Detroit Water and Sewerage plans to spend at least $4.3 billion
by 2006 to boost supply to rapidly expanding suburbs.
Special Report: More
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| Water feeds
Michigans agricultural economy. |
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