Seal Beach Daily

A beach town blog for Seal Beach, plus Surfside, Sunset Beach, Rossmoor, Los Alamitos and neighboring communities

11:06 am | Jun 09, 2009

Seal Beach moves on water conservation

The Seal Beach City Council approved permanent water conservation measures Monday night that include restrictions on when residents can water their yards and require that local restaurants only serve water to customers who request it.

“There is so little water,” said Councilman Michael Levitt. “Something drastic has to be done.”

water-tap-smSeal Beach is the latest Orange County city to adopt citywide water conservation measures in response to Southern California’s drought. In April, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the region’s water wholesaler, reduced supplies to area agencies by 10 percent, and the Metropolitan Water District of Orange County has been working with the county’s cities to adopt conservation measures.

On Monday, the City council approved these six permanent conservation measures:

• No landscape irrigation between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Limit plant and lawn irrigation to no longer than 15 minutes.
• No water served to restaurant patrons unless they ask for it.
• Only use water fountains or decorative water displays that recirculate water.
• No installation of single pass cooling systems in connection with new water service.
• Install only re-circulating water systems in commercial car washes or commercial laundry systems.

The proposed conservation measures initially included a local ban on washing down hard or paved surfaces, such as patios, driveways and parking areas, except to eliminate a safety or sanitary hazard. Councilman Gary Miller, however, expressed concerns that the measure might be hardship for residents who need to remove dust or soot from their properties. “I know we’re in a crisis, but it seems we’ve went a little too far,” Miller said.

At the suggestion of resident Robert Goldberg, council members revised the local conservation measures Monday night to substitute the restaurant patron water cutback for a citywide ban on washing down hard surfaces. The city could add the pavement washing ban and additional water restrictions if the drought conditions are elevated to a higher “Phase 1″ alert, city officials said.

City Manager David Carmany said the city has been trying to encourage residents to adopt voluntary water use cutbacks by including reminders in monthly water bills.

By approving the local conservation measures Monday night, Seal Beach can remain eligible for future funding from the state and the Metropolitan Water District.

“Currently there is a call for a voluntary 10 percent reduction in water use and mandatory conservation could be implemented soon,” Vince Mastrosimone, Seal Beach’s Director of Public Works, wrote in a staff report. “Rain will help the region, but it will not solve the shortage.”

Posted by donna | Uncategorized

8 Responses to "Seal Beach moves on water conservation." Comment policy.

Seal Beach Daily promotes the free exchange of ideas in our community. Comments reflect the opinions of the author and are not edited or endorsed by Seal Beach Daily. SBD cannot verify the accuracy of reader comments. Comments that violate our comment policy are removed. Click here to call a comment to our attention.

1 | HillRes

June 9th, 2009 at 12:23 pm

Me thinks the council has done too little, too late. As there has been nothing coming from the council concerning water conservation, we Seal beach water users have assumed it must not be us. Seal Beach is never mentioned in rationing or shortages. I’ve searched my water bill-the only thing mentioned is recycling yard waste, dog poop, and pesticide runoff- not a word about water conservation. I thought we must somehow have our own secret source. The real question is- what took them so long?

2 | » Seal Beach moves on water conservation | NRGideas

June 9th, 2009 at 1:46 pm

[...] “Currently there is a call for a voluntary 10 percent reduction in water use and mandatory conservation could be implemented soon,” Vince Mastrosimone, Seal Beach’s Director of Public Works, wrote in a staff report. “Rain will help the region, but it will not solve the shortage.” via sealbeachdaily.com [...]

3 | elgabachero

June 9th, 2009 at 4:41 pm

My latest gadget for saving water is a 1.5 gpm showerhead made by High Sierra. Works great!

4 | kate

June 9th, 2009 at 5:58 pm

Thanks for the tips elgabachero! look for SBD’s Water Wednesday feature coming in July — we’ll share water conservation tips and strategies. Thank you for sharing yours.

5 | Mike from Backyard Water Fountains

June 10th, 2009 at 3:55 pm

Water conservation is becoming more important with each passing day. I am glad to see the council take a proactive approach to the problem. Hopefully, some time in the future, these efforts will pay off and water will be plentiful again.

6 | BeWaterWise Rep

June 12th, 2009 at 4:01 am

Today when fresh water level in Southern California has dropped alarmingly, the need to save water has grown in importance. As a result, we are currently heading into Mandatory Conservation. What this means is that restrictions or fines on water usage could be imposed in order to address our water shortage. Therefore we need to make a conscious effort to reduce and minimize our water usage. Easy things we can do to help save water include fixing leaky faucets, installing water efficient shower heads, toilets and sprinklers etc. Check out all the tips on the site and pass it on to fellow Southern Californians! http://tr.im/og6K

7 | SBKaren

June 15th, 2009 at 3:58 pm

I’m glad to read that mandatory conservation measures have been put in place. I’d really like the city to re-evaluate the watering done at parks. I live near Marina Park and walk through it often. I hate to see standing water or water run-off, a sign that too much water is being used.

8 | John Drysdale

July 2nd, 2009 at 9:37 am

Doesn’t the city use recycled water for park irrigation like Long Beach and CalTrans?

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