The Laguna desert
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Laguna’s lush vegetation is a con.
“There is only one way to get green, and that is water,” said
Michael Dunbar, general manager of South Coast Water District.
Not a plentiful commodity in a desert.
Despite its lush vegetation and the ocean in its backyard, Laguna
is part of the Southern California desert and totally dependent on
imported water for drinking and irrigation, according to Dunbar and
Renae Hinchey, his counterpart at the Laguna Beach County Water
District.
“It is amazing how many people think water comes from the tap,”
Hinchey said.
Dunbar and Hinchey were guest speakers Monday night at the Laguna
Canyon Conservancy dinner meeting. South Coast supplies water to
Laguna from Nyes Place to the southern border of the city. Laguna
County supplies the rest.
Laguna’s water comes from Northern California and from the
Colorado River, a source that is drying up.
Under a 1922 compact, California is entitled to 4.4 million
acre-feet of water per year, but the state routinely exceeds that
amount.
“We haven’t lived within our means,” Hinchey said.
The state has been siphoning off 5.2 million acre-feet of water
for at least a decade, Hinchey said, drawing from supplies allotted
to Nevada and Arizona.
“They want their share back and the Department of the Interior has
mandated a reduction to 4.4 by 2016,” Hinchey said.
Agricultural needs in Palo Verde and the Imperial and Coachella
valley get first dibs on the allotment. The Metropolitan Water
District, from which the local districts buy water, gets about
550,000 acre-feet a year, Hinchey said.
Laguna’s districts pump 21 million gallons of water annually to
11,500 customers in the 10 square miles of the city, serving 32,000
residents, not to mention 3 million visitors a year.
The district’s resources include 165 miles of pipe, 27 reservoirs,
41 million gallons of stored water, 18 pumping stations and 1,275
fire hydrants, including the polished brass one in front of Laguna
Beach County offices at 306 Third St.
“Sixty percent of the water is used for landscaping and lawns,”
Hinchey said. “There is a preference in Laguna for nonnative plants
and an inclination to over-water.”
A couple of years ago, the district partnered with Mike Parker and
the fire safe council to relandscape its front yard, now a showplace
of native plants.
“They need two-thirds less water to survive,” Hinchey said.
Visit o7bewaterwise.com f7for tips on ways to save water out of
doors.
Both districts urge water conservation and offer advice on
landscaping, as well as rebates for the purchase of water-efficient
washing machines, low-flow toilets and irrigation systems.
Guests at the dinner picked up free water-saving hose nozzles,
which are available at the South Coast district’s Laguna Beach
office, which is located at 31592 West St.
“We have a man who visits homes to explain conservation methods --
how it saves money,” Vice President Bob Moore said. “People need to
learn that conservation is a way of life.”
Conservation also saves money -- nice at a time when rates are
escalating to keep ahead of higher costs to the districts.
“I was asked tonight to talk about desalination and future water
-- subjects I could talk about for days,” Dunbar said. “The ocean is
the largest reservoir in the world and we have to use it. It is
drought-proof and won’t ever run out of water.
“The United States is one of the few countries in the world that
does not have large desalination projects. We have to find sites and
we are not going to tear down two acres of Laguna Beach to do it.”
South Coast has an ideal site for a desalination project,
according to Dunbar -- 10 acres near the ocean on the San Juan Creek.
He hopes to see a project completed by 2015.
The joint presentation by Dunbar and Hinchey was their first
appearance as speakers at the Laguna Canyon Conservancy dinner, said
Linda Homscheid, the district’s public information officer.
“I really enjoyed the meeting and I loved the camaraderie I saw,”
Homschneid said. “It was a great gathering of people who want to
share ideas about the ecology and ways to improve Laguna.”
Conservancy meetings take a hiatus during festival season, when
Tivoli Terrace serves as a public restaurant, and resume the first
Monday in September unless it’s Labor Day, as happened this year.
Reservations are required. Dinner tickets are $10 for conservancy
members, $15 for nonmembers, payable at the door. Memberships are
$10.
Guest speakers have included former Congressman Chris Cox, Joan
Irvine Smith, and Supervisor Tom Wilson.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to Suite 22 in the Lumberyard,
384 Forest Ave.; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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