I
remember the surprise one day when I found that the local Safeway in Cottonwood
was selling gallon jugs of water for less than it was being sold in Cleveland , OH (bottled,
of course, in New York ).
About
that time I read Charles Bowden's Killing the Hidden Waters and
realized I wasn't crazy...at least there was one other person thinking as I
was.
Water
is a diminishing resource and should be taxed or priced as such.
The small town ofClarkdale , Arizona , has restructured its water rates
and found that usage dropped by 50%.
The small town of
Growing
population in the state is part of the problem and, candidly, I've thought
endlessly for a solution of how one would control population in Arizona .
Part of
the problem will have to rest on price or rate structure...not a popular solution
these days.
Tax
water use to a level that prohibits lush lawns in Phoenix, tax it to a level
that prohibits economical establishment of cotton farms in southern parts of
the state, tax it to the extent that makes stock/stock tanks uneconomical, tax
it so you question flushing the toilet every time you pee.
Charge
enough so that makes an 8,000 gallon swimming pool in Phoenix a true luxury
.
The
first year or two I was out here, water wasn't an issue. I've noticed,
increasingly, that one water issue or another is becoming a factor in mining
or, less so, the weather.
Realistically, a
water inventory for the state needs to be established and maybe the
results will point the way to a solution.
No comments:
Post a Comment