I found myself getting a little "hot under the collar" when I was reading his story of how he was driving home and saw two separate people violating the ordnance and watering their lawns. Even more frustrating for me was the fact that they were doing so in the middle of the day when it is actually detrimental to their lawns because the grass gets scorched by the evaporation of the water caused by the heat of the mid-day sun. The actions he took are what more people should do we are all responsible for protecting the water supply so I must applaud "The Gunny" for having the intestinal fortitude and integrity to actually tell these individuals that they were not supposed to be doing what they were doing.
I also empathize with his level of confusion and frustration toward the reaction of the Round Rock Police department basically telling him "they don't care". It is tantamount to the city implementing the restrictions just for the sake of saying that they had, without having any actual intention of ever enforcing the new laws. This is an all too common byproduct of a pessimistic and non-proactive government and society. It seems to me the only time we really care about the major issues we face like; our current drought and water supply problem, is when they have become to severe to actually do anything meaningful about.
My example is the levee system on the Mississippi River the levee system built by the Army Core of Engineers. The system has long been known to be completely inadequate if there were a large magnitude flood. The State and Federal Governments just kept on passing the buck on to the next guys in line until finally we had a huge flood event in early 2011 and the inadequate levee system all along the rivers length failed and destroyed millions of acres. This may not have been preventable entirely but it certainly could have been mitigated to a much greater extent than it was.
This is why we as Texans seriously need to take a real, long-term, extensive and proactive approach to the impending disaster which we face of running out of fresh water. If you think I'm just exaggerating then you are fooling yourselves! You can think of our water supply as a system. The way a system works is it receives input and produces outputs. The inputs in this case are rain and snowfall which drains into the Colorado River system and the output is the fresh water we harvest from the system. In order to maintain the system there has to be a balance between the input and output levels, we are currently experiencing the worst shortage of input in Texas history (the draught) yet are increasing the output to the highest level in Texas history due to our increasing population. If we are not able to bring the problem under control then we face the failure of the system completely and all we are left with is nothing but empty glasses and dried up communities.
No comments:
Post a Comment