Amidst the deep-seated drought, the Austin City Council has approved new policies for long-term water conservation and drought response. Following the city’s obligation under state law to update its drought and conservation plans every five years, the approved plans map out the year-round goals for reducing water wastage and consumption. The plans will be revisited by the end of the year, with potential amendments to further tighten the regulations.
The approval of these conservation plans, with strings attached, comes after the city’s water task force declined to give its support. The task force, dubbed the Water Forward Task Force, considered the conservation goals as relatively inadequate in safeguarding Austin’s water supply. The task force, composed of volunteers appointed by the City Council members—- many of whom are experts in water management, conservation, and law—- indicated that Austin Water could do more to enforce its water-saving rules.
In defense of the newly set goals and strategies, Austin Water maintained that the proposed measures were realistic and achievable compared to past policies. The officials underscored the importance of approving the new plans due to the probability of the drought worsening in the summer. The city coordinates its water management policy with the Lower Colorado River Authority, demanding renewed plans to tackle the escalating crisis.
As the ongoing drought left city reservoirs in the Highland Lakes around 43% full, Bill Bunch, head of the Save Our Springs Alliance, responded to the crisis, saying, “Y’all are sleepwalking through a crisis.” He suggested the plans be sent back to the task force for further tightening.
The City Council resolved to approve both of the plans as proposed by Austin Water. However, they assured the public that the plans would undergo a revision as part of another water planning process called Water Forward. This plan, also updated every five years, aims at ensuring a reliable water supply over the next 100 years and is devised in consultation with the same water task force that turned down the current conservation proposals.
Conservation and drought response debates have taken on added urgency. With Austin reservoirs less than half-full and an expectation of another hot dry summer, water resources are under perilous pressure. On the broader scale, climatologists predict that Central Texas will continue to experience longer and more devastating droughts as global warming proceeds, underlining the necessity of robust and watertight water conservation strategies.
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