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Environment: Valley Water rebate program helps residents reduce watering
South Valley residents can get up to $3,000 to help remove lawns and plant drought-tolerant landscaping Photo by Marty CheekBob and Nancy Wells in the front yard of their home. They took advantage of [...]
Main story: Price of rebuilding Anderson Dam balloons to $1.2 billion
Several factors have led to the rising cost of the project including inflation and worker shortage Photo by Marty CheekAnderson Dam, looking west, has doubled in price and is now scheduled to be completed [...]
Environment: Protecting Coyote Valley supports long-term viability of local farming
In the past four decades, 45 percent of prime farmland was converted into urban sprawl area A farm field in Mid Coyote Valley at sunrise. Photo courtesy Open Space Authority By Staff Report [...]
Environment: Water conservation must become a way of daily life
Use sprinklers between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.
By Staff Reports
The multi-year drought may be over after last winter’s deluge of precipitation, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t still conserve water. That was the Valley Water Board of Directors’ message after the agency adopted a resolution declaring water conservation must be a way of life.
The board also unanimously passed an ordinance with permanent water waste prohibitions to ensure water is not misused, even during non-drought periods.
As part of the ordinance, the following water-wasting actions are now permanently prohibited:
- Using sprinklers between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.
- Causing runoff while watering any outdoor landscape.
- Watering outdoors within 48 hours of measurable rainfall.
- Using leaking plumbing fixtures, sprinklers, or irrigation systems without repairing them after written notification from a retailer or Valley Water.
- Watering non-functional turf at commercial, industrial, and institutional properties, including common areas of homeowner’s associations and multi-family residential properties.
- Washing cars, except by handwashing, by a hose with an automatic shut-off nozzle, or at a facility.
- Washing building exteriors or mobile homes with a hose without an automatic shut-off nozzle.
- Washing sidewalks, walkways, driveways, patios, parking lots, or other hard-surfaced, non-porous ground areas except in cases where health and safety are at risk.
Valley Water’s inspectors respond to reports of waste and violations. Reports in Santa Clara County can be reported through www.valleywater.org, emailing [email protected], or by calling (408) 630-2000.