- Location
- NE Texas
Water is a complex issue. If you could divert, store, whatever any and all water that hit your property, upstream farmers would bankrupt downstream farmers. Not everyone has groundwater to pump or if they do, it's not infinite. If you're interested in the water history of the west (which is surprisingly interesting, just might make you really hate the gov't...) read Cadillac Desert. Great book, and it really gives you an idea of how vital water is to our pork barrel.It may not be new but its still a load of crap! Your land you paid for...but you only get the dirt, sorry. What next... Charge for the air that flows through your property? Maybe fine you if you kill a bug on your own kitchen table. Oh... and since the dirt you bought contains trace minerals...well, sorry. Governments gotta take that too.
Socialist bunch of BS IMHO. We need less government, not more! Less hand outs and more willing to sweat to prosper.
It may not be new but its still a load of crap! Your land you paid for...but you only get the dirt, sorry. What next... Charge for the air that flows through your property? Maybe fine you if you kill a bug on your own kitchen table. Oh... and since the dirt you bought contains trace minerals...well, sorry. Governments gotta take that too.
Socialist bunch of BS IMHO. We need less government, not more! Less hand outs and more willing to sweat to prosper.
I think all the water stuff out there is pretty interesting...I've always been a sucker for dams/waterfalls/viaducts/etc. More from the mechanical & physical side than politcal though.
The Mulholland Dam story is pretty interesting as well.
Water is a complex issue. If you could divert, store, whatever any and all water that hit your property, upstream farmers would bankrupt downstream farmers.
The intent is to prevent large companies from interfering the hydro cycle on a large scale.In Colorado, two new laws were recently passed that exempt certain small-scale rainwater collection systems, like the kind people might install on their homes, from collection restrictions.
while I think that outlawing rainwater collection is a bit extreme and, since it can't be enforced, pointless.
you do not have the right to divert or collect the water running through your property.
clean fresh water is one of the most finite resources on this planet if everyone could manipulate the water on their property however they wished our society would die.
How do you figure? Do you even know how much water farming actually uses?
Farming uses a TINY fraction of the water in an area. There's no chance of "upstream farmers bankrupting downstream farmers."
Where do you live? Back east, it's very different from the west. Much of the west is desert. I can tell you that a farmer in Idaho uses 10 acre-feet of water in a year. I can also tell you that the large majority of the water being doled out from the Colorado River to the various states party to the Colorado river compact use that water for farm irrigation. Most of the water being diverted from the Owens River Valley and the Feather River (the latter via gigantic aqueducts and monstrous pumps to push the water up and over the Tehachapi mountains) by LA goes to farm irrigation.How do you figure? Do you even know how much water farming actually uses?
Farming uses a TINY fraction of the water in an area. There's no chance of "upstream farmers bankrupting downstream farmers."
It rains so much here in the pacific northwest that everyone could catch and store RAIN WATER that fell on their property and it would do no harm.
It's summer and it rained a little today. I truly believe that the majority of you fail to realize just how much water we have up here.
So I pay for the water into my home. Then pay for the same water that leaves my home. Now you say I should pay for the water that falls on my home, if I try to catch it. Try this one out. In the city of Portland OR where NW_zj_scott lives there is a rain runoff tax on all home owners for the rain that falls on their roof, travels through their gutters and down into the cities storm drain system. Owning a house boat. (for those who don't know. A house boat is a floating house on our water ways.) Does not exempt you from paying the tax. Everyone has to pay the tax. Now is you disconnect your gutter from the storm drain or otherwise catch and store the rain runoff you may be fined or worse. Explain to me the reasoning for all this non northwesterners. Please explain.
Some uses of water are exempt from the requirement to obtain a permit. These are called “exempt uses.”
Exempt uses of surface water include:
...
7. Rainwater: collection and use of rainwater from an artificial impervious surface (like a parking lot or a building’s roof).
I can tell you that a farmer in Idaho uses 10 acre-feet of water in a year.
A bit(well a lot) Doomsday but who is to say in 100 years from now water becomes very scarce in places(like here in arizona). The price of water would go up as would demand while people look for another source. Rain, collecting the rain provides free water in replace of high price water. The people missing out on selling high price water need a way to control it. Make rain collecting illegal and enforce it by flying over houses to find possible collectors. Yes that would be a crazy extreme but if their is something to be profited off of, people will try.
And I can tell you that even a small stream delivers 10 acre-feet of water every few days. A decent sized river delivers that every few hours.
a true indicator of what little freedom we actually have here in the U.S.