Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Misters cool yards, stop fire

 


            It is said by water “conservationists” that “sprinklers evaporate half of the water they throw,” and followed with, “Evaporation is waste.”  But the same Landscape Management teacher that told us this in 2000 when he was selling us on drip systems also told us that Grants Pass was in no danger of burning because green grass doesn’t burn.  Grass is watered with sprinklers.  There is a lot less green grass in Grants Pass now.

Evaporation is not waste; it cools, humidifies, and is the first step in the water cycle, followed by condensation and precipitation.  It can cool objects and the air down to 41 degrees F, the temperature at which water starts to evaporate.

Sprinklers are known to create a “bubble of moisture” around any property where they are used sufficiently.  An apartment complex that was threatened by the Almeda fire did not burn because the landlord knows this and keeps his properties watered with sprinklers.  Trailer parks, on the other hand, are largely pavement and/or gravel and are often not watered enough to keep a wind-driven fire from burning right through them. 

Misters evaporate nearly all of the water they emit if the mist is fine enough, and water the ground beneath them as well.  They increase humidity and cool the air as they evaporate, making it easier to breathe.  They reduce wildfire smoke by taking smoke particles to the ground.  You shouldn’t run sprinklers 24/7, but you can run misters around the clock when the weather is hot or we are being smoked by wildfires.  If every resident of a trailer park ran several standing misters when fire danger is high, it might not burn when a gravity wind blows up fires in their vicinity.

But there is more!  Misters can moisten and cool the soil to start seeds in summer when they normally would not readily sprout.  I’ve been starting clover, lettuce and collards seed and keeping them cool and moist until they grow enough root to survive.  They also can prevent transplant shock when planting in hot weather.

Most plants like more humidity than Grants Pass has ever provided in summer, even before water-rationing rates.  Misters among my blueberries on the west side of my yard keep plants all over my garden happier with more humidity and cool the air enough to keep pollen from burning when the temps are over 95 degrees, allowing corn and tomatoes to pollinate and produce.

Published 8-25-23 at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com

Like Ratepayers for Fair Water and Sewer Pricing on Facebook

 Rycke Brown, Natural Gardener           541-955-9040                 rycke@gardener.com


Saturday, June 19, 2021

Council: Cheap water bought fire safety

 


Honorable Council, Mayor and Manager,

            I was looking over the water section of your website and looked at “The Value of Water” page.  Three brochures were listed and shown: “Clean Clothes;” “Clean Drinking Water;” and “Treated Wastewater.”

            You are missing at least one brochure: “Irrigation and Fire Safety.”  But your pricing of our water does not reflect this.  Your price discrimination between customers and their uses of water has irrigation and fire suppression paying the same top tier price that single-family homeowners pay, which shows that you want to suppress these uses the most.  As Staff pointed out in 2008, irrigation uses the most water and it is most easily cut from household budgets. 

Our city is showing the result in brown, often weedy yards that could burn at a spark.  Last year’s fires have people on edge; they know that Grants Pass could burn in the next katabatic wind event like that of last September. 

Grants Pass did burn, as did many cities, before it had a water treatment plant.  It was rebuilt with brick.  I am sure that they built the water plant to allow our residents to keep their property safe with pressurized water.  They priced water as cheap as possible by the unit and paid for the overhead with base rates.  There was no competition; water service is a natural local monopoly.  The City did it so people could afford to use as much as they needed for every conceivable use.  It resulted in a clean and beautiful city in the 80’s.

Green grass does not burn.  Dry grass and weeds burn hot.   Fresh, cleaned water is not scarce or precious and should not be priced as though it is.  It is abundant and vital to our health, hygiene and fire safety and should be a cheap as possible to use.  Those big storage tanks on our hills give us the pressure to use cleaned water effectively for irrigation and fire suppression, all over the city, making our cleaned river water far superior to water delivered in ditches.

We used to have only one unit price for those who paid the base rate, and it was low, as it covered only the unit costs, those that change with the amount of water produced.  All of our overhead: plant; pipes; equipment; personnel; debt and maintenance; were paid through base rates, monthly charges for monthly bills.  You could go back to that system well before September.

 

Speech to the Grants Pass City Council, 6-16-2021, published at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com

Like Ratepayers for Fair Water and Sewer Pricing on Facebook

 Rycke Brown, Natural Gardener    541-955-9040    rycke@gardener.com


Saturday, June 5, 2021

Council: Act like Regulators

 


Honorable Council, Mayor and Manager,

            At our last meeting, I chided this Council, especially the member who wanted to nearly double our bulk water rates from $6.05/1000 gallons to $12 just to see what happens to demand.  The Council passed the increase unanimously, so you all share in that decision. 

It seems that little will happen to demand for that water, because the actual price of the water is still low compared to the cost of hauling it.  Water is, after all, not a scarce, precious resource; it is abundant and vital to families and farms in our county.  Even hauled water is a monopoly, because the cost of time and fuel exceeds any savings that might be realized by hauling water from Medford at $1.25/1000 gallons.   This explains how Cave Junction can charge $30/1000; they are just as far from us as we are from Medford.

            The Councilor who proposed this rate hike for our rural customers replied that he represents the citizens of this city.  If you truly represent and act as regulators to protect the residents of Grants Pass from the monopoly power of city utilities to run rates up to whatever the market can bear, then you would reform our water and sewer rate systems back to what we had before water rationing rates became a worldwide fad over the last 35 years. 

For over 50 years, we paid for all the overhead of our water plant, the expenses that do not rise and fall with our use of the service, in our monthly base rates.  We paid only marginal unit costs, which rise and fall with use, in our unit rates.  Sewage treatment was all base rates with no unit rates not long ago.  Unit rates for wastewater cleaning are oppressive to larger families who are often low income and multi-generational.  Overpriced water is oppressive, too.

Returning to the old rate system would pay all the expenses of our utilities at the least cost to customers every month and allow us to use all the water we want at a low price, as we did in the ‘80s and before, when our city was clean, green, and safe from fire because we put millions of gallons in the air every day of the growing season with our sprinklers and water vapor spread through the surrounding countryside for miles.

Please put utility rate reform on your agenda so we can all water our city and make it clean, green, beautiful, and safe again.

 Speech to the Grants Pass City Council, 6-2-2021, published at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com

Like Ratepayers for Fair Water and Sewer Pricing on Facebook

 Rycke Brown, Natural Gardener    541-955-9040    rycke@gardener.com