Thursday, July 8, 2021

Council: A Restrained 4th of July

 


            Though we had no official fireworks show this year, the unofficial show of both legal and illegal fireworks in my neighborhood was surprisingly restrained.  It seems last year’s Almeda fires awoke many residents to the fire danger that has been building over decades of rationing water by rates and poor enforcement of our weed codes. 

This year, the City has certainly been keener to enforce our codes regarding seeding weeds, and to obey them as well.  I was delighted to see the railroad weeds cut, and to see seeding and dry weeds being cut almost every time they are called in. 

But we should not have to complain to enforce our weed and trash codes.  That was a job for police and fire until 2006.

            As I walk neighborhoods, putting flyers to “Contact our City Council and Manager” on doors, I have not been talking to many people.  But I am also giving gardening leaflets and these flyers to store clerks and others as prizes.  Nearly all agree that it would be good to reform our rates so everyone can afford to water their yards, protecting our city from fire.  “Protecting our city from fire” really strikes a nerve this year.

            We all know that water stops fire.  Green grass does not burn, and neither do most green plants, if they are kept watered.  After plants flower, go to seed and dry out, they burn hot and fast.  That is why we have a weed code that mandates cutting or killing weeds before they flower and go to seed.  

Fire danger is a major reason we built our water plant.  Before that, Grants Pass burned, as many cities did without pressurized water to put out fires and to water yards so fires don’t spread. 

            From the time we built a water plant until we started rationing water by rates in the ‘90s, the rates were kept as low and stable as possible, so residents could garden their city, and so pressurized water to fight fires would be as close as the nearest spigot or hydrant. 

            The city paid all the plant overhead with our monthly base charges and covered only unit costs with unit prices.  We paid for the water system with our monthly charge, and the water was nearly free, so everyone with a yard was free to garden and protect their neighborhood with water.  We must return to that rate system.

 

Speech to the City Council, 7-7-2021, published at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com

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


1 comment:

  1. Rycke, thank you for following up on this. It has become so expensive to water in the city that a friend of mine had to give up raising a vegetable garden and that is not right.

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