Thursday, February 19, 2026

Making oil and natural gas providers pay for wildfires?

 


Paradise lost

There is a movement among some states to make our oil and natural gas providers pay for wildfires, when cities have dried themselves out over the last 40 years, starting in 1986.  

Cities, states, and the EPA bought into a conjoined hoax that started in ‘86: the idea that “Fresh water is a scarce and precious resource that must be conserved!” ignoring both the water cycle and normal cost accounting.

 That same year, we heard about global warming.  I think the financier started the hoax but needed proof.  He started the “scarce and precious” water scare.  What could go wrong? 

Cities overcharge their ratepayers for their use of water and undercharge them for overhead, a system designed to jack up the price of water use.  In Grants Pass, water unit rates carry 40% of overhead and increase 5.28% over inflation every year.  It’s the only way they can pay the overhead. 

Mankind has changed weather three times, and it always involves water:

 

·       killing beavers, who kept water in the land.  This caused country and cities to burn and turned most of the West into desert. 

 

·       cities built water plants to keep cities from burning, by piping water into every occupied building.  People gardened. The water was cheap to use.

 

·       sprinklers evaporate half of what they throw! This is not waste; it feeds the water cycle, making rain.  Rain returned to cities and their surroundings.  The ‘80’s was a wet decade. 

In 1986, cities began to buy into rationing water by rates. They ration clean water with high unit rates, causing many ratepayers to eliminate their greatest use of water: Property maintenance.  These people lose their best insurance against wildfire: a green, watered yard.

 

2-4-2026 2-minute Speech to Grants Pass City Council

Published at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com and shared on Facebook, and X.com.

Like Ratepayers for Fair Water and Sewer Pricing on Facebook.

 

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



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