And watering the lawn is a definite no-no.
Facing a serious drought, Las Vegas is diving into action in an effort to reduce the amount of water waste. With the Lake Mead reservoir drying up, Clark County officials voted to shrink the size of swimming pools to no more than 600 square feet.
The largest county in Nevada has about 200,000 residential swimming pools for 2.4 million people. “Having a pool in Las Vegas is like having a second car. It’s that common,” said Kevin Kraft, owner of a family custom pool design company.
A projected 3.2 million gallons of water will be saved in the first year and could increase to 32 million by the year 2032. The Southern Nevada Water Authority is working to put the measure into effect this year. This rule will only apply to new pools and spas at single-family homes.
Nevada has other plans to conserve water, such as removing lawns and replacing them with artificial grass that doesn’t need to be watered. A new law that takes affect in 2027 will ban ‘non-functional’ grass from housing developments. This will not include parks, golf courses or single-family homes.
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Band-aid solutions that are too late anyway.
ReplyDeleteToo bad.
You can have an oasis in the desert; just better not make it too big.
62 golf courses - seriously?
CC
Making a video with a fucking mask on is fucking stupid.
ReplyDeleteduh...
DeleteJaina Moan obviously does not understand what the problem is. The problem is because of Global Cooling there is less rain and snow on the Colorado watershed. That cannot be fixed. Limiting the size of new pools will not address the problem. Existing pools must not be refilled and golf courses will have to zenoscape.
ReplyDeleteflooding in Vegas last night. go figure...
ReplyDelete