Amid a record drought, Mayor Eric Garcetti on Oct. 14 issued an executive directive to dramatically reduce the use of fresh water and the purchase of costly imported water.
"Our relationship with water must evolve. We cannot afford the water policies of the past," said Mayor Garcetti. "We must conserve, recycle and rethink how we use our water to save money and make sure that we have enough water to keep L.A. growing." The directive requires a reduction in fresh water use by 20% by 2017 and in the DWP’s purchase of imported water by 50% by 2024. The directive represents a comprehensive approach that addresses supply, use and recycling.
Through the directive, Garcetti is ordering city departments to sharply cut water use by reducing watering and replacing lawns or other water-intensive landscaping at city facilities, street medians and sidewalk parkways, in addition to increasing city incentives to help L.A. residents do the same, including an increase in the DWP’s turf replacement incentive to $3.75 per square foot. Outdoor water use is a key area to address – it represents 50% of residential consumption.
Angelenos are asked to voluntarily reduce watering to two days a week; to use DWP rebates to install low water landscaping and more efficient plumbing fixtures and appliances; and to ensure pools are covered to reduce water lost to evaporation. If targets are not met through the combination of mandatory city actions and voluntary resident actions, residential mandates will be implemented, including new watering, swimming pool and car washing restrictions. Garcetti urges residents to visit www.lamayor.org/drought for information on how to access incentives and lower their water bills through conservation.
“Keep in mind that reducing water use is not just good for the environment, it lowers water bills,” he added during a ceremony Tuesday. “Right now, we’re paying up to $1,032 per acre foot of water. Conserving that same amount of water through DWP rebate programs costs up to 30% less. Reaching our target and reducing per capita water use by 20% would save our ratepayers up to $120 million annually.”
Sierra Club is on board
"We don't need to look further than our dried up streams and record droughts in California. The effects of the climate crisis are here, and the Sierra Club applauds Mayor Garcetti for his plan to respond to climate disruption by changing the way we manage and care for our state's vital water supply," said Michael Brune, Executive Director of the Sierra Club. "The Mayor's plan for city-wide water conservation and recycling in Los Angeles will help ensure that we clean up, protect, and wisely use local water sources as demand for water increases and regional supplies decline. It will also help reduce our use of costly imported water, creating a more resilient economy in the future. But even the best water management will not be enough if we don't quickly move to stem dangerous carbon pollution, and Los Angeles must continue its historic progress toward a carbon free, clean energy economy."
A coalition of environmental leaders made the following statement Oct. 14 in response to the Mayor's executive directive:
The signatories to this letter applaud Mayor Garcetti for his bold proposal to increase water conservation in Los Angeles with a 20% reduction in water use by 2017.
As leaders of organizations who are focused on helping Southern California develop sustainable water use practices, we strongly endorse Mayor Garcetti’s call to action. We agree with the Mayor that we all need to act - now.
We thank Mayor Garcetti for his leadership in addressing the drought crisis early enough to avoid unacceptable consequences. We cannot live without water. But water shortages will have a significant impact on public health, on our quality of life, on social equity, and on our pocketbooks.
We support the Mayor for setting measurable water conservation goals that push everyone in Los Angeles – government agencies, private businesses, and all residents – to do their fair share in reducing water waste. We know it may be challenging, but these water conservation goals are well within our reach.
Liz Crosson
Executive Director
Los Angeles Waterkeeper
Esther Feldman
President
Community Conservation Solutions
Steve Fleischli
Water Program Director & Senior Attorney
NRDC
Dr. Mark Gold
Former President
Heal the Bay
Alix Hobbs
President
Heal the Bay
Adi Liberman
President
Coalition for Our Water Future
Andy Lipkis
President
TreePeople
Miguel A. Luna
Executive Director
Urban Semillas
Melanie Winter
Founder & Director
The River Project
In addition, the directive creates the Mayor's Water Cabinet, which will be chaired by Deputy Mayor Doane Liu and includes the city’s first-ever Chief Sustainability Officer, Matt Petersen, and representatives from the DWP, Bureau of Sanitation, Recreation and Parks, the Metropolitan Water District and the city's Proposition O Citizens Oversight Advisory Committee. The Mayor's Water Cabinet will be responsible for ensuring city departments hit targets outlined in the directive and will focus on long-term initiatives to ensure long-term sustainability of L.A.'s water supply, including:
- Increasing the local water supply through an integrated water strategy that coordinates groundwater remediation, stormwater capture and storage, green infrastructure, recycled water, and conservation
- Assessing the current tiered water rate system and identifying ways to improve it so that it optimally encourages conservation and local water use.
- Ensuring L.A. is in a leadership position on state rules and regulations related to water use.