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PEP Archives | May 2002
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By DIANE S. WILLIAMS
Ashokan Reservoir lies in a valley of the Catskill Mountains, a two-hour
drive north of New York City. The area, one of the largest freshwater
sources in the country, usually provides 350 million gallons of drinking
water a day to the Big Apple and its surrounding counties.
When the reservoir is full, its blue waters reach to just below the
guardhouse bridge. But an unpredictably dry autumn and a snowless
winter failed to replenish upstate water sources this spring.
By April, the waters had receded and bared slate crags and driftwood.
As the water level fell, small dusty islands appeared, dotting the
reservoir basin.
The city's upstate reservoirs are at 40 percent of their capacity;
normally they would be 90 percent full.
With chances unlikely that the region will get the 25 inches of rain
needed to quench the parched reserves, New York City Mayor Michael
R. Bloomberg declared a Stage 1 Drought Emergency April 1.
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The situation is urgent: Without strict conservation,
a protracted dry spell would drain the city's reservoirs. The Dept.
of Environmental Protection and local police are to enforce restrictions
on water use. "The city is in the midst of the worst drought
it has experienced in a decade," said the mayor.
To protect the water supply from further erosion and
contamination, DEP Watershed Maintainers, Supervisors and Engineers
from Locals 376, 1322 and 375 are undergoing training and certification.
They are prepared to treat and purify water and upgrade pumping station
systems that could be used, should drought conditions worsen.
Veteran Maintainer Bill Quinlan remembers the Chelsea pumping station,
a Hudson River viaduct that was last used in the drought of 1989.
If the drought continues, DEP could reopen Chelsea to allow more than
100 million gallons of water to flow into downstate reservoirs.
Continued conservation is key
In the meantime, DEP crews maintain area bridges, remove debris, stones
and sand that can clog drains and dam delicate streams that flow into
the Ashokan.
"I want to thank the Watershed Maintainers and other members
of DC 37, who work so hard to conserve and protect our resources and
to keep our water supply infrastructure operating efficiently,"
said DEP Commissioner Christopher O. Ward.
New York residents have pitched in by voluntarily conserving water.
Such measures have reduced usage by some 30 million gallons a day.
The average person uses around 60 gallons of water daily, and more
stringent measures have been ordered (see box) to further reduce water
use.
As the summer months arrive and we wait for rain, New Yorkers must
continue to conserve, conserve, conserve.