The Prague Post - Paper plates and short showers: life with no water in Arizona

EUR -
AED 4.29562
AFN 82.46501
ALL 96.995159
AMD 447.926531
ANG 2.09346
AOA 1072.589524
ARS 1655.881479
AUD 1.776525
AWG 2.105411
AZN 1.988839
BAM 1.946419
BBD 2.356045
BDT 142.363874
BGN 1.953564
BHD 0.440982
BIF 3450.534577
BMD 1.169673
BND 1.49808
BOB 8.082906
BRL 6.355884
BSD 1.169762
BTN 103.054328
BWP 15.602536
BYN 3.957427
BYR 22925.585661
BZD 2.352611
CAD 1.620412
CDF 3358.130418
CHF 0.93337
CLF 0.028837
CLP 1131.272084
CNY 8.329822
CNH 8.333047
COP 4589.210987
CRC 590.653334
CUC 1.169673
CUP 30.996328
CVE 110.387878
CZK 24.365807
DJF 207.874881
DKK 7.465214
DOP 74.537368
DZD 151.906031
EGP 56.115404
ERN 17.545091
ETB 167.729013
FJD 2.657266
FKP 0.863581
GBP 0.865347
GEL 3.146089
GGP 0.863581
GHS 14.16867
GIP 0.863581
GMD 84.801603
GNF 10123.517596
GTQ 8.964794
GYD 244.612719
HKD 9.110815
HNL 30.587537
HRK 7.532343
HTG 153.061662
HUF 393.12351
IDR 19249.187279
ILS 3.911741
IMP 0.863581
INR 103.187184
IQD 1532.271287
IRR 49213.981132
ISK 143.401602
JEP 0.863581
JMD 187.177892
JOD 0.829289
JPY 172.48989
KES 151.471828
KGS 102.287421
KHR 4683.36931
KMF 491.845639
KPW 1052.726163
KRW 1625.751766
KWD 0.357382
KYD 0.974785
KZT 627.68486
LAK 25338.033796
LBP 104744.193523
LKR 353.207708
LRD 233.6422
LSL 20.503955
LTL 3.45374
LVL 0.707523
LYD 6.333775
MAD 10.562732
MDL 19.388227
MGA 5231.368003
MKD 61.244829
MMK 2455.723416
MNT 4207.642919
MOP 9.382163
MRU 46.728068
MUR 53.594357
MVR 18.024904
MWK 2031.721962
MXN 21.79416
MYR 4.930151
MZN 74.694605
NAD 20.504547
NGN 1760.111989
NIO 42.915353
NOK 11.686709
NPR 164.887322
NZD 1.974478
OMR 0.449708
PAB 1.169737
PEN 4.056191
PGK 4.891279
PHP 66.719333
PKR 329.390922
PLN 4.251174
PYG 8378.61907
QAR 4.258548
RON 5.07158
RSD 117.159152
RUB 97.903322
RWF 1690.177106
SAR 4.38856
SBD 9.619182
SCR 17.182113
SDG 702.973177
SEK 10.981297
SGD 1.501374
SHP 0.919179
SLE 27.34112
SLL 24527.450102
SOS 668.462369
SRD 45.884508
STD 24209.864113
STN 24.855546
SVC 10.235669
SYP 15208.245213
SZL 20.504131
THB 37.183587
TJS 11.007215
TMT 4.105551
TND 3.396437
TOP 2.739492
TRY 48.268766
TTD 7.937744
TWD 35.522019
TZS 2907.914027
UAH 48.173134
UGX 4097.253203
USD 1.169673
UYU 46.744713
UZS 14486.396984
VES 180.93527
VND 30864.739369
VUV 140.547105
WST 3.256385
XAF 652.810765
XAG 0.028639
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.161099
XCG 2.108239
XDR 0.811214
XOF 652.093406
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.262689
ZAR 20.529975
ZMK 10528.458723
ZMW 28.044241
ZWL 376.634144
  • RBGPF

    1.8400

    77.27

    +2.38%

  • SCS

    -0.3400

    16.88

    -2.01%

  • BCC

    -3.7300

    85.29

    -4.37%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    56.26

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -0.3400

    81.22

    -0.42%

  • NGG

    -0.0600

    70.36

    -0.09%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    24.14

    -0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.37

    -0.08%

  • GSK

    0.7300

    40.78

    +1.79%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    47.19

    -0.25%

  • RIO

    -1.8500

    61.87

    -2.99%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.78

    +0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    24.2

    -0.79%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    11.86

    +0.51%

  • BP

    0.1800

    34.09

    +0.53%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    14.65

    -0.89%

Paper plates and short showers: life with no water in Arizona
Paper plates and short showers: life with no water in Arizona / Photo: Frederic J. BROWN - AFP

Paper plates and short showers: life with no water in Arizona

With its cactus-filled garden and breathtaking views of the rocky peaks of the Arizona desert, Wendy and Vance Walker's home in the Rio Verde Foothills seemed to be a little slice of paradise.

Text size:

Until the water was cut off.

The neighboring city of Scottsdale decided it could no longer afford to sell its dwindling supply from the Colorado River, as a decades-long drought bites the American West.

For three months, the couple have eaten from disposable paper plates, had lightning-quick showers only every few days and collected rainwater to flush their toilets.

"A lot of people don't take the drought seriously," said Wendy, as she stood in the kitchen of their $600,000 home.

"And we, even though we live in the desert, we really didn't take it seriously either.

"Until you have to."

- Tankers -

Homes in fast-growing Rio Verde Foothills have never had running water -- there are no mains pipes -- so the 500 households without access to their own wells bought tankerloads from Scottsdale.

Most of that city's supply comes from the Colorado River, a mighty watercourse that rises in the Rocky Mountains and winds 1,450 miles (2,300 kilometers) through seven US states and Mexico, providing a lifeline for 40 million people.

But what was one of the world's great rivers has now shrunk.

Human-caused climate change means the once-bountiful snowpack that feeds the river has dwindled.

What snow there is melts more quickly because of higher temperatures, and more is lost to evaporation.

What does become river water is subject to a more than century-old agreement on who can take how much.

That agreement, made when it rained more and there were fewer inhabitants, was always a fiddle -- a political fix that allowed users to take more water than was added every year.

Now the federal government in Washington has told river users that the difference must be brought into balance: they must slash consumption by a quarter.

City managers in Scottsdale, faced with meeting their own targets, decided Rio Verde Foothills -- which they view as profligate development -- would no longer be able to buy their water.

On January 1, they closed the city's supply station to delivery drivers like John Hornewer, who says he now has to drive for hours to find enough water to fill his 6,000-gallon (22,000-liter) tanker.

He reluctantly doubled his prices to cover the extra cost of the gasoline and the overtime.

"We've become the first domino to fall and feel the effect of what a drought actually means," he told AFP.

"As water becomes more and more scarce, and it becomes more and more valuable, cities and communities are going to want to protect their own."

- Public or private ownership -

Arizona state officials stepped in last month to urge Scottsdale -- run by the Democratic Party -- to offer an accommodation to Rio Verde Foothills, an unincorporated settlement in Republican Party-run Maricopa County.

For a transitional period, Scottsdale would be allowed to buy additional water and -- for a cost -- reauthorize deliveries.

There was one catch: the county would have to cough up the cash.

Maricopa officials balked, and negotiations are stalled.

Ultimately, Rio Verde Foothills knows it will have to come up with a stable solution, and the town's residents are at loggerheads with each other over how to do that.

Scottsdale wants Rio Verde Foothills to establish a public body that will be able to plan for the long term, and will be subject to the same government rules as other water suppliers.

But well owners in Rio Verde Foothills say such a body would effectively be sucking their water out from underneath them and redistributing it to others. Why should others get what we have paid for, they ask.

- 'Drunk on growth' -

The uncertainty was too much for Lothar Rowe, a German immigrant who has 50 horses on a ranch in Rio Verde Foothills, where he has lived for two decades.

He splashed out $500,000 for a piece of land with its own well -- good for as long as the aquifers are.

"I can't believe it," says the 86-year-old.

"We're talking about the United States: they went to the Moon, they're trying to go to Mars, and they have no water here."

Fellow resident Rusty Childress said the problem stemmed from head-in-the-sand development.

"The issue from the very beginning was that we were all in denial," the 64-year-old told AFP.

"Nobody really thought this was going to happen."

Childress, a photographer, says developers exploit legal loopholes and continue to build in the area, despite not being able to guarantee the luxury homes they sell will have water.

"Buyer beware! No water in Rio Verde," reads a sign he put up in front of his house warning people who come to tour the half-built housing estates nearby.

"We're getting drunk on growth here," he says.

"But we can't have out-of-control growth with a real water issue."

W.Cejka--TPP