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The Georgia
Environmental Protection Division drafted the plan, acknowledging right up
front that the water in the state belongs to each and every one of us. It’s
a great start, but the solutions proposed should be strengthened to keep our
rivers flowing and our drinking water clean.
First, we need to make
sure that water continues to flow in rivers around the state. The current
plan, though, makes no guarantees. Metro Atlanta is growing rapidly with
limited water availability, and real estate developers are thirstily eyeing
the handful of rivers that flow through the metro area - as well as those
hundreds of miles away - for new sources of water. The draft plan alone
cannot require the metro Atlanta region to comply with its own provisions,
because that area is covered by a regional water plan that was developed in
2003. It remains unclear how the state plan works with the completed metro
plan to place common-sense limits on the amount of water available to add
more and more houses, shopping centers and pavement to the metro region.
Our water plan
should guarantee that metro Atlanta’s thirst does not trump the availability
of water for the rest of us. The plan should not allow us to be divided into
“two Georgias,” metro Atlanta and the rest of the state. It must ensure that
enough water remains in rivers outside of Atlanta in order to protect our
communities, economies and cultures; to protect fish, wildlife, recreation
and our children’s future.
Second, the plan
should propose specific efficiency and conservation requirements for all
water permit-holders so that efficient water use is required everywhere,
always. The draft plan says that goals for water efficiency will be
developed, but it is not clear if these goals will be based on significant
measurable reductions in water use, or whether they will apply to all water
users.
Third, for the
reasons outlined above, the plan should set a specific policy on how much
water must flow in our streams, or outline a process to develop such a
policy.
Fourth, the plan
must be enforceable with clear and transparent criteria for decision-making.
The current draft plan by itself is not enforceable and contains only policy
statements, recommendations and conditional language such as “may” and
“should,” rather than “will” and “shall.”
Finally - and
perhaps most important - no mention is made of funding to accomplish the
plan. Without sufficient funding, the plan is nothing more than paper. In
order to achieve success, we all need for local, state and federal
governments to commit to specific, stable funding for the plan at
significant levels over the course of several years.
The Georgia Water
Coalition (GWC) is a diverse group of 149 organizations working for a water
plan that will provide enough clean water for all of Georgia, now and for
future generations. GWC wants a plan that protects all of Georgia’s
communities, calls for efficient water use every day, provides for water
that is clean enough to drink and for fish that are safe enough to eat, and
involves the public in planning their own future. The coalition encourages
all citizens to become informed and to comment about the water plan, as it
has the potential to be one of the most important policies for our waterways
for years to come.
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