
Drought
makes news when it affects cities
Baxter Black
December 27, 2007
The
drought in the south made the news. Not because North Carolina
Cattlemen’s pasture is drying up or
Kentucky
soybean crop is
compromised, but because
Atlanta
is running out of tap
water!
Atlanta
is one of the biggest
metropolitan areas in the
U.S.
Its biggest city water
reservoir is
Lake
Lanier
and the Governor of Georgia
is pleading, threatening Baxter Black and demanding the federal
government (Army Corps of Engineers) to hold back water presently being
released to protect an endangered mollusk downstream.
Klamath
Lake
’s sucker
Sound familiar? Does the name “short-nosed sucker”
come to mind? In the spring of 2001 the federal government ruled that
most all stored
Klamath
Lake
irrigation water would be
diverted to protect the endangered short-nosed sucker downriver. The
devastation of the
Oregon
farming community of 50,000
was virtually ignored. It’s easy to be green when it isn’t personal.
There’s probably not too many Atlantans who lost any sleep over the
shortnosed sucker, but ask them what they think of the endangered
mollusk in
Lake
Lanier
.
We in rural
America
are very aware of the
voracious demand for water by growing metropolis.
Denver
is buying up the farmer’s
water rights along the
Arkansas River
.
Los Angeles
turned Bishop,
Calif.
, into a dust bowl and is
now seeking to dry up the
Imperial Valley
.
Phoenix
and
Las Vegas
continue to look for more
ways to increase their share of the
Colorado River
.
At the same time,
Colorado
won’t allow any more dams
in the mountains just west of
Denver
, the Sierra Club wants to
drain
Glen
Canyon
Lake
and
Nevada
,
Colorado
,
Arizona
and
California
rank high in the list of
fastest-growing states. Just as flooding brings quick destruction to
cities like
New Orleans
, drought brings a slow
death. The hottest, driest time in recent memory was the Dirty Thirties.
Mass exodus of the
Great Plains
was the result. I don’t
expect to see people emigrating from
Atlanta
. Maybe they will enact some
water conservation methods, but regardless, I have no doubt the city
will continue to grow in population and water use will increase.
It is also predictable that the bulk of the sacrifice
to keep them afloat will be made by those folks miles away trying to
make a living along tributaries that run in and out of
Lake
Lanier
.
I sympathize with those elected officials who have to
make the hard decisions necessary to keep civilization’s plumbing,
electricity and highways functioning, but I remind them of William
Jennings Bryan’s admonition when they start thinking it’s okay to
sacrifice the agrarian community to keep the city’s cup full; “Burn
down your cities and leave our farms and your cities will spring up
again as if by magic; but destroy our farms and the grass will grow in
the streets of every city in the country.”
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