More

El Paso Conservation Plan Rips Up Grass To Save Water

By JUAN CARLOS LLORCA   08/27/11 02:59 PM ET   AP

EL PASO, Texas -- For decades this city in far West Texas defied the look of most desert communities, with neighborhoods boasting lush, green lawns and residents freely running their sprinklers.

Then a study released in 1979 showed just how close El Paso was to a crisis: At its rate of water use, the city would run dry within 36 years.

Over the next couple of decades the city took drastic measures to stabilize its water supply, undergoing a philosophical and physical facelift that included ripping up grass from many public places, installing rock and cactus gardens and offering financial incentives for residents to do the same.

Today, El Paso is among the few cities in the drought-stricken state not worrying about water. It's a distinction El Paso leaders attribute to a conservation plan that other cities in less arid climates such as San Antonio and Austin have tried to a limited extent amid receding water resources and booming population growth.

But even in El Paso, the changes have been a tough sell for some residents who cherish their lawns and have bypassed financial incentives to rip them out.

"In school, when they told us to draw a house, you would always draw it with grass," said Fred Fierro, 75, who wakes up early to water his turf with his wife.

The couple moved into their Cielo Vista neighborhood home in 1964 and "fell in love with the lawns, but now it's all rocks," said Fierro's wife Soledad, peering outside her window at her neighbors' gravel- and cactus-filled front yards, a style that now dominates the local landscape.

Over the past 20 years El Paso has paid residents a combined $11 million – $1 per square foot – to remove their grass and replace it with gravel, cement or desert plants. The city has permanent restrictions on watering days and reduced water consumption by offering special showerheads and rebates for water-efficient toilets.

The plan helped the city avoid a water crisis that other towns across West Texas now face, including the community of Robert Lee, which is rushing to find a new water source before its faucets run dry within the next several months.

Bigger cities facing diminishing water sources in less arid climates are hoping to duplicate El Paso's success by offering money to their residents in exchange for turf.

Austin offers a $20 to $30 rebate for each 100 square feet of turf removed as part of a pilot program. So far 70 residents have replaced their grass, and the plan may become permanent if the city sees enough water savings. The city also offers up to three free water-efficient toilets per household and rebates for new dishwashers.

San Antonio offers rebates and gift certificates of up to $400 to residents who choose certain grasses, reduce their turf and cut their water consumption. Only about 360 residents have taken part since the program began in 2008, and the utility estimates savings of about 1 million gallons per year. Overall, the city estimates it can save up to a billion gallons annually from all the water-saving measures combined.

Other cities such as Houston and Dallas have begun watering restrictions but don't expect to offer turf-removal incentives, despite the record-setting drought that has left parts of these normally green cities looking a little brown.

The idea of ripping out lawns would be shunned by some Dallas residents who pride themselves on pampering their grass.

"It would mean an awful lot of rock landscaping and I really don't care for that," said Ann Garman, whose well-manicured lawn was named "Yard of the Month" in her Dallas neighborhood earlier this summer. "... It would depend on how dire the need was."

Garman turns on her sprinkler three and sometimes four times a week despite the city's request for fewer watering days.

El Paso's desert climate played a large role in its early entry into the conservation effort. The city averages less than 10 inches of rain annually, while Houston typically gets around 50 inches. San Antonio, Austin and Dallas receive around 30.

Still, El Paso's actions could be a model for other water-starved cities if the state's second worst drought in history worsens and reservoirs continue to deplete. Only 9.6 inches of rain has fallen on average across Texas this year, and forecasters predict no relief soon.

The Hueco Bolson aquifer, the city's main water source, has stabilized since the city plan was implemented in 1991, and a recent study shows El Paso will have a steady supply for at least the next century, said Ed Archuleta, president of El Paso Water Utilities.

The city's annual water consumption in 2010 had dropped by 1.6 percent since 1990, while its population increased about 36 percent. The utility says the city saved more than $460 million that would have been needed for more pumping and treatment plants to accommodate higher water use.

Many homeowners replaced their grass with xeriscaping, which incorporates gravel and rock designs with plants that are accustomed to the dry climate. Neighborhoods are now a mix of mostly xeriscaped yards and an occasional green lawn.

"It's only common sense," said Pat McCaskill, who received rebates for using a water-efficient toilet and ripping out half of her front lawn.

Officials in other Texas cities wonder if the expected population boom over the next several decades will force others to adopt El Paso's ways.

"In the Southwest, you're always worried about the future where water is concerned," said Charles Stringer, Dallas's assistant director for water operations. "... What happens in 2060 when our population doubles?"

__

Associated Press Writer Linda Stewart Ball in Dallas contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

EL PASO, Texas -- For decades this city in far West Texas defied the look of most desert communities, with neighborhoods boasting lush, green lawns and residents freely running their sprinklers. Then...
EL PASO, Texas -- For decades this city in far West Texas defied the look of most desert communities, with neighborhoods boasting lush, green lawns and residents freely running their sprinklers. Then...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 56
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
05:07 PM on 08/29/2011
I think lawns should be a thing of the past i.e. the 50s. We as a planet cannot afford to waste water on something that is unnatural.
04:48 PM on 08/29/2011
The headline sounded crazy. Fortunately the content of the article wasn't.
photo
ontariogirl
Power to the People
10:05 AM on 08/29/2011
Drought tolerant plants. They are becoming more and more popular here as well. We had a really dry July and depending on the size of your property......watering is not a good option.
IMOPINIONH8D
because I want it empty...
09:09 AM on 08/29/2011
I havent cut my yard in over 3 years turned most of it into a vegetable garden and the rest is a flower garden. Trying to think of a way to make my lawn mower a decorative part of the landscape.
photo
ontariogirl
Power to the People
10:04 AM on 08/29/2011
You could do a shaped shrub or something so it looks like a person is pushing the mower.
IMOPINIONH8D
because I want it empty...
10:15 AM on 08/29/2011
I've got a green thumb but I cant draw a stick man so that might be interesting. Thanks.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Madbunny
Prison Guard - FireFighter - now a School Teacher
04:26 AM on 08/29/2011
Well good for those conservatives down in Texas. It looks like their government is doing a good job.

After all, they really are all for government agencies monitoring and managing natural resources right? That's totally a Texas thing... right?
10:56 PM on 08/28/2011
I don't see why they would have people cover their yards with rocks. Here in SA, many let their grass go dormant (usually bermuda or buffalo, though even st augustine will live without water for several months, it'll just look dead) in the summer, it comes back to life with rain the rest of the year. If you tear the grass out and replace it with rocks, it's going to make things hotter, and we don't need that. There are many native ground covers (bermuda isn't, though it has adapted; buffalo is) and those should be used instead of rocks.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeanette DeBella Bogue
pretty sure I'm going straight to hell....
04:44 PM on 08/28/2011
Simple solution: fake grass.
03:22 PM on 08/28/2011
San Antonio has also done a solid job of reducing water; xeriscaping was a major factor. Most Texas lawns use tropical grasses that require a lot of water - San Augustine and tall fescues, for example. These two in particular are favored in Houston and Dallas, the state's two largest cities. It takes about 58,000 gallons of water a year to keep a San Augustine lawn green, 45 or so inches of rain a year. The math is not that hard.
02:02 PM on 08/28/2011
After living in New Mexico, I learned to love landscaping with "attractive grey rocks". I didn't know about a possible rebate in my city. Any excuse to get rid of San Augustine grass - a TX favorite and water glutton is a great thing!

Great work El Paso!
photo
Rasebiho
You're getting tea. Do you want sugar or lemon?
01:12 PM on 08/28/2011
I applaud El Paso for having a plan. Many places don't. And conservation based plans are very popular right now, but they have a weakness.

When a city comes up against a severe drought that really stretches their water supply a city where landscaping and lawns are common has something obvious to cut. What does the low water usage city cut?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JeffWayne
I don't know who I am, how could I tell you?
10:24 AM on 09/14/2011
This makes no sense, since preventing a water shortage through conservation during normal years maintains the water table so you are better able to handle severe droughts in bad years. Ten years of conservation will help overcome a one year drought better than reacting to the drought only when it is too late. 10yrs x 1g=10gallons, 1yr x 1g = 1gallon
11:52 AM on 08/28/2011
not so smart............................
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
11:28 AM on 08/28/2011
I live in Lubbock. Its normally a dry, dusty, windswept wasteland. I figure this town of 200,000 has about 30 years left. It'll be a shock when people find out that the house they just paid off isn't worth anything because there's no water. But I'm sure that it will have plenty of company as ghost cities become a regular feature of the southwestern US.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
05:09 PM on 08/29/2011
I agree with you. Water is becoming a scarce commodity. The ignorance of people to this fact is mind boggling.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:31 AM on 08/28/2011
Do like the Garden state and cover everthing in concrete. Need a lawn just paint green
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
09:24 AM on 08/28/2011
Texas has a Gulf of Mexico shore line. The skies are mostly clear. I invented a solar powered
de-salination plant that operates for free ( makes free fresh water). The pumps operate off of silicon solar cells and the water is evaporated in cone-shaped percolators. As a side benefit it gives you free sea salt too worth a dollar per 10 pounds .....Alfred-
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aleks Hunter
Keep your greedy Mitt off our country!
11:24 AM on 08/28/2011
Sounds like you;re violating at least a dozen Texas laws! Oil men gotta eat!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EdRea
War is organized insanity.
11:53 AM on 08/28/2011
Distance of El Paso to Galveston:
12 hours 54 mins
799.9 mi - I-10 E
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
04:17 PM on 08/28/2011
I'm actually an oil man. I can run a pipe anywhere even from Galveston to El Paso with solar pwered pumping sub stations.
If those sissy Texas guys can't do it, not my issue....Al-
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atlasusa
08:17 AM on 08/28/2011
The same state that boasts the safeguarding the freedom for individuals to do whatever they want even if against the common good (ex: against encouraging healthier lifestyles and nutrition to fight the obesity/diabetes epidemic) is promoting and spending for landscape changes? What hypocrisy ! Considering Rick Perry also wants to safeguard individual freedoms, why is he against marriage equality? The freedom for two individuals to marry should be safeguarded, Governor Perry.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EdRea
War is organized insanity.
11:55 AM on 08/28/2011
We're talking, the city of El Paso, not the state of Texas.