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Spicewood, Texas Water Shortage Leaves Residents Reliant Upon Tanker Trucks

First Posted: 01/31/2012 3:06 am Updated: 01/31/2012 9:25 am

SPICEWOOD, Texas (AP) — Tanker trucks loaded with water have become the lifeline for a Texas lakefront village that came precariously close to becoming the state's first community to run out of drinking water during a historic drought.

Spicewood got its first delivery of water Monday under dark clouds and rain. The 8,000-gallon water delivery arrived after it became clear the village's wells could no longer produce enough water to meet the needs of the Lake Travis community's 1,100 residents and elementary school, said Clara Tuma, spokeswoman of the Lower Colorado River Authority.

The town uses wells, not the nearby lake, for its drinking water. Ryan Rowney, manager of water operations for the authority, said it plans to truck water into the Central Texas town for several more weeks while exploring alternatives, including drilling a new well or piping water from Lake Travis. But the agency doesn't want to rush into any project, and prefers for now to pay $200 per truckload of water while ensuring the tens of thousands of dollars it will cost to find a permanent solution are well spent.

Several towns and villages in Texas have come close to running out of water during the driest year in Lone Star State history, but until now none has had to truck in water. Most found solutions to hold them over, often paying tens of thousands of dollars to avoid hauling water, a scenario that conjures up images from the early 1900s, when indoor plumbing was a novelty.

"The hauling of water is just a Band-Aid approach. It's just a short-term approach," said Joe Don Dockery, a commissioner in Burnet County that oversees the Spicewood area.

The Lower Colorado River Authority realized last week how dire the situation was, and informed Dockery on Monday. By the next day, the situation was worse — the well had dropped an additional 1.3 feet overnight. The severest forms of water restrictions were put in place, and the authority said there would be no new hookups to the town's water supply.

Water still ran Monday through the pipes and faucets of Spicewood. But instead of being pumped from wells into the community's 129,000-gallon storage tank — a two day's supply of water — the already treated liquid will be hauled in from 17 miles away, treated a second time and put into the town's water system.

"If we need to haul every day, we will. This will probably go on for several more months," Rowney said.

Trucks, including at least one 6,000 gallon tanker, will make about four or five deliveries a day, Rowney said, but the town will still have to remain under the severest water restrictions.

"All you can do is take a bath, a shower, and that's really all you're allowed to do. You can flush the commode, but even that we're asking people to do judiciously," Rowney said.

Spicewood, about 35 miles from Austin, is home to many retirees who spend their weekdays in the city and drive to their lakeside homes on the weekends. Residents are now being careful, taking shorter showers, and some are even bringing their clothes to Laundromats.

Until last week, when it became clear they could run out water, the most exciting event in Spicewood was the upcoming wild game chili cook-off advertised on a roadside sign at the entrance to the small community.

"When we had water it was pretty nice here," deadpanned Riley Walker a 73-year-old state transportation employee.

Walker bought land in Spicewood in 1988 when only a handful of families lived here. He built a house and moved into town full time in 2002.

"I have faith they will haul water in. They don't really have a choice; there are a lot of people here," Walker said.

Joe Barbera, president of the local property owner's association, said residents have been "really worried about this for a long time now," but have always been conservation minded.

"You look around and you don't see any immaculate lawns," he added. "This is just normal use for a normal community."

For more than a year, nearly the entire state of Texas has been in some stage of severe or exceptional drought. Rain has been so scarce that lakes across the state turned into pools of mud. One town near Waco, Groesbeck, bought water from a rock quarry and built a seven-mile pipeline through a state park to get water. Some communities on Lake Travis moved their intake pipes into deeper water. And Houston started getting water from an alternative, farther away reservoir when Lake Houston ran too low.

Although it has started to rain more this winter, it's not enough to fill the state's arid rivers and lakes.

A few inches of rain certainly won't be enough to fill Spicewood's wells.

"We're talking about rainfall events of 20 inches plus. Huge, huge flood events to bring the lake levels up," Rowney said. "The downside of that is that everyone's praying for a flood, well floods can be bad too."

___

Plushnick-Masti contributed to this report from Houston. You can follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com//RamitMastiAP

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SPICEWOOD, Texas (AP) — Tanker trucks loaded with water have become the lifeline for a Texas lakefront village that came precariously close to becoming the state's first community to run out of drin...
SPICEWOOD, Texas (AP) — Tanker trucks loaded with water have become the lifeline for a Texas lakefront village that came precariously close to becoming the state's first community to run out of drin...
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06:04 PM on 02/01/2012
Reading about the impact of the Texas drought brings to mind a statement by some pro-growth groups that the entire world's population could fit in the state of Texas. Of course they are making a point that there's lots of land to accommodate billions of people around the world, but that doesn't do people or the ecosystem much good if there isn't any water...

www.howmany.org
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
05:51 PM on 02/01/2012
Building water pipelines makes more sense than building gas and oil pipelines.
If they leak they will not polute the environment either. Here we are depending
on weather for flood and drought control because our priorities are all screwed
up.
We plant Soft Maple trees in the cities that blow apart with a little wind.
Planting fruit bearing trees is unheard of. Someone might not starve if they had
nuts or apples. or the market might miss the revenue from the poorest.
Yellow (Tulip) Poplar takes a little longer to grow, however they could also be harvested
by the city for the lumber and termites wont touch them.
Habitat for humanity might also benefit from such a lumper source. Oh sorry I might
cut in on the Kotch Bros. lumber profits with that idea.
Can you imagine front yard gardens fetting the benefits of wasted water sprinklers
Ohhhhh The travesty of that Idea. What was I thinking?.
10:31 AM on 02/07/2012
You bring up many good points, some of which I did not know. I will keep your information in mind for future use. I once lived in Texas and loved it. Since then I have realized the person can leave Texas, but Texas never will leave the person! Thank you so much for sharing these ideas.
12:10 PM on 02/01/2012
What are people worried about? It's just some town of peasants. I can see where people might be getting concerned if infrastructure projects and cutting carbon emission from dirty energy caused the lords in their castles to rake in fewer bucks, but really people... peasants needing drinking water? What's the big deal about that.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
10:10 AM on 02/01/2012
maybe move the people closer to the water or city area instead of driving the deisel truck to move the water.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NJP1
08:43 AM on 02/01/2012
looks like Perry's raindance didn't work after all
11:34 PM on 01/31/2012
Texas has been ravaged by the oil industry. T Boone Pickins and his cronies have devastated, Texas over the years, all the while being subsidized by your tax dollars. You all loved it ! Sooo you'll have to have a glass of oil....Drink up......Q
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
07:51 PM on 01/31/2012
Wouldn't Canada make more money if it built pipe lines running into the Southwest and Texas that carried fresh crystal clear Canadian drinking water rather than pipe lines that carry toxic tar muck to the Gulf? In time, Conservative Texans will stop voting for politicians who ignore Global Warming as they become the first victims of it. With proper irrigation, most of Texas could be covered with switch grass from which motor fuel is made, and solar electric projects. I wonder if Texas cattle would be allowed to graze on switch grass? Solar electricity, switch grass motor fuel, and steaks made possibe by a properly irrigated Texas would be a credit to our Nation.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
10:07 AM on 02/01/2012
MN, WI, and MI signed an ongoing pact regarding the ownership of Lake Superior. 20 years from now, lets see what happens.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
07:50 PM on 02/01/2012
MN, WI, and MI will become three of the wealthest states in the world. Water wealth will replace oil wealth. Our dollar could be based upon the price of water world wide. Water wars could take place all around the world as they fight over American water.
10:40 AM on 02/07/2012
Sorry, pal, but converting switch grass to ethanol is every bit as polluting as refining oil into gasoline. My husband and I just devoted two years of our lives to saving our pristine small town from such a project, and we won!. We personally are promoting hydroelectric projects and electric engines for private and public transportation. The chemicals used in industry need to be broken down into their original elements or sources, stored safely, and re-used so that they will not harm the environment
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
11:01 AM on 02/07/2012
I had no idea that converting switch grass was so polluting. The chemicals used would need to be recycled. Ethanol would only return the CO2 used to grow the crop, and there would be no thermal pollution since the solar energy use to grow the plant would be returned to the atmosphere. Gasoline would add new CO2 and cause thermal pollution that Chaos Theory says causes extreme weather and climate. Electric engines are great if electricity comes from solar and wind. Water reservoirs may store solar energy in the form of pumped water.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hypyrwyf
there'll be pie in the sky when you die
03:30 PM on 01/31/2012
Wouldn't the lake and the wells be part of the same water table?
03:23 PM on 01/31/2012
It might be a good idea to pump water from the lake if its not to polluted and filter it. If it is to polluted then they might use it to replenish the ground water.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
grappler1987
Why does this generation ask for a sign?
02:57 PM on 01/31/2012
"The downside of that is that everyone's praying for a flood, well floods can be bad too."

Funny. Yes, they (Texas) need to start creating the reservoirs that they proposed. Reservoirs bank flood water for dry times.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
02:25 PM on 01/31/2012
Global warming deniers, think global warming mitigation is expensive. It has cost Texas 25 billion and looks like Cali is next. Just like wallmart, it's the high cost of cheap!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susanne McDaniel
01:27 PM on 01/31/2012
Any comment from the governor of the great state of Texas on this issue???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
02:26 PM on 01/31/2012
Frankenstein forgot what he was going to say!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greengrl
The more you know, the less you believe.
08:31 AM on 02/01/2012
Oooops!
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KarmaPatrol
Fair and balanced and sugar-free
12:57 PM on 01/31/2012
Asking residents is the issue and didn't work around Big Spring. Chihuahua City (Mexico) had to turn off residential water during the day. Eventually the rest of Texas will need to learn to conserve their groundwater (El Paso TX had to learn to conserve to keep their large federal military base/LEO center with a promise of 100 years of water, so the rest of TX can learn from them. Who's going to pay for it on the other hand...).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Fanney
Scribbler
12:11 PM on 01/31/2012
So you have fracking resulting in water truck reliance in the north and La Nina + Climate Change causing the same shortages in the south. Thank you fossil fuels...
10:01 AM on 01/31/2012
Sounds like an Infrastructure project. I wonder what the Republicans would say about "wasting" money on these middle class and poor people who think they are "entitled".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
grappler1987
Why does this generation ask for a sign?
03:00 PM on 01/31/2012
On the one hand, Texas has paid $5.2B in drought losses. On the other hand, Texas has pulled together $1.4B for water infrastructure projects. If they spent $10B on infrastructure, they'd get it back in drought mitigation.

Better late than never.
06:09 PM on 01/31/2012
Exactly, but is it me or is common sense becoming more uncommon back there in the good old US of A?