The Pine-Strawberry Water Improvement District has struggled with increasing demands from residential and vacation rental properties.
By ALEX BROWN | Arizona Mirror
PINE — As the Western United States endures an ongoing megadrought that has spanned more than two decades, an increasing number of cities, towns and water districts are being forced to say no to new growth.
There’s just not enough water to go around.
The California Coastal Commission urged San Luis Obispo County in April to stop all new development requiring water use in the communities of Los Osos and Cambria.
“The Commission has repeatedly made it abundantly clear that the required (local coastal permit) findings for water supply cannot be made,” read one letter to a county official, according to the San Luis Obispo Tribune.
The Los Osos groundwater basin is being depleted at an unsustainable rate, the Tribune reported, while Cambria relies on a limited water supply under creeks that could threaten fish and riparian species if depleted.
Meanwhile, a water district serving mountain communities in Arizona announced in March that it had issued a moratorium on new connections. Pine-Strawberry Water Improvement District has struggled with increasing demands from residential and vacation rental properties, The Arizona Republic reported. The water table has fallen below most of the district’s shallower wells, and much of the water that is pumped is lost to leaky infrastructure.
“Pine-Strawberry’s decision to stop accepting new connections is unfortunate, but it is needed, will decrease Pine’s on-going maintenance costs and allow them to refocus on growth going forward.”
David Johnson, Rose Law Group water attorney