Politics & Government

Drought: East Bay MUD Wants Customers to Continue to Reduce Water Usage

EBMUD officials urge customers to continue to voluntarily cut their water use by 10 percent.

The East Bay Municipal Utility District's board of directors voted Tuesday to ask their customers to continue voluntarily cutting their water use by 10 percent because the dry winter has reduced the amount of water in the agency's reservoirs. The board also approved the purchase of 16,000 acre-feet of water, which is about a month's supply, to help meet the needs of its 1.3 million customers in Alameda and Contra Costa counties.
 
Water agency officials said its customers have already heeded their call to cut their water use voluntarily the past two months. The water from the Sacramento River will flow into two East Bay reservoirs: the Upper San Leandro Reservoir in Oakland and the San Pablo Reservoir, which is located between Orinda and El Sobrante.

EBMUD staff members said today that their worst-case water supply forecast is that the agency's reservoirs could be less than half full by this fall.
 
But board president Andy Katz said in a statement, "A severe drought does not mean severe cutbacks" because of customers' ongoing conservation measures and prudent water management by the agency.
 
EBMUD officials said if precipitation levels are low again next winter they could increase the amount of voluntary customer cutbacks beyond 10 percent, enact mandatory rationing or buy more Sacramento River water.

Previous drought coverage on Patch:


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here