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Thursday, December 01, 2022

A new year, same old shit

Federal water officials are warning Californians about the ongoing water conditions heading into the new year. 

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, a federal agency overseeing water resource management in 17 states, announced that California cities and industrial contractors who get water from Central Valley Project should prepare for “extremely limited water supply conditions in 2023.”

13 comments:

  1. Hope the Delta Smelt are okay!

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    Replies
    1. They're pretty good with tartar sauce.

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    2. Rolled in cornbread and pan fried!

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  2. The California Water Resources Board is directly responsible for every water shortage in that state since the institution was created, the current crew belongs in prison.

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    1. You forgot the most important word in that agency's title. The correct name is the California State Water Resources CONTROL Board.

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  3. How can they regulate the air we breathe?
    Put a tax on it and create shortages?
    Do not comply.

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    1. In California they tax air by including a 23¢ Cap and Trade fee on every gallon of gas you buy. It's kind of hard to not comply with something like that.

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  4. According to the movie Chinatown, it's been a totally corrupt agency since day one.

    CC

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  5. Just buy a guppy and tell those in charge of water in Kalifornia that your guppy will go extinct unless they allow you to fill your 50 meter pool once a week.
    You'll be fine.

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    1. By the year 2030 California residents will be limited to 50 gallons of water usage per day. I'm sure there will be carved out exceptions to this limit, such as to a former Speaker of the House who lives on Zinfandel Lane in St. Helena, CA, Gavin Newsom's home, wherever that may be in 2030 and Moonbeam's ranch and pot farm in Colusa County. They'll be allowed to use as much water as they like, in gratitude to to them for their years of public service.

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  6. The gov keeps warning about the "water shortage", yet they have no problem issuing a ton of building permits for new houses. Can someone explain this other than developers controlling the state politicians?

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  7. The DESERT Southwest does not have a water problem.
    They have a people problem.
    Too fucking many of them!

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