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Santa Clara County, CA | November 2, 2004 Election |
Change and ChallengeBy Ernest SolomonCandidate for Director; Purissima Hills Water District | |
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Meeting Change and Challenge Purissima Hills Water District takes pride in delivering high quality water, maintaining a reliable and secure delivery system, and providing friendly, responsive service to our consumer/owners. Credit for this desirable state goes to the District's staff: manager, office staff, and field crew. The District's Board of Directors, jointly and severally, supports and encourages staff in its positive and proactive approach. The Board takes a collegial, democratic approach to addressing issues that come before it and takes very seriously its charge that the District be run for the good of its owners--the consumers. The District faces change and challenge in the coming years. Change. The District is in the beginning stages of design and construction of a new operation center. The new op center will replace the existing facility, which will be subsumed into the new town hall complex. The final details of the lease agreement with the Town are being finalized now. Selection of an architect is expected by early September. Construction is expected to begin in the spring of 2005 and should be completed by the end of 2005. Challenge. The number of residents and per capita consumption in the District are increasing. The District now uses 34% more water than it is allotted (our supply assurance) according to a formula established in 1981 between the SFPUC (the provider of Hetch Hetchy water) and BAWUA (a group of 29 agencies which have a contract to buy water from SFPUC). Because some agencies use less than their supply assurance, the District does not have a problem...yet. However, in times of drought, or in five to eight years when demand begins to exceed the Hetch Hetchy system's capacity, the District may have to enforce onerous rates to reduce consumption. The largest use of water is for landscaping irrigation--summertime water use far exceeds wintertime use. Meeting the Challenge. The District presently uses several tools to encourage a more conservation-minded approach to water use:
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