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Reckoning With Responsibility in Dry Times: A Personal Water Story
Bay Area Monitor: We have a duty to keep a close eye on our water use, even in places that are relatively well supplied – like Fairfield.
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Bay Area Monitor: We have a duty to keep a close eye on our water use, even in places that are relatively well supplied – like Fairfield.
FRESNO BEE: Fines, shaming and brown lawns are getting headlines in California. But there’s good reason to keep landscape alive, horticulturists say.
THE TRIBUNE: Cal Poly irrigation center helps teach agriculture industry to combat drought.
Modesto Bee: The new system is a framework for future regulation, but well owners remain suspicious – and tightfisted with data.
SACRAMENTO BEE: Leakage in Water Distribution Lines a Growing Concern Statewide; Legislative Fix Proposed.
FRESNO BEE: “I don’t think I’ll last another year here like this,” says Juana Garcia. “How can the children and I live without water?”.
FRESNO BEE: Overgrown Sierra Nevada forests are primed for catastrophic blaze among trees decimated by drought and bark beetles.
Water Diverted From Creeks and Streams to Grow Marijuana – Whether Legal or Not – Means Less Water for Fish, Habitats and People.
Fresno Bee: Private company seeks investors for project that will purify farm region’s tainted groundwater.
Distributing Water Burns Electricity, a Fact California is Only Starting to Reckon With.
Experts disagree, but water scarcity seems more likely in the future.
Farm employment and crop production are both up, although there have been plenty of challenges.
More Syrian women are working as first-responders in rebel-held areas. Trained in emergency medical care and search and rescue operations, they are winning over conservative Syrians by playing a nontraditional role in the conflict.
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