NYC Declares a Drought Watch and Asks Residents to Conserve Water

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    In this photo taken Friday, Sept. 2, 2016, dwarf corn stalks from lack of rain are seen in a field in Barnstead, N.H. The drought in southern New England and dry spells this summer further north mean fall foliage could come earlier this year and not last as long in some areas. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    NEW YORK (AP) — New York’s mayor urged residents to take shorter showers, fix dripping faucets and otherwise conserve water, issuing a drought watch Saturday after a parched October here and in much of the United States.

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    A drought watch is the first of three potential levels of water-saving directives, and Adams pitched it in a social media video as a step to try to ward off the possibility of a worse shortage in the United States’ most populous city.

    “Mother Nature is in charge, and so we must make sure we adjust,” said Adams, a Democrat.

    He ordered all city agencies to get ready to implement their water conservation plans. He asked the public to do its part by, for example, turning off taps while brushing teeth and sweeping sidewalks instead of hosing them down.

    The mayor also exhorted residents to report opened-up fire hydrants and other street leaks. The recommendation comes days after the city fixed a leaky Brooklyn hydrant that fed a homespun goldfish pond on the sidewalk.

    Just 0.01 inches (0.02 cm) of rain fell last month on the city’s Central Park, where October normally brings about 4.4 inches (11.2 cm) of precipitation, National Weather Service records show. City Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Rohit Aggarwala said it was the driest October in over 150 years of records.

    Complicating the water squeeze, the city is repairing a big, leaky aqueduct that carries water from the Catskill region, so residents are relying more on reservoirs in the city’s northern suburbs. That area got 0.81 inches (2 cm) of rain last month, about one-fifth the October average, the mayor’s office said in a release Saturday.

    New York City uses an average of 1.1 billion gallons (4.2 billion liters) of water a day. That is about 35% below a 1979 peak. The city attributes the decrease to such factors as improvements in spotting leaks.

    Last month, nearly half the country was in a flash drought, which means a rapid dry-out from a combination of little precipitation and abnormally high temperatures. The Northeast capped the month with an unusually — one might even say weirdly — warm Halloween, with temperatures hitting the high 70s and low 80s (24 to 28 Celsius) from New York to Maine.

    Experts attributed the flash drought to a weather pattern that kept moisture from moving north from the Gulf of Mexico.

    The dry weather constrained shipping on the Mississippi River and contributed to wildfires in the Midwest and the East.

    The National Weather Service continued Saturday to warn of elevated fire risk in places including Connecticut, where a firefighter was killed last month while battling a dayslong brush blaze apparently sparked by a poorly doused campfire.

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    30 Comments
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    Mr&Mrs AmHaAretz
    Mr&Mrs AmHaAretz
    1 month ago

    We’ve long been wondering…. how much water is wasted in order to comply with instructions to “rinse clean” recyclable food containers?
    How much does rinsing increase an average household’s water bill monthly?
    Has rinsing recylables increased municipal water department revenues?
    Does conserving water during a Drought Watch mean DON”T be wasting water to rinse-out recyclable containders?

    Same old
    Same old
    1 month ago

    Everyday New York is becoming more and more unlivable. Out of control crime out of control anti-semitism. Out of control Motors. Out of control prices on everything. You start to think why are we living here..

    Dr Schreber
    Dr Schreber
    1 month ago

    Clown world.

    Hmmmm
    Hmmmm
    1 month ago

    Nothing to do with the overpopulation of undocumented individuals overtaxing the infrastructure

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    1 month ago

    I enjoyed my rain free sukkos

    Yaakov S
    Yaakov S
    1 month ago

    Warning! I declare NYC a brain drought.

    Rebklemson
    Rebklemson
    1 month ago

    Hasn’t it been a world record-breaking year for rain? Literally floods every second here. Hard for me to believe that one dry month and we’re already short on water

    hishamru...acheirim
    hishamru...acheirim
    1 month ago

    Get rid of idolatry. Politics is not in control.

    Nachum
    Nachum
    1 month ago

    If NYC wanted to save on water, it would eliminate the absurd program of letting residents in certain neighborhoods use fire hydrants, as a neighborhood pool. In some neighborhoods, you need a lifeboat, after residents open up the fire hydrants full blast on a hot summer day, flooding the streets. Also, what about the NYC Sanitation Department’s trucks spraying water on the streets to clean them? Is that really necessary?

    Lavrenty
    Lavrenty
    1 month ago

    Fossil fuels are causing droughts

    Fried
    Fried
    1 month ago

    Shloime Zionce to the rescue!!

    Mehaso
    Mehaso
    1 month ago

    This blue sky through Sukkos was worrisome to me (09/11 style blue sky)