[Vision2020] Other topics-- was: Water. Where do you stand on the issue?

Donovan Arnold donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
Tue Apr 25 08:38:28 PDT 2006


Instead of over flowing Latah's landfills with endless numbers of  toilets, why not A) Require new home developers to connect homes with a  fresh water pipe, and a reclaimed water pipe for the toilet and outdoor  watering. and/ or B) Retro fit existing toilets to use less water.  Creating excessive waste to save water is not thinking about the Earth.  
  
  _DJA

Nils Peterson <nils_peterson at wsu.edu> wrote:  Decker and Chasuk have opened related discussions on economic and population
growth. Perhaps those are impossible to separate from the question of water,
but I'd like to ask that someone else lead those discussions as new threads.

We have several issues hanging out:
* Marginal cost of new water resources
* Fiscal impact of conservation on the City & water rates (fixed & marginal
costs)
* Water budget, paying for new uses of water by conserving on current uses
* Pressurized irrigation
* East Moscow water treatment plant
* And where to you stand: must conserve, painless conservation, don't
conserve

Plus a wiki page to compile our information


On 4/24/06 11:06 PM, "Matt Decker"  wrote:

> 
> Nils,
> 
> I'm all ears. What would you suggest we do? Nils you said "Make changes in
> current policy and procedure that aim to conserve the
>> aquifer by changing personal and collective behaviors".
> I would open too consideration, without the anti growth aspect of it all. If
> we are going to continue to grow and have a future for our children here in
> Moscow Idaho we need to figure out if A. We have a water issue. B. how to
> solve is reasonably. C. do it so we can maintain who we are as Moscowanians.
> 
> There should allways be growth. To ignore this(not saying you or others are,
> just stating) will be the day this town becomes haunted by ghosts.
> 
> matt

Chasuk replied:
On 4/24/06, Matt Decker  wrote:

> If we are going to continue to grow and have a future for our children here in
> Moscow

I hope that this isn't a naive question.  It certainly isn't meant
disingenuously.  But here it is:  why is growth important?  A town
isn't a corporation, in a business sense, so we don't have
shareholders to pay or a CEO.  Therefore, what is the benefit of
growth?  For myself, Moscow is the perfect size; that's why I live
here (amongst other reasons).

I guess I am anti-growth, if growth means increased congestion and
more crime and more anonymity.

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