3 6 £ es 4j T1 a~ t b a mc ,{- ". "â€.";"z“*‘w ons : : 3p 7. t M & Year No. 2 64 : says it it a crigis when it‘s just a «*L think it {creates cynicism when f know ~we‘ve had 10â€"million : of water in excess of needs the last few weeks" while the region has had a total lawn watering ba;inofl'ect. ‘oolstencroft was reacting to a report + that while the ban has been in effect xs since June 28, there have only been two B or three days when water use exceeded I -’ the level at which a watering ban is Neanest watching: their plants die and they thought it was an emergency," mmed_ to kick in. That limit is 28 ion gallons, enough to preserve sufficient water to fight a major fire. _ "I know how my neighbors are reactâ€" _Waterloo city Coun. Lynne Woolstenâ€" sroh dgesh‘t Rage whorty belreve over a |government who Waterloo. Ont The ban need never have been put into effect, according to Coun. Andrew Teleâ€" gdi. "When they called the ban (on June 28), they knew they were going into a long weekend," he said. ‘Their g:blem now is they have a tiger by tail. They figure once it‘s If a ban has not actually been necesâ€" ;ryf:wthehnfewmmidenu ve responding to an emergency that is actually just a difficulty, she said. On.Monday June 26, water use was 29.1 million gallons. The next day it dncn-::dthI. 3:1, over the limit, region slapped on a been exceeded only twice â€" on Wednesâ€" g;yâ€hlyï¬afl&ladl’riday.!unfln During that time, demand has been as low as the 18.4 million gallons a day used July 2. Yet the region has mainâ€" tained the ban, and published daily an index showing "0" water available. Statistics are not yet available for usage since July 9. JUL 2 0 1989 household use is reduced. Yet regional statistics show demand already is at less than a crisis level. Woolstencroft finds it significant that all four of the days when demand was excessive were during the week, not on the weekend. "it‘s not lawn watering we‘re talking about â€" it‘s access to water. Lawn watering is the easiest thing to hook on to. Residents shouldn‘t have to pay to replace trees because there‘s a lawn watering ban. "The region should deal with industry and the schools." These are the main users of water during the week., she said. In related news, regional council voted Thursday to spend up to $20,000 to hire outside consultants to asses future water supplies. The move was intended to help shore up public faith in regional engi legal, everyone will rush out and water their lawns. So they‘re waiting for rain." Though rain has no effect on dayâ€"toâ€" day water levels, demand for water for Watering ban in effect 0 cents |