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| Pump test on a new well in Payson. Photo: Scott Stratton |
Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands, Volume. 1: Guiding Principles
to Welcome Rain Into Your Life and Landscape
Brad Lancaster, 183 pp., $24.95, self-published by Rainsources Press
at http://www.harvestingrainwater.com/
This is the first volume of what is to be a three-volume guide on conceptualizing,
designing and implementing sustainable water-harvesting systems for home,
landscape and community. The concept is explained, with specific information
provided about effective water harvesting strategies for various site
conditions. Information ranges from designing new water-harvesting landscapes
to retrofitting existing ones. Amply illustrated, the volume is written
in a clear, nontechnical style to attract the interest of nonprofessionals
and homeowners as well as planners, designers and landscapers. Water-harvesting
Earthworks, volume 2 in the series, is scheduled for summer 2006 and Roof
Catchment and Cistern Systems, volume 3, will be out in fall 2006.
Arsenic and Groundwater: Questions, Answers and Solutions
Jan. 23 is the deadline for water agencies to meet new Environmental Protection
Agency standards for arsenic in drinking water. Left on their own are
the many suburban homeowners and resident of rural areas who depend on
their own wells for drinking water. How do they find out if there’s
arsenic in their wells or coming out of the taps in their home? What steps
can they take to get the arsenic contamination down to the level that
EPA has determined to be safe. The American Ground Water Trust, a non-profit
public service agency, recently published a guide to answer these and
many other questions about arsenic and groundwater.
The 24-page guide explains the geologic origins of arsenic, its occurrence
in groundwater, arsenic related health issues and methods to remove or
reduce arsenic levels. Check the AGWT’s web site for information
about the publication: http://www.agwt.org/
Cities
in the Wilderness: A New Vision of Land Use in America
Bruce Babbitt, Island Press at www.islandpress.org, 200 pp., $25.95.
Babbitt offers a proposal for a new national land use policy, one that
protects our rapidly disappearing landscapes and dwindling rivers and
controls urban sprawl. He argues that heedless development has too often
had its way, with government subsidizing sprawl and local officials mostly
unwilling or unable to halt the momentum for development. Babbitt’s
aim is not to join the chorus lamenting and condemning land developers.
Instead he wants to get to what he sees as the root of the problem: the
failure of state and local governments to adopt effective land use regulations
to control sprawl.
The solution to the problem according to Babbitt is stronger federal leadership
in land use planning. He realizes he will be raising some hackles with
this proposition; land use has come to be seen as very much a local matter.
He argues, however, that the national government’s involvement in
land use planning can be traced to the early days of the republic.
In making his case for a strong federal role in land use planning, Babbitt
identifies issues that are of national and, therefore, federal interest:
protecting endangered and threatened species, the health of rivers that
cross state lines, coastlines, forests, and regions of special scenic,
ecological or historic significance.
The various chapters are case studies of success stories, each demonstrating
elements that can be applied to other regions of the country. In the discussions
Babbitt at times calls for additional federal legislation to improve land
use planning.
He lauds the Endangered Species Act as one of the most effective federal
laws influencing land use. He says it served Tucson well. In response
to a development moratorium on lands occupied by the spotted owl, Pima
County Supervisors took the extra steps to enact a county-wide general
plan to protect riparian areas, sensitive species and core biological
areas throughout the county.
Babbitt also argues for a revision of the Clean Water Act to promote firmer
federal-state partnerships in managing water resource use and in regulating
the effects of land use on rivers and lakes.
Babbitt’s suggestion of extending the ESA to encourage protection
of critical ecosystems and open space throughout the country comes at
a time when, according to one newspaper headline, the ESA is in the cross
hairs. Legislative efforts are underway to make the 32-year-old law more
friendly to landowners and builders, with less accommodation to environmental
interests. In fact, much of what Babbitt proposes in his book might seem
sadly out of step in the prevailing political climate.
Undeterred, Babbitt calls for “an armistice followed by a peace
conference to which not just westerners, but all Americans, are invited.
The outcome should be a new constitution for public lands, in the form
of federal legislation that subordinates but does not eliminate mining,
grazing, and logging to an overriding public mandate for long-term biological
diversity, abundant wildlife and fisheries and the ecological integrity
of our streams and watersheds.”

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