California’s drought may be over, for now, but I continue to scrutinize my water bill whenever it arrives, making sure I’m not wasting water. Normally those bills show that my household uses far less water than our assigned target. But a year ago last summer my wife and I returned from a trip to learn that a hose had been left running in our backyard. Fortunately, our gardeners had discovered it and shut it off, but not before the hose had run for something like two and a half days. When we returned, even though the hose had been shut off for some 48 hours, one of our sump pumps — which we’d had installed well before the drought, back when our main problem was too much rainwater, rather than too little — was running, even though we’d had no rain. Trying to be optimistic, I thought that perhaps the problem had originated from a neighbor, but no. It really was us inadvertently wasting water.

Greg Wilson

Greg Wilson

Redwood City sends out water bills bimonthly basis, but that isn’t how they read our meters. Years ago, Redwood City added transmitters to our water meters, thereby enabling the city to remotely gather hourly usage information from each. That detailed information was made available to interested households via the web, so that is where I turned to see just how much water we’d wasted. While there, I did something I should have done long before: I set an alert if excessive usage was detected. Such an alert would have enabled me to learn about the problem sooner, and I could have had someone check on things. Now, with the alert finally set, I manually checked our usage periodically for another couple of weeks, after which I began to relax and trust the system.

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(3) comments

Westy

Wow, that's good to know. I had no idea you could set up an alert on your water usage.

It's not just the next drought, there is also the fact that delivering our water all the way from the Sierras uses a lot of electricity. This is yet another good reason to conserve water.

Dirk van Ulden

Westy - there you go again. The water coming from Hetch Hetchy is delivered through tunnels and uses very ingenious syphon systems to pump water that do not require electricity. Please do your homework before you write.

Westy

Dearest Dirk, You are so right, I looked it up. It is an ingenious system. However, I would bet it still takes a lot of energy to distribute the water from the reservoir, and it definitely takes energy to process what goes into the sewer lines.

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