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More Population Requires More Water, Leadership
September 11, 2005
Here's a regional take on one pressing water policy issue - securing adequate future supplies as population grows. "It's Clear: Plan Today For Water Tomorrow," is the title of the front page Insight section piece in today's Tacoma News Tribune, which I authored. My guest commentary is drawn from a longer white paper I recently completed for the Cascadia Center of the Seattle-based Discovery Institute, called "Ample Water Potential, But a Leadership Drought: Toward a 21st Century Regional Water Policy for Central Puget Sound." Please click below to continue. As you'll see, I was especially interested in how key advisory bodies, and water utility managers outside of Seattle in Central Puget Sound (Pierce, King and Snohomish counties) look at impending growth, and our corresponding water supply planning options. From my TNT Insight piece today: The region’s future water needs, for both man and fish, will require more than conservation and more than the current fragmented approach to planning and decision-making on in-stream and out-of-stream water supplies. Central Puget Sound can learn from the experiences of other regions, and even nations, a number of which are also grappling with securing adequate future water supplies. To that end, a few related posts from one of my own sites, Rosenblog: "GE Desalination Project To Expand Algiers Water Supply;" "New Water Supplies, Conservation, Key To Metro Atlanta Growth." TECHNORATI TAGS: PUGET SOUND, GROWTH, WATER, PLANNING TO COMMENT: The regular "comment" feature is not in operation. E-mail comments to address under "Contact" on main page masthead, and I'll add them, here. Posted by Matt Rosenberg at September 11, 2005 10:40 PM Comments:
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