First State to Issue New Water-Efficiency Standards

SACRAMENTO– Forget straws! Soon there will be more focus on flushes and scrutiny over showers with a new law, a requirement that California achieve a twenty-percent reduction in per person urban water use by the end of 2020 (also known as “20 x 2020″) became law in 2009. California Governor Gavin Newsome, who is Nancy Pelosi’s nephew, is enforcing another lame law signed by ex-Governor Brown when Newsome was the Lt. Governor.

The state with zero opposite political representation has its registries refusing to acknowledge or address the Change petition signed by 34,000 plus Californians and the Recall Gavin Newsome movement. Newsome also signed into law the broadest US laws for seizing guns. We hereby declare California dead on arrival.

California is now the first state in the nation to enact tough new water-efficiency standards. The controversial rules are targeted at water districts to cut per capita water usage, but in order to meet the goals, those cuts will trickle down to the customers they serve. Despite the already increasing conditions of the homeless, we all will soon see the income inequality gap widen. Just give it more time of voting the same way so California will be the most beauiful shithole in the nation.

“So that everyone in California is at least integrating efficiency into our preparations for climate change,” said Chair of the State Water Resources Control Board Felicia Marcus. So, what are the new laws?

What Exactly Does this Law Say?

In 2022, the new indoor water standard will be 55 gallons per person, per day. By 2030, it will fall to 50 gallons. “With a child and everyday having to wash clothes, that’s just my opinion, not feasible. But I get it and I understand that we’re trying to preserve…but 55 gallons a day?” said Tanya Allen, who has a 4-year-old daughter. Just how many gallons do household chores take?

An 8-minute shower uses about 17 gallons of water, a load of laundry up to 40, and a bathtub can hold 80 to 100 gallons of water. “She likes to bathe three times a day and she does laundry all day,” said Rocka Mitchell from Texas. He and his wife Ginger are living in Sacramento for work and say it would be hard to conserve. “I couldn’t do it. My family is way too large,” she said.

Retrofitting homes with water-efficient fixtures could help cut back and makes sense to do this but is getting twisted into this water law. A limit on our water is absolutely wrong. Is this state still reside in America?

“I think the average new home is 35 gallons per person per day, so we are not talking emergency conservation here,” Marcus said. Is this a comedy sketch? Do we actually have to go there?

It’s All About Control

Greg Bundesen with the Sacramento Suburban Water District says they already assist customers.“We offer toilet rebates, we offer complimentary showerheads, we offer complementary faucets,” he said. Well why then don’t you make that a law first before jumping into water regulations? The liberals want the sheep to have zero control of their lives becasue they don’t trust you. They want goverment to control you. Don’t say I didn’t warn you California.

The new laws also require water districts to perform stress tests of their water supply and curb loss due to leaks. “Right now we lose up to 30 percent of urban water just to leaks in the system,” Marcus said. Infrastructure reform makes sense but micromanaging Californians is just plainly un-American.

Agencies believe fixing those leaks and educating residents is the key, which would make sense to do first but instead is being piggybacked into this law. This water bill will separate the poor from the rich even more drastically. California looks worse than a third world country. Travel to Jamaica or Trinidad and Tobago and you won’t see this type of homelessness or trash everywhere, maybe the India ghettos, but the fact we see this in one of the richest states in the US is beyond erronous.

The ultimate goal is to force conservation as a way of life in California or else pay for it. Outdoor water use is also covered by the new laws so watch out home owners. Standards will be based on a region’s climate and other factors instead of just one standard for the whole state. The California water year is below average, so reservoirs benefitted from last year’s record. Nevertheless these water laws have been established in full force, sending California well on its way to becoming a third-world socialist state; RIP California.