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Practically Speaking

Kyle and her husband moved to Brookfield in 1986. She became active in local politics and started blogging in 2004. Her focus is primarily on local issues but often includes state and national topics, too. Kyle looks at things from the taxpayers’ perspective in a creative, yet down to earth way, addressing them from a practical point of view.

You Can't Wash Your Car But The Car Wash Can?

By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, May 27 2008, 04:52 PM

It is watering restriction season for Waukesha County, but in Brookfield, lawn watering, pool filling, and car washing* is restricted whether you are on a private well or municipal water every day of the year.

Somehow I was under the assumption that if one had a private well they were exempt from the watering restrictions. Many people on municipal water kept their private wells for watering and car washing purposes. I also thought there was a season to water restrictions. Not so. All Brookfield residents are under the restrictions all of the time: (My emphasis)

Sprinkling lawns, gardens, shrubs, trees, and other vegetation, washing vehicles or structures and filling swimming pools are restricted to certain days. Sprinkling is restricted to before 9 a.m. and after 6 p.m. by properties with even-numbered addresses on even-numbered days, and by properties with odd-numbered addresses on odd-numbered days. The regulations apply all year.

Now I don't have a problem with the concept of conserving water. We don't sprinkle our lawn as a rule, and washing a car is not a weekly occurrence. Brown lawns do survive. Even during the drought of 1988, when it did not rain all summer, I think we only broke down and sprinkled a few times.

In fact, most gardeners know that if you sprinkle often but not long, the root systems tend to grow horizontally instead of down. Watering less frequently, but longer, will result in stronger plants. (Exception: tomatoes need more frequent watering I think.) If the roots are established deeply, more than likely it will rain in a 2 week period and then watering isn't necessary. Early morning watering is better than mid day or evening too. 

Newly established lawns, plants/shrubs, and trees do need more care and they are exempt from restrictions. And "A watering can, container or hose may be used at any time to water gardens, trees or shrubs if the device is used manually and not left unattended."

The problem I have with restrictions is for one, the day system. Yes, it is simple. I am just thinking that maybe, just maybe I get the troops to finally wash the vinyl siding on my house only to realize the day is wrong! That is just a little annoyance.

The bigger picture is that Brookfield (and other cities outside of the Lake Michigan watershed) approve heavy water using development like restaurants or car washes left and right, but then tells me, who washes a car maybe 4 times a year I am restricted! (Car washes that use recycled water are exempt from the restriction, but they still use more than a homeowner!)

The article said that fines would be given for violators. In Brookfield the fine is $350. In Waukesha for example, "We wanted to nudge people to realize that we are serious about protecting the (water) resource," said Nancy Quirk of the Waukesha Water Utility.

I don't mind protecting water resources. Plentiful, good quality well water is a problem in Brookfield. But if municipalities were really serious about protecting water resources, would they be approving more and more heavy water users like restaurants, hotels, and car washes? Will water concerns at all determine what VK puts in at his Ruby Farms development? Approving them and then cracking down on residents to "save water" seems a little 2 faced to me. 

*UPDATE: City clarifies sprinkling policy, New rule aims to cut down lawn watering  Director of Public Works "Grisa said the ordinance does not apply to certain expectations, including hand washing of residential vehicles, residential uses such as children running through sprinklers and had watering of plants with a watering can or hose. He said that residents using water for those purposes should exercise common sense and not keep water running when it's not being used."

 

Links:

counter hit xanga

Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield
Vicki Mckenna

 

Comments

Larry Knetzger   

Hi Kyle. The City really has two faces on the water conservation issue and I have a different opinion on the private well issue.I have talked about this in the past at Brookfield Now.  People were allowed to use there private well for msc. purposes after hooking up to municipal water. And yet when I raised the issue on another blog about why the city doesn't think requiring sealed well caps be installed on all existing wells to prevent ear wigs from septic systems and other vermin making the water unusable for all people in an area,  they felt they couldn't do that. Scott Berg made a comment about how people would strongly object to a building inspector coming on there property and requiring them to protect the water supply .

When does the city really care about what citizens feel about an issue. They do what they want regardless of public opinion.  The City does have that power to do that. Yet our city fathers can tell me not to use my investment in my private water supply . Typical political back stabbing. Waving the "Green"flag to make citizens think the city cares about the environment when in fact they encourage people to abuse there wells by not protecting them with sealed well caps and regular maintenance of the well it self with bleach.  

Talking to the city on many issues is a dead end street. Just humoring the puplic by listening to the bitching with a deaf ear.

Thank you for questioning a real issue that the public is getting stepped on.

Kyle's reply: I think when a private well is kept for misc. use after hooking on to municipal water, the private well must be inspected from time to time and must be properly sealed. The inspection is done by the DNR?* (See Larry's reply)

As I understand a private well, it is not a pipe going down to an underground river type water source. It is a pipe going down to an individual pocket that collects water. When a property is purchased, a DNR water test is made. If it does not pass, the individual well is chlorinated. The neighbors wells are not bad, just the one that does not pass. Usually if a well is bad, the people using it would get sick? Guess that is the everyday "test"?

Larry's reply:

When a home is sold and if it has a private well, the water is tested by either a private agency or the county health department. the DNR does no testing of private wells.

 
Each and every well is unique. In some neighborhoods they can be using the same aquifer and in some areas the wells can all have a different source of water. I.E. a well at 90 feet can be in a source of water from gravel, not always a large pool of water. Those wells will require stainless steel sand screens on the pump in order to function properly. The house next door can be in a limestone well which must be cased at least 8 feet into the limestone and then just drill the lime stone for a source of water.
 

On some of the homes I have built the source of water can differ greatly from home to home. I had a home in Delafield that we were at 480 feet, fully cased and the driller lost the drilling bit, they tried to retrieve the bit with tools to no avail . had to seal the casing and move and drill over. got a well 20 feet away at 90 feet. 15 gallons per minute ( which is a good yield) . You can drill a well say in Brookfield and the limestone can be a source of water from lake superior because of the rock strata.  The biggest thing is to protect the aquifer with sealed well caps and timely sanitizing.

Kyle's reply again: You would think everyone would want their well properly sealed. My son once got quite sick from a coliform bacteria contaminated well at a state campground. The park said that frequently the bacteria is just from an earwig or mouse that gets into the well. Sealing is rather simple and would prevent this type of contamination.

 

May 28, 2008 7:44 AM

My Two Cents   

When I questioned a city staff person about the high water usage requirements at VK's proposed Ruby Farm site, I was told there is plenty of water.  Apparently there's plenty of water for developement, not residential usage.  

May 28, 2008 8:20 AM

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