Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on April 8, 2015

Bookmark and Share

Enforcement Of Mandatory Water Restrictions Is Only Just The Beginning

Enforcement Of Mandatory Water Restrictions Is Only Just The Beginning thumbnail

The Economic Collapse blog



18 Comments on "Enforcement Of Mandatory Water Restrictions Is Only Just The Beginning"

  1. Makati1 on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 7:56 pm 

    “In the end, the drought in California is going to affect all of us” … unless we do not live in the US.

    I’m looking forward to a price comparison when I go back to the States this summer. I also plan to bring some seeds back to the Ps to plant almonds, pecans and a few other items I like, that currently come from Cali. I purchase very little that is exported from the States. Their prices have jumped by double digits over the last year. Cheaper from Europe or Australia.

  2. GregT on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:02 pm 

    “So what do you think about all of this?”

    Move now, avoid the rush.

  3. Perk Earl on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:23 pm 

    Mak, just a suggestion to take your seeds on board, otherwise they will likely get stolen by TSA. Everybody I know that flies has had something stolen in supposed security luggage checks. The only thing in luggage you check in should be stuff you can easily replace, like socks, t-shirts, etc. I had things stolen going from Hawaii to SF and my Mother from NY to SF. Luggage handlers also help themselves to valuables. It’s really changed a lot in just a few years and nobody does anything about it for fear of being labeled ‘a person of concern’ by TSA.

    Also keep in mind it may be illegal to bring seeds in with you. Agriculture inspectors may confiscate them at the initial security check. Probably best to take what you will be ok with losing if that happens.

  4. Perk Earl on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:27 pm 

    Here’s an eye opening link, Mak.

    http://rt.com/usa/tsa-stealing-from-travelers-358/

    ‘Ex-TSA agent: We steal from travelers all the time’

  5. Apneaman on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:27 pm 

    So what do you think about all of this?

    I think only a fucking denialist retard like Michale Snyder can write about the California drought and not mention climate change. Well, I guess it’s understandable considering he is writing for his fellow retards. Now before you retards start going on, like last time, about how it’s everyone’s fault who is not like you – white conservatives- just don’t. It’s your fault as much as anyone. Soon you will know what the immigrants you are always bashing feel like. When your forced to abandon your homes and travel to another state…..you won’t be welcomed. Your fellow conservative friends will tell you to keep moving – you will be the new Wet Backs. Dry Backs actually. Then you will understand the true purpose of all that flag waving and pledge of allegiance. Useful idiots until your not.

  6. Apneaman on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:35 pm 

    The Dust Bowl-get ready

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-iSYCweh5U

  7. Davy on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 8:51 pm 

    or more like this:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxaLULinfFc

  8. GregT on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 9:48 pm 

    That’s what is facing us up here in BC Davy. There’s some 18 million hectares of dead standing forests just waiting for a spark and high winds.

    Ravaged by pine beetles, fire hazards loom large in B.C. forests

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/ravaged-by-pine-beetles-fire-hazards-loom-large-in-bc-forests/article22754449/

  9. Chris Hill on Wed, 8th Apr 2015 11:42 pm 

    I can see the security concerns with smart meters, especially lack of data security. As far as what one could figure out with such a data stream, I suspect you’d be hard put to figure out much of anything specific. Until appliances that can be controlled by the smart meters become common, I’m going to concern myself with other issues.

  10. GregT on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 12:00 am 

    Chris,

    The smart meters themselves are ‘controllable’. The data stream is compiled by the signature of the ‘appliances’ being used.

  11. Makati1 on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 3:58 am 

    Perk, I brought seeds last time and no one even asked about them. An American going to the Ps is not checked very thoroughly by immigration/customs in the Ps. The real hassle is coming back into the UFSA.

    Although a few of my friends have noticed missing items when they travel, I never have and I put most of my stuff in checked luggage. I only take cash and similar items in my carry on along with a change of underwear, camera, book, etc. I even brought an 8 qt. cast iron Lodge camp dutch oven and a Garrett metal detector in my suitcases last time. No problem.

    I use those plastic electrical loc-ties on my luggage instead of locks. They have to cut them when they inspect. They may deter casual theft along the way. I have traveled internationally at least once each year for the last nine years with only an occasional late luggage which was always delivered to my hotel or condo the next day.

    But, thanks for the tip.

  12. ghung on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 8:13 am 

    Smart meters caused a stink in our area; lots of folks’ bills went up substantially. The utility said it was because the old meters were under-reporting usage.

    Then, again, some of us don’t need no stinkin’ meters, or meter our own production. Those of us who live successfully off grid must regulate and monitor our own consumption or face the consequences of living beyond our ‘allocation’; no cheating permitted; no grid or municipal water system to enable extravagant consumption. If every consumer in drought-stressed areas was allotted a fixed amount of water/energy (and if that supply was cut off when/if the allotment was exceeded), folks would develop off-grid habits and a more conservative mentality. It goes to altering the public’s sense of entitlement in a gluttonous society.

    Add on ‘off’ switch or valve to smart meters; warn customers when they’re within 20% of exceeding their allotment, and shut them off if they ignore that warning. An alternative would be to charge them an extravagant rate.

  13. Ken300 on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 9:27 am 

    Too many people and too few resources…..

    Endless population growth is not sustainable.

  14. JuanP on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 11:06 am 

    Meanwhile, in Miami, water to me seems to be free. As a tenant in a humongous condo with hundreds of units, I need not worry or concern myself with how much water I use because I don’t pay for it, and my landlord only pays his part indirectly through the condo association fees. The condo’s water bill must be very, very big. I have absolutely no economic incentive to save water. I indulge in long hot showers daily and enjoy them immensely, knowing I may not always be able to. Hot water is free for me, too, as it is central, as well as the AC roof unit. They are one of the few things that give me pleasure in spite of my depression.

    At the community food gardens I visit, most people seem to only go there to spray a lot of water around, and then they leave. That must be another huge water bill, where again the water users don’t pay for the water they use.

    My wife and I attended a Rainwater Barrel Workshop taught by our local AEO at the Miami Beach Botanical Gardens recently, and we purchased and built a rainwater barrel kit to donate to our neighborhood’s food garden. We doubled the garden’s rainwater storage capacity and quadrupled the collecting area, now we have two barrels. 😉

  15. Apneaman on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 1:26 pm 

    Calif. Continues to Shatter Temperature Records

    http://www.climatecentral.org/news/california-shattering-temperature-records-18871

  16. Bob Owens on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 1:39 pm 

    CA has a fairly simple solution if it wants to fix the water woes: Raise water prices. That, with enforcement, should work wonders. Hit them in the pocketbook and you will get their attention. Until then, you just have neighborhood spies ratting on each other.

  17. Apneaman on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 1:47 pm 

    Bob, Raise the rates on whom?

  18. Apneaman on Thu, 9th Apr 2015 2:14 pm 

    Bob if the restrictions have a 100% compliance rate – that would add up to a grand total of 5% savings of water. Wow! Drastic times call for drastic measures- Just not for those who use the majority of the water. Our owners.

    California Crisping: But Business as Usual

    http://www.dailyimpact.net/2015/04/07/california-crisping-but-business-as-usual/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *