top of page
Writer's pictureShidonna Raven

Arizona and California have been transformed by climate change. Now we face some tough decisions

Updated: May 24, 2022


By EMasada Siegel

Source: Independent

Photo Source: Unsplash, Julian Myles

Phoenix, Arizona — which boasts summer temperatures of 120 degrees Fahrenheit (49 degrees Celsius) — is the fastest-growing big city in the country over the past decade, according to the Census Bureau. This, despite the fact that Arizona is facing serious consequences from climate change and predictions of increasing heat deaths, decreasing air quality, and more frequent water shortages.

Serious water shortages are already here. Arizona is the first state to experience restrictions because of the drought-fueled decline in the Colorado River. The state has been conserving its water supplies for over 40 years, and its long-range plan for water conservation began in 1980 with the enactment of the Groundwater Management Act. The act is devoted to progressively reducing the amount of water used by major consumers in the“Active Management Areas,” which include the metro regions where 80 percent of the population lives.

“Our focus today is on the condition of the Colorado River system, primarily the rapidly dropping surface levels at the system’s two biggest reservoirs, Lake Powell and Lake Mead,” said Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources. “Both are at less than a third of capacity and projections going forward are not encouraging.” While some people are flocking to the state, others have left in search of cooler temperatures. Dr. Chad Arthur, an Arizona native and orthodontist, upped sticks recently to El Segundo, California. He and his family now live by the ocean and have no plans to return to Arizona. “Ten years ago, my wife and I decided to leave the economic comforts, lesser governmental regulations, lower cost of living and easier lifestyle Arizona affords and head to California,” he told me, adding that his family was “in search of a year-round rather than seasonal outdoor lifestyle with ideal temperatures and sunshine and an ocean breeze.” At the moment, Arizonans spend long weeks trapped indoors because of the oppressive heat. “We decided the planet is only heating up and while life is short, we want to take advantage of our youth and head for the coast.”

However, California is hardly immune from the sort of environmental concerns that have hit Arizona hard already. Both states are facing water shortages and starting June 1, southern Californians will face unprecedented restrictions because of it. Residents will be expected to limit their water use to 80 gallons per person per day, cutting normal usage by about 35 percent. In particular, they have been told to limit water usage outside — like watering lawns and plants — to one day per week. As one official put it, “We can’t afford green lawns.”

Los Angeles resident and comedian Shawn Pelofsky says she’s noticed the effects of drought and water shortages already. “On a recent trip to Big Bear, I saw lakes drying up, wildlife suffering from the heat, and brown patches of earth,” she says. “We need to conserve our natural resources. Take little steps, start by turning off the running water when you brush your teeth… I just tell my LA friends, ‘Preserve water like it is your last vial of Botox’.”

Do Arizona residents have time to come up with long-term solutions such as building water pipelines and water storage plants? And with the new construction across Maricopa county and the endless golf courses across the Valley of the Sun — all of which require water — will Arizona run out of this precious resource?

Buschatzke, the director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, doesn’t think so. While he believes the challenges on the Colorado River system are serious, the fact that Arizona’s communities have diverse water portfolios other than the Colorado River that include surface water supplies and stored groundwater will help.

“We need to come to terms with the expectation that our hotter, drier future in the southwest is going to mean less water from the Colorado River system. We have to adjust to that,” he says. As someone who grew up in Arizona and lives here now, I’ve seen the weather patterns change. Summers are hotter and drier, exacerbated by an abundance of concrete with new building projects year after year. Even my trees flower and produce fruit at different times of the year than in the past these days — the fig tree produces fruit in December; the citrus trees start flowering in January rather than March. The climate is definitely changing and one does not need to be a scientist to see the effects in their own gardens.

Arizona used to be the place people moved to for clean air when they had asthma and allergies. Now there are regular air quality warnings. If climate change and the water issues are not addressed, in the next hundred years, there’s reason to believe Arizona won’t be habitable at all.


Does your company have a climate change plan? How is your company image? Why?



Share the wealth of health with your colleagues and friends by sharing this article with 3 people today.


If this article was helpful to you, donate to the Shidonna Raven Garden and Cook E-Magazine Today. Thank you in advance.



Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page