[Rockhounds] This Is Why It’s Illegal to Collect Rainwater in Some States
pmodreski at aol.com
pmodreski at aol.com
Wed Nov 28 13:20:41 PST 2018
And indeed, in Colorado it was illegal to collect even one barrel of rainwater, until the law was passed/changed as said, in 2016. This did become quite a public issue, back during some of our bad drought years, during at least one of which, all outside watering of plants in the Denver area was prohibited, and people were "scratching" for ways to keep their outside shrubs alive.
As a matter of fact, somewhat related, this story just popped up for me today, from Water Education Colorado - Fresh Water News; https://www.watereducationcolorado.org/news-and-publications/news/denvers-new-green-roof-law-has-some-surprising-implications-for-water/ . Concern about required roof gardens on new buildings in Denver, requiring water and consuming more water beyond that which falls on them!
Pete
-----Original Message-----
From: Don Halterman <donhalterman at comcast.net>
To: rockhounds <rockhounds at rockhounds.drizzle.com>
Sent: Wed, Nov 28, 2018 1:01 pm
Subject: Re: [Rockhounds] This Is Why It’s Illegal to Collect Rainwater in Some States
Indeed it's a rural western thing. In Nevada I have the right to
drill a domestic well with rights to 2 acre-feet a year, which is pretty
generous. However I do not have the right to impound any flowing
surface water--not that there is any except during spring runoff. I
also cannot collect rainwater--all 11 inches of it a year in Elko
County--though the state website says that this not generally enforced.
LOL Kitty I don't think Hawaii would have any water issues... plenty of
rain water there I'm sure. :)
Don
On 11/28/2018 10:48 AM, Tim Fisher wrote:
> I hadn't even read the article but I immediately knew what it would have to say about Oregon. And I also knew that the news media had screwed that one up, royally. He can't build ponds to collect the water without numerous state and federal permits, which for that size pond would easily take a year and thousands of dollars to obtain. Somehow this got twisted into "collecting rainwater is illegal". Building structures to impound a stream, spring, seep, wetland, surface runoff, or just plain old rain from the sky without any permits or water rights whatsoever is as illegal as it gets in the west. Even a removal/fill permit (not necessarily from the Corps, that usually applies in flowing water or wetland situations) is necessary to move that much dirt (in our county anything deeper than 2 feet). Googling it, even Snopes has weighed in. Which is news to me, and a great summary of exactly while the guy had the book thrown at him.
>
> https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/man-gets-prison-sentence-for-collecting-rainwater-on-his-own-property/
>
>
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