There's a discussion going on around me  about water. Both respondents appear to have substantial facts at their finger tips. I will not repeat.
There is a mis-perception however. Municipalities do not permit development to outstrip availability of hard services.
My God, you  have no idea how much it costs you to keep these  things  under control.
Aurora has been on a strict allocation of units for years. . However many  are allocated, that's how many permits can be issued. Developers wait in line. They fund the infrastructure.
The question of storage capacity is clearly not understood. It costs millions to build  capacity.  Millions more for treatment  to keep it safe and clean.
Building   sufficient capacity to allow people to pour expensively treated water on lawns to keep them artificially green in  a heat wave  and let it run down driveways into the sewers  and keep treating when it is no longer required for use the  rest of the year  is insane.
If gas at over a dollar a litreis not  enough to keep people from idling their carsma premium on water to stop them from wasting it, wont work either.
It doesn't take genius  to realize water use  was being  re-cycling long before that expression became part of the lingo.We take it from  the ground, use it , treat it and return it from whence it came,  into streams, rivers and lakes.
Lake Simcoe is in better shape to-day  than it has  in years. The main problem to-day  is  nutrient run-off   from farmers' fields. Even laundry detergent is not the problem it once was.
We spend millions on storm water ponds to remove sediments from road  and roof run-off before it reaches the waterways.
The late Garfield Wright, former Reeve of  East Gwillimbury told a story once.
He received a call from an irate home-owner.  No water  was coming  from his taps.
Garfield asked him to go down to his basement. Helped him to identify an object. Asked if  it was making any noise .
No, it wasn't. Well check your fuse. He did. A fuse was  blown. It was replaced . And Voila!  he had water.
The former city dweller  purchased a home in the country with no understanding of the unlikelihood of  city services.  His  water pump had blown a fuse and he had to make a fool of himself to learn the  basics  about  life in the country.
How  is it  in this day and age, when  taxes  are exorbitant,  so many people assume no-one in charge understands the connection between water supply, sewage treatment and development.
If it wasn't costing  millions  of your hard-earned tax dollars to take care of the priorities, it might be funny.
But if you own a property  and you would influence others, you need to know that  living in a little town high in the hills, on  the headwaters of Lake Simcoe and Lake Ontario in the most richly resourced country  is the best place in the world to raise your children and know that your grandchildren's legacy is safe.
We are taking water, carbon dated  thousands of years old, from deep in the cold recesses of an aquifer regularly monitored without sign of supply being diminished.
Our distribution system is linked to the Town of Newmarket
All you needed was to ask.
You're welcome.
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
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