Vancouver flushes less as raincoast turns dry
Amy Carmichael
The Canadian Press
Monday, September 08, 2003
VANCOUVER - "Amid frantic warnings that Vancouver-area water supplies could run dry this fall, B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell said he would shower less and many citizens have stopped flushing their toilets in a smelly stab at conservation.
'There's a definite 'ick' factor, but we're not flushing toilets after every use,' said BIll Morrell, a spokesman for the Greater Vancouver Regional District.
In late August, nearing the end of British Columbia's driest summer on record, civic officials announced that if people kept sucking up as much at at the current rate -- two billion litres per day -- area reservoirs, now at 37 percent of capacity, would be dry by mid-October.
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In Vancouver, summer rainfall (June to September) so far this year has measured 36.7 millimetres, versus a 10-year average of 132.4 mm. Flow conditions in some streams across the province are 10 to 25 per cent of normal for this time of year."
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Edmonton Journal