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Grand River watershed users, please cut your consumption

Request made due to the unusually dry weather this year
Grand River Conservation Authority -wetland

NEWS RELEASE

GRAND RIVER CONSERVATION AUTHORITY

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Water conservation urged throughout Grand River watershed

Water users throughout the Grand River watershed are being asked to cut their consumption by 10 percent, because of the unusually dry weather this year.

Low rainfall since mid-April has contributed to reduced stream flows on a number of tributaries throughout the watershed, and the GRCA has increased augmentation levels at its large reservoirs in order to maintain low flow targets on the Grand and Speed Rivers.

The call for the reduction came from the Grand River Low Water Response Team, which met in a conference call on Wednesday. The team is made up of representatives of major water users including municipalities, farmers, golf course operators, water bottlers, aggregate businesses, Six Nations and others.

The Low Water Response Team decided to place the entire watershed at Level 1 under the Ontario Low Water Response Program.

Level 1 results in a request for a voluntary 10 percent reduction in water consumption by all water users, including municipalities, aggregate operations, golf courses, water bottlers, farms for irrigation and private users. For residents, the most effective thing they can do right now is to follow their municipal outdoor water use bylaws, which limit watering to specific days and times.

A few localized rain storms in May and June delivered up to 20 mm in some parts of the watershed, but most rain events have been short with very little volume.

Almost all of the GRCA’s rain gauges are under the Level 1 threshold for three-month precipitation, and there is very little rain in the short or long-term forecast.

The dry conditions and diminishing river and stream flows can place stress on the natural environment of the Grand River and its tributaries.

The large reservoirs are within their normal operating range, but high discharges to maintain flow targets, coupled with high evaporation and low inflows means that levels are dropping.

Over the past week, augmentation from the reservoirs accounts for approximately 80 percent of the flow through Kitchener, 40 percent of the flow through Brantford and about 70 percent of the flow through Guelph.

The GRCA is operating the reservoirs carefully to meet flow targets downstream, while maintaining storage in order to augment flows throughout the summer.

This helps municipalities that get all or some of their drinking water from the Grand River including Waterloo Region, Brantford and Six Nations.

It also supports the proper operation of about 30 sewage treatment plants throughout the watershed.

As the augmentation season progresses, the conditions of the reservoirs will be closely monitored and reviewed.

More information on the Low Water Response Program is available on the GRCA website at www.grandriver.ca.

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