Recent News

Help Washington Watch track congressional earmarks 07/23/2009

Stimulus Watch was inspired in part by Washington Watch, a site that lets you find, rate, describe, and discuss legislation…

Norcross on C-SPAN tonight 05/28/2009

We haven’t said much here in a while, but be assured that we’re still planning revamp the site to include…

Joshua-Michéle Ross, who previously wrote a profile of Stimulus... 03/10/2009

Joshua-Michéle Ross, who previously wrote a profile of Stimulus Watch for O’Reilly Radar, has also made a short video walk-through…

OpenRegs.com
Find government regulations by issue or agency. Comment, add links and subscribe to regulations.

San Jose, CA

Advanced Recycled Water Treatment Facility

$55,000,000.00 - 500 jobs - Water Program

Is this project critical? or

71% voted critical - 29% voted not critical - 265 votes cast

Yes
 
No
 

Wiki Description

[edit] General Description

Recycled Water Facilities are investments in the long-term health of an areas water resources. Effluent can generally be sold for non-potable purposes, such as irrigation or aquifer recharge. If the plant has energy efficiency measures, as well as potential for renewable energy (eg. solar panels), the plant can eventually pay for itself and be budget-neutral.

Aquifer drain is a serious problem that faces many communities around the country. By using recycled water instead of well water or water treated to drinking water standards, the health of the local water ecosystem can be maintained. It requires the use of fewer virgin water sources to serve the same area, which leaves better quality water for future generations.

[edit] Points in Favor

1. Besides creating jobs in the short term, the plant will employ operators, technicians, maintenance people, and administrative staff in the future.

2. Recycled water is a great resource for any community to use for non-potable needs such as irrigation of golf courses or parks.

3. Using recycled water reduces the strain on the environment and the aquifer.

4. Protecting the health of the aquifer prevents dangerous, costly events such as subsidence, and the need to drill deeper, more expensive wells.

5. Only 2% of water is actually consumed by humans and treating to drinking water standards is very expensive (most is used for irrigation and household uses like toilets and washing machines)

[edit] Points Against

1. Recycled water currently has limited uses, such as irrigation, groundwater recharge, and non-potable household use (eg toilets and washing machines). It cannot legally be used for drinking water purposes.

Edit the Wiki Description (editing policy)

Share

Post a comment

blog comments powered by Disqus