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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWelcome to Fairmead, California, Where You Have to Walk a Mile for a Sip of Water
from the Nation:
Welcome to Fairmead, California, Where You Have to Walk a Mile for a Sip of Water
For some Californians the drought means brown lawns. For others, it means nothing to drink.
By Sasha Abramsky JULY 14, 2015
The tiny, dusty town of Fairmead, California, feels a long way from anywhere. Its the kind of place where people come to start anew, hoping to silence the ghosts of hard times past. There are the African-Americans whose families migrated out of the segregated Deep South more than half a century ago, looking for farmwork and a place where they could hold their heads high. There are the migrants from Mexico, who came in search of a slightly better life than the one they had left south of the border. There are the Anglo descendants of refugees from the Oklahoma Dust Bowl. And there are elderly adventurers looking for something newfor a little land and a lot of quiet in which to live out their fixed-income retirements.
Fairmead is unincorporated. It used to have a mill, a library, a hotel, and a small store, as well as a handful of restaurants. None of these remain. Located a few miles from the prison town of Chowchilla, Fairmead today has a Last Picture Show feel to it. It boasts a small elementary school, a Head Start program, a couple of churches, and a population of roughly 1,400, spread out along miles of rural back roads. The towns avenues are numbered instead of namedsome of them paved, others simply bumpy lanes of gravel and stone. They stretch out from what passes for the town centera few neat streets lined by bungalows and ranch houses, with a city well and a recently built water-storage tank at its heartinto the orchards beyond.
These days, while the almond orchards are kept a perfect green, the surrounding landscape is a dull brown, and the yards in front of most of the houses are little more than dirt and weeds. At least 25 families have seen their wells go dry in recent months. Many others are rationing what little water remains. Those lucky enough to be on the citys system still have to strictly conserve to keep the towns only well from going dry.
Not that they want to use any more of the citys water than they absolutely have to: The water quality is so bad in Fairmead, where tap water flows a milky white, that even those on the city well prefer to drink bottled water. Mostly low-income, they spend tens or even hundreds of dollars each month on drinking water, and many dollars more on gas to drive their cars out of town to someplace where the water quality is better, so that they can fill up large containers with safe water to use for showering, washing dishes, and watering their gardens. .................(more)
http://www.thenation.com/article/welcome-to-fairmead-california-where-you-have-to-walk-a-mile-for-a-sip-of-water/
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Welcome to Fairmead, California, Where You Have to Walk a Mile for a Sip of Water (Original Post)
marmar
Jul 2015
OP
aggiesal
(8,940 posts)1. El Niņo is coming ...
hopefully that will alleviate our water issues.
But I'd like to ask; Why are they using fresh water to water their gardens?
I would think that their poor quality water would better serve their garden.
Our community uses reclaimed water for landscaping.