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CityStories / City Profiles / Medium Cities / Athens, Georgia

City to Watch

Population: 101,489

 


 

Drought on the Middle Oconee River, Athens, Georgia
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Athens–Clarke County


Athens, Georgia

Map showing this city's location

Water conservation has been a major challenge for this northeast Georgia city, which relies almost entirely on surface water and has struggled with overdevelopment and an ongoing drought that has reached 50-year extremes and drained the Middle Oconee River to historical lows. To preserve water, in addition to restricting outdoor water use and promoting voluntary conservation, Athens-Clarke County instituted a conservation water rate structure that is led by a public and private water conservation committee.

It is pursuing code changes that promote using captured rainwater, greywater (residential wastewater produced by showers, bathroom sinks, dishwashers and washing machines) and recycled water for non-potable uses, like irrigation. To protect water quality, the city is implementing stormwater management practices largely funded by a user fee based on the amount of impervious surface on a property. Impervious surfaces contribute to the runoff of pollutants—like petroleum and chemicals—into streams and rivers.

 

The city was the first in the state to establish curbside recycling in 1988 and has a "pay-as-you-throw" policy for commercial and residential waste—so those who trash more pay more, while those who conserve pay less. In January 2009, Athens hosted its first Green Life Expo to further educate the community on recycling, as well as on carbon reduction and conservation practices.

 

The Athens Land Trust—a private, nonprofit community land trust—protects land through conservation easements, creates energy-efficient and affordable housing, and revitalizes ailing neighborhoods. And in a town known for its music scene, native band R.E.M. has had a significant social and environmental impact on the community, funding and speaking out on behalf of a host of local nonprofits and preservation efforts, and initiating environmental awareness in the city.

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Porous Paving

The EPA's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System site provides information about applicability, siting and design criteria.

Georgia's Department of Community Affairs has a page on best practices for porous paving.
Portland, Oregon's Bureau of Environmental Service pervious paving projects page.
City of Chicago's permeable paving site with many local examples.
San Francisco Parks Trust permeable landscape page.

Environmental Health Perspectives provides a good overview in "Paving Paradise: The Peril of Impermeable Surfaces."

NRDC's report Stormwater Strategies: Community Responses to Runoff Pollution considers a variety of responses implemented across the country.

Water Conservation

US Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation: with a mission to "manage, develop, and protect water and related resources in an environmentally and economically sound manner in the interest of the American public" the bureau provides information about water levels in reservoirs throughout the West, updates on dams, powerplants and related projects and a library of water reclamation materials.

Bureau of Reclamation WaterSMART program: Information on WaterSMART grants for water and energy conservation projects, basin studies with integrated management plans and water supply reviews and details on the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives in the Southwest.

In Hot Water: Water Management Strategies to Weather the Effects of Global Warming (NRDC report)

Water Efficiency Saves Energy (NRDC report)

Las Vegas Water District conservation pages

Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNVA) conservation and rebates

SNVA landscaping information

 

NYC's Residential Recycling Program

Live in NYC and wonder what you can recycle and how? This guide will help.

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