Like most Americans, you probably take water for granted. You drink it, wash with it, and swim in it. It seems to be everywhere.
But in parts of California, the water has dried up. The nation’s most populous state is in its fourth year of a record-breaking drought—a severe and unusual lack of rainfall. Lakes are vanishing, crops are dying, and lawns have gone brown. Some people can’t take a bath, flush a toilet, or even sip a glass of water without reaching for a bottle or a bucket.
“You don’t think of water as a privilege until you don’t have it anymore,” says Yolanda Serrato, who lives in East Porterville, about
150 miles north of Los Angeles. She has been without tap water since her well dried up about a year ago.
The drought is affecting several Western states, but California has been hit the worst. (See “U.S. Drought Watch,” p. 17.) A lack of rain and snowfall over the past few years has left the state in crisis.
In April, California Governor Jerry Brown imposed the first-ever mandatory statewide reductions in water use. Residents and businesses must cut usage by 25 percent to try to prevent the state from running out of water altogether.
“This is the new normal,” Brown said in April, “and we’ll have to learn to cope with it.”