THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

#DroughtShaming is on the rise


image_pdfimage_print

By Associated Press

Pssst. Ready to water that beautiful lush lawn of yours? The one that’s the envy of the entire neighborhood.

You’d better wait until after midnight. Preferably on a cloudy, new-moon night during a power outage when it’s so dark even night-vision goggles won’t give away your position. Otherwise, you could wind up the star of the latest drought-shaming video posted on YouTube or Twitter.

“Yeah, I put your address out there. The world is watching a lot more,” says Tony Corcoran, one of several people who spend their spare time these days canvassing the tony communities of Beverly Hills, West Hollywood and elsewhere, looking for people wasting water during the worst California drought in recent memory.

Corcoran alone estimates he’s put up on YouTube more than 100 videos of water-wasters, complete with their addresses.

Others tweet out addresses and photos of water scofflaws, using hashtags such as #DroughtShaming. Still others are snapping smartphone photos of them and sending them directly to authorities.

Not everyone is happy about it.

One woman, quickly tiring of Corcoran’s lecture on conservation while she watered her plants, turned her hose on him.

In Beverly Hills, where he was showing a reporter and photographer water running down the street in front of a mansion, the angry resident called police. Two patrol cars quickly responded, but the officers took no action.

In Hollywood, Sam Bakman, who manages a condominium complex, said his building was recently shamed wrongly by somebody on Twitter over a broken sprinkler head that was quickly repaired. He showed a reporter the city-issued restrictions on watering and pointed out his sprinkler timers fall well within the guidelines.

“If they thought we were doing something wrong, why not come knock on my door?” he asked.

Corcoran, a restaurant group administrator who kept his New York attitude when he came to laid-back Los Angeles awhile ago, is unrepentant.

“The whole point is to get people to change, not to shame,” he said.

With California in the fourth year of a drought with no end in sight, the governor has ordered everyone to use 25 percent less water, and drought shamers say the easiest way to accomplish that is to quit watering your yard. Or at least be careful about it and not let water spill into the street.

“I was a passenger in a car driving by, and first I noticed water down the street. And when we drove up, I saw the broken sprinkler head,” said Patricia Perez of Eagle Rock who quickly tweeted out a picture of the mess. She also emailed it to the local water agency.

“When you’re trying to do your best personally, and you’re trying to conserve water, it’s very irritating,” she said of one of the reasons behind drought shaming.

Dan Estes, a Los Angeles real estate broker, has gone so far as to build his own free app, DroughtShame, that records the time and place where people see waste.

Unlike some other drought shamers, he doesn’t believe in getting in people’s faces or outing them to the world. Instead, people who use his app send the information and a photograph to him, and he forwards it to the appropriate water agency.

“I drought shamed the preschool next to my apartment,” Estes said. “Timer was off on their sprinklers. Those things were on for five hours, and the sidewalk was a river. I was non-confrontational, but at the same time, public.”

Twenty minutes after he reported it, Estes said, the sprinklers were shut off.

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (5)
  1. tahoeadvocate says - Posted: June 13, 2015

    Mein Kinder,
    Report your parents.

    signed
    Adolph

  2. steve says - Posted: June 14, 2015

    Water conservation is one of the few “environmental” measures developers get behind. More conservation = more development. Keep watering folks- rather see trees and green landscape then more houses all in a row.

  3. AROD says - Posted: June 14, 2015

    This shaming is totally miss directed. Residential water use accounts for approximately 7% of total use. The fracking industry is the culprit here. Millions upon millions of water polluted and now the used water is being used to irrigate crops, disgusting. So take your cameras out to the fracking fields. I’m going to hose off my driveway.

  4. Kits Carson says - Posted: June 14, 2015

    Perfect! Now we have strangers invading neighborhoods and snitching on people for water use. I hope the Beverly Hills cops are prepared for the impending violence against these nuisance activists. I’m all for conserving but now the government is turning people on each other. Brilliant!! Or maybe they have been little tattle tails all their lives. I’m pretty sure Moonbutt hasn’t a legal right to order a 25% cutback. I could be wrong. Maybe he used an executive order like his pal in the white house. I’d like him to publish a copy of HIS water usage for all to compare.

  5. Perry R. Obray says - Posted: June 14, 2015

    A classic example of So. Cal that has very serious water issues lumping No. Cal in with em. Propaganda at its worst.