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KevinFromTexas
Aug 15, 2008, 6:26 AM
Click on the link to see an aerial photo of Lance Armstrong's mansion, along with Jerry Jeff Walker's. There's also two charts showing the usage by some of Austin's biggest commercial companies.

From the Austin American-Statesman
http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/08/15/0815wateruse.html

WATER USE

Armstrong tops list of city's largest water users
Bicyclist, lobyyist, techie and musician use more water than most

By Marty Toohey
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Friday, August 15, 2008

Every minute, about five gallons of water passed through the sinks, sprinklers, fountain and pool at Lance Armstrong's house in June, making the retired professional cyclist Austin's biggest water-using individual that month.

A total of 222,900 gallons of water was used at Armstrong's home, according to the most recent city records available. That's about what 26 average Austin households use in a month. At a time when rainfall has been scarce and the city has imposed mandatory water restrictions, Armstrong is not the only Austinite using a lot of water.

The list of the top 10 water users reads like a cross-section of Austin culture: prominent lobbyist Neal "Buddy" Jones ranks third, tech executive Marc Hafner seventh and health-care magnate Robert Girling eighth. Country singer Jerry Jeff Walker rounds out the top 10. Among them, they used about 1.55 million gallons of water — enough to fill an enclosed football field 31/2 feet deep.

The original top 10 list included two people who used large amounts of water because of unusual circumstances — a broken pipe and a pool that was inadvertently left cycling water while the owner was on vacation — and don't have a history of high bills, according to the city. They were dropped from the story at the city's request.

The people on the modified top 10 list who were reached for this story offered as explanations: a broken water pipe, lack of knowledge of their high usage or both.

Armstrong said he didn't know just how much water he was using.

"I'm a little shocked," he said when told about the water use at his 1.1-acre home, which has a pool and expansive lawns. "There's no justification for using that much water."

Armstrong, who has been in California since early June, said that the electric bills seemed high when he moved in several years ago but that high water usage had not been called to his attention. His finances, including bills, are handled by a management company.

In June, his water bill, which does not include wastewater or other utilities, was $1,630.23, according to Austin Water Utility.

"I need to fix this," Armstrong said. "To use that much more water (than most residents) is unacceptable. I have no interest in being the top water user in Austin, Texas."

As Austin's population continues to grow, city officials worry about the availability of water. The city is planning to open a new treatment plant near Lake Travis to provide more water, but that won't happen until 2014.

In the meantime, the city's water demand will exceed its supply unless residents continue conserving, said Daryl Slusher, a former City Council member who now leads the water utility's conservation department.

Last year, the city imposed mandatory year-round water restrictions. Residents can't water their lawns between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m., to avoid evaporation. Everyone except single-family homeowners can water only twice a week. And even those homes can use sprinklers only twice a week from May 1 to Sept. 30. Hand watering is not restricted.

Dan Strub, the water conservation program coordinator, said the restrictions have made a difference. Austin's collective water use reached its highest mark of the year on Sunday at 219 million gallons, he said, but the water utility does not declare a shortage until 270 million gallons are used in a day.

"We are not in any danger of reaching that," Strub said.

Austin's tech companies are the city's biggest water users.

The microchip manufacturing process requires massive amounts of water, and Samsung was easily the biggest commercial user in June, having consumed 109.8 million gallons. Spansion was next, followed by Freescale Semiconductor's Ed Bluestein Boulevard and Oak Hill locations.

Of the top residential water users, all but one live on the western side of town, and some of them live large.

Jones built his 14,475-square-foot hillside home in 1998. He is traveling this week and is unreachable, his assistant said.

Walker lives in a Clarksville home that has nearly 10,000 square feet. He did not return messages left with him through his assistant.

Neither did John Bird (who used 148,800 gallons at his 2-acre East Austin home), Hafner (who used 143,700 gallons at his 1-acre property) or Sherry West (who used 135,500 gallons at her 1-acre home).

Bettie Girling, Robert Girling's wife, said they received a notice from the city two weeks ago that their water use was too high. She said they are talking to crews who handle their landscaping and plan to significantly reduce the amount of water being used.

"I have tried to change things since I got the notice," said Bettie Girling, a noted philanthropist who said she spent most of the past six months in the hospital recovering from a medical procedure. "We intend to be within the City of Austin guidelines, and I think the environment is very important. We know that water is going to become the new oil."

The Girlings used 141,300 gallons at their almost-an-acre property.

Although Austin's biggest residential water customers used significant amounts, Strub cautioned against blaming them for Austin's water needs.

"If you subtract their numbers, it doesn't make much of a dent" in how much water Austin consumes, Strub said. "Although that does not excuse extremely high levels of usage."

Judy Grigsby said the utility costs at her Northwest Austin home had been creeping up for more than two years. She said that an inspector had fixed two broken sprinkler heads and a busted pipe and that the 3-acre property kept her too busy to follow up.

"We tried different ways to keep our bills down," she said, "but just assumed that various things, like having guests for a few weeks, were causing" the rising bills, which reached $1,050 in June. "Hopefully, it's a broken pipe, and that will be the end of it."

She said she will call the city to check. Strub said a broken pipe could be the cause.

Investment manager Mischa Deeter said he thought the water bills were high when he moved into his West Austin rental but said that it was his first home with a lawn. He assumed that keeping it watered while maintaining a pool was pricey.

He said that his bills are paid automatically each month and that he never saw that he had used 151,500 gallons in June.

"I didn't know we were using so much," he said. "I don't use much water (inside the house), and we're having an inspector come out to check for a leak."

Attorney Carolyn Beckett, who used more water in June than every Austinite except Armstrong, said her bills had been steadily climbing for a year. But, she said, between her busy travel schedule and work, she hadn't had time to look closely at them.

She wasn't shocked, she said, by the $1,260 water charge that arrived as part of her bill but thought it could only get that high because of a broken pipe somewhere at her approximately quarter-acre home.

"I don't even have a sprinkler system," she said, "because the yard isn't big enough for one."

Strub said a broken pipe probably isn't the reason Beckett's bill is so high. He said the city has repeatedly asked Beckett to cut down on her water use.

Beckett is the only one of Austin's top 10 water users whose home doesn't have a swimming pool.

1.55 million

Gallons of water — enough to fill an enclosed football field 31/2 feet deep — used by the top 10 residential water consumers in Austin.

135,400

Gallons of water used by No. 10 on the list: Jerry Jeff Walker.

8,500

Gallons of water used monthly by the average residential consumer.

KevinFromTexas
Aug 15, 2008, 6:42 AM
That's your million dollar West Austin homes for you. So wasteful.

How much water do most highrise apartment/condo dwellers use?

hookem
Aug 15, 2008, 7:24 AM
Hmm, I wonder if this list only includes City of Austin? Or are places like Westlake and unincorporated sections along 360 included? I can't believe some of the huge estates in those areas (like Michael Dell's) wouldn't be among the top users.

Of course, I know by experience that running toilets and broken sprinkler heads are the easiest way to waste huge amounts of water without knowing it. And on a big place with many of those items (sprinkler heads & toilets), it seems plausible that some broken ones could go undiagnosed for a long time... still, private fountains (at least this time of year) and excessive landscape watering is inexcusable.

sakyle04
Aug 15, 2008, 1:39 PM
Ha. Tommy Lee Jones' Terrell Hills home was on the list the Express-News released recently.

:)

miaht82
Aug 15, 2008, 2:27 PM
Top 10 residential water users

Web Posted: 06/30/2008 06:09 PM CDT

KENS 5 Eyewitness News

Residential Homes
Neighborhood
Monthly Avg.
(12/07-06/08)


M Landon
Olmos Park
203,804 gallons

G Meadows
Olmos Park
160,842 gallons

D Monroe
Olmos Park
159,345 gallons

T Turner Jr.
NW/Orsinger ln
153,467 gallons

M Steves
Terrell Hills
151,757 gallons

J Cotter
Dominion
150,154 gallons

C Amato
Bluffview of Camino Real
146,948 gallons

Tommy Lee Jones
Terrell Hills
128,673 gallons

A Hollis
Terrell Hills
128,139 gallons

O Barrett
Terrell Heights
126,643 gallons

Source: San Antonio Water System

WanderingQueen
Aug 15, 2008, 3:28 PM
:previous:
Did they REALLY post his entire name (while using initials for everyone else)? That doesn't seem right. Or did you edit the list? If it just said T. Jones (following the pattern for the others), how do you (or whoever put his whole name there) know they're actually referring to Tommy Lee Jones? Personally, I think it's a great thing when public figures act responsibly - but until the "average" American starts doing so, I don't see why the rich and famous should be held to a different standard. I'd be more interested in a list that ranked water usage per square foot for example. I'm sure a whole bunch of "average" folks would be on it.

alexjon
Aug 15, 2008, 3:50 PM
And again my grandma knows people who show up on one of those "shame on you" lists. The San Antonio one, that is.

If she knew Lance Armstrong, I'd totally be in Sheryl Crow's cell phone cuz we'd be tight before she broke up with him.

sakyle04
Aug 15, 2008, 4:21 PM
:previous:
Did they REALLY post his entire name (while using initials for everyone else)? That doesn't seem right. Or did you edit the list? If it just said T. Jones (following the pattern for the others), how do you (or whoever put his whole name there) know they're actually referring to Tommy Lee Jones? Personally, I think it's a great thing when public figures act responsibly - but until the "average" American starts doing so, I don't see why the rich and famous should be held to a different standard. I'd be more interested in a list that ranked water usage per square foot for example. I'm sure a whole bunch of "average" folks would be on it.

not only did it list his name that way, but the newspaper ran a story about it.

miaht82
Aug 15, 2008, 5:52 PM
:previous:
Personally, I think it's a great thing when public figures act responsibly - but until the "average" American starts doing so, I don't see why the rich and famous should be held to a different standard. I'd be more interested in a list that ranked water usage per square foot for example. I'm sure a whole bunch of "average" folks would be on it.
So do the rich and famous need to flush their toilets twice for every one time I flush, their baths and showers take twice or three times as long?
Oh I forgot, us "average" folks only shower once a week, don't wash our dishes and follow city water restrictions for watering lawns.

Okay on that note, I'll post my entire list:

Top 10 business and residential water users

Web Posted: 06/30/2008 06:09 PM CDT

KENS 5 Eyewitness News


Businesses
Address
Monthly Avg.
(12/07-06/08)
Notes

Maxim Integrated Products
9651 Westover Hills
18,278,755 gallons
Micro Chip Manufacturing

H-E-B Grocery Co.
4710 N. Pan Am Expwy
15,761,078 gallons
Working on Projects with SAWS

UTSA
14810 Babcock Rd
11,514,648 gallons
Completed Retrofit Projects with SAWS

CPS Energy Building
13000 S. Hwy 181
10,033,410 gallons
Power Plant - Potable Water for Steam

Coca-Cola Bottling
162 Coca Cola Pl.
9,194,149 gallons
Completed Retrofit Projects with SAWS

Bexar Co. Correction Health
200 N. Comal St.
8,982,971 gallons
Correctional Facility

CPS Energy Board
14740 Streich
8,365,468 gallons
Power Plant - Potable Water for Steam

Bexar Co. Hospital Dist.
4502 Medical Dr.
8,118,916 gallons
Hospital

Fiesta Texas
17000 W I-10
7,469,030 gallons
Theme Park

Frito-Lay Inc #32310
4855 Greatland
6,585,631 gallons
Completed Retrofit Projects with SAWS

Residential Homes
Neighborhood
Monthly Avg.
(12/07-06/08)


Martin J. Landon
Olmos Park
203,804 gallons

Gilbert R. Meadows
Olmos Park
160,842 gallons

David A. Monroe
Olmos Park
159,345 gallons

Tom E. Turner Jr.
NW/Orsinger ln
153,467 gallons

Marshall T. Steves
Terrell Hills
151,757 gallons

James F. Cotter
Dominion
150,154 gallons

Charles Amato
Bluffview of Camino Real
146,948 gallons

Tommy Lee Jones
Terrell Hills
128,673 gallons

Aliece Hollis
Terrell Hills
128,139 gallons

Osborn Barrett
Terrell Heights
126,643 gallons

Source: San Antonio Water System

Texas Tuff
Aug 15, 2008, 11:40 PM
I've always admired Lance Armstrong as a great athlete, but seriously, that's pretty bad to be using that much water when the city is under a water restriction! :yuck:

KevinFromTexas
Aug 16, 2008, 2:25 AM
how do you (or whoever put his whole name there) know they're actually referring to Tommy Lee Jones? Personally, I think it's a great thing when public figures act responsibly - but until the "average" American starts doing so, I don't see why the rich and famous should be held to a different standard. I'd be more interested in a list that ranked water usage per square foot for example. I'm sure a whole bunch of "average" folks would be on it.

The list isn't listing celebrities for the sake of listing celebrities. It's listing people who had high water usages. The fact that they're celebrities is just coincidence. These high water usages are usually happening to the wealthy who have large yards with sprinklers, pools and fountains.

And it's a good bet they're talking about the Tommy Lee Jones - the actor. He was born in San Saba 60 miles northwest of Austin and still lives around San Antonio, and has for years.