Drought tightens grip on Southeast
With little rain in forecast, towns weigh drastic conservation measures
![]() John Bazemore / AP Fishing guide Chuck Biggers maneuvers his boat through shallow water at Lake Lanier in Buford, Ga., on Oct. 11. Rivers and some lakes throughout the Southeast are turning to dust, towns are threatening to ration dwindling water supplies and lawmakers are pointing fingers. |
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MSNBC video |
Lake, business sink from Georgia drought Oct. 15: Georgia officials say if the drought persists, Lake Lanier could reach its lowest levels in history. WXIA reports. MSNBC |
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Forecast calls for weak El Nino July 9: Government forecasters predict this year's El Nino will bring wetter weather from Texas across the Gulf Coast and Southeast, while the Midwest and Pacific Northwest can expect a milder winter. NBC's Anne Thompson reports. |
BUFORD, Ga. - If there’s a ground zero for the epic drought that’s tightening its grip on the South, it’s once-mighty Lake Lanier, the Atlanta water source that’s now a relative puddle surrounded by acres of dusty red clay.
Tall measuring sticks once covered by a dozen feet of water stand bone dry. “No Diving” signs rise from rocks 25 feet from the water. Crowds of boaters have been replaced by men with metal detectors searching the arid lake bed for lost treasure.
“This lake is a survivor,” Jeff “Buddha” Powell told a worried customer at his bait shop along the barren banks.
“If you panic, you don’t help Mother Nature,” he added. “It’s going to rain when it rains.”
But little rain is in the forecast, and without it climatologists say the water source for more than 3 million people could run dry in just 90 days.
That dire prediction has some towns considering more drastic measures than mere lawn-watering bans, including mandatory rationing that would penalize homeowners and businesses if they don’t reduce water usage.
“We’re way beyond limiting outdoor water use. We’re talking about indoor water use,” said Jeff Knight, an environmental engineer for the college town of Athens, 60 miles northeast of Atlanta, which is preparing a last-ditch rationing program as its reservoir dries up.
“There has to be limits to where government intrudes on someone’s life, but we have to impose a penalty on some people,” he added. “The problem is how much and who. That gets political. But it’s going to hurt everyone. We’re all going to share the pain.”
'Exceptional' drought
About 26 percent of the Southeast is covered by an “exceptional” drought — the National Weather Service’s worst drought category. The affected area extends like a dark cloud over most of Tennessee, Alabama and the northern half of Georgia, as well as parts of North and South Carolina, Kentucky and Virginia.
The only spots in the region not suffering from abnormally dry conditions are parts of southern and eastern Florida and southeast Georgia.
Government forecasters say the drought started in parts of Georgia and Alabama in early 2006 and spread quickly. Sweltering temperatures and a drier-than-normal hurricane season contributed to the parched landscape.
Now residents are starting to feel the pinch.
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John Bazemore / AP Lake Lanier, an Atlanta water source, is now a relative puddle surrounded by acres of dusty red clay. |
N.C. urges water restrictions
In North Carlina, Gov. Mike Easley stopped short of imposing statewide water rationing but asked people to stop watering lawns and washing cars.
“A bit of mud on the car or patches of brown on the lawn must be a badge of honor,” Easley said Monday. “It means you are doing the right thing for your community and our state.”
As conditions worsen, the Army Corps of Engineers has become a favorite target of lawmakers in Georgia, Florida and Alabama, where the drought has intensified a decades-old feud involving how the Corps manages water rights.
“I particularly am disappointed that the Corps has allowed so much water to drain out of our reservoirs, out of our lakes, as they have,” said Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, a Republican. “It’s not that we haven’t had enough water. It’s more a function of allowing so much of it to go downstream.”
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