Water News for Austin Texas
Austin’s water story over the past two days is a mix of reassuring numbers and a reminder that Central Texas is still living on a knife’s edge between drought and downpour. According to the Texas Water Development Board’s Water Data for Texas site, the main Austin-area water supply reservoirs are sitting at roughly 91 percent full as of Saturday, June 13. Water Data for Texas reports that Lake Buchanan is about 97 and Lake Travis is just under 88 capacity, with Stillhouse Hollow at a full 100. In plain language, the big regional bathtubs that keep faucets flowing in Austin are in good shape, with millions of acre-feet of water in storage and only modest recent declines in lake levels. On the ground in the city, that means no new restrictions on treated drinking water this weekend beyond Austin’s usual conservation rules. Austin Water has not issued any new boil-water notices or emergency alerts in the past 48 hours, and there are no citywide warnings about tap safety. If you are in the city service area, you can drink from the tap, cook, brush your teeth, and fill up reusable bottles with confidence as treatment plants continue to meet federal and state standards. The sky, however, has been surprisingly quiet. The Lower Colorado River Authority’s Hydromet rainfall summary shows zero rainfall in the Austin gauges feeding into Lady Bird Lake over the past 24 hours, including Barton Creek at Loop 360 and the SH 71 gauge near Oak Hill, along with other nearby stations that have also registered 0.00 inches. After some scattered storms earlier in the month, the last two days have brought essentially no measurable precipitation over the core of the metro area. That dry spell matters because, as KXAN has been reporting in its drought coverage, most of Central Texas remains locked in moderate to extreme drought despite earlier rounds of rain. The soil is thirsty, the Hill Country aquifers are under pressure, and the region is one hot, windy stretch away from seeing wildfire danger spike again. Social media voices like Clayton Tucker have been amplifying statewide concerns, pointing out that more than two-thirds of Texas is dealing with some level of drought and that fast-growing demands, from data centers to new subdivisions, are putting extra stress on existing water supplies. So the bottom line for Austin this weekend: plenty of water in the big lakes, safe drinking water at the tap, bone-dry rain gauges, and a drought that refuses to loosen its grip. It is a good time to enjoy a long shower, but maybe still a better time to keep it short. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local water updates and stories. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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