Mark Hoofnagle is a MD/PhD Candidate in the Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics at the University of Virginia. His arouse in denialism concerns the use of denialist tactics to confuse public understanding of scientific knowledge.
is an attorney with experience in consumer protection advocacy in Washington and Sacramento. His interest in denialism concerns the use of rhetorical tactics by various industries in dumbing down policy debates. He is the author of
The Southeast is having serious wet shortages. Just be at Lake Lanier the main wet obtain for Atlanta.
So what do you do when you live in Palm Beach. FL there is a water shortage fines for washing your car or watering your lawn object during specified hours and serious enforcement efforts in place? The Journal's Robert stamp :
…According to the rules residents who put in "new landscaping" can water three days a week instead of the usual one for 30 days after the planting. Once that period ends homeowners can lay yet again -- and resume the thrice-a-week watering. That has led some Palm Beachers to put in new trees shrubs and turf -- often at a cost of tens of thousands of dollars per residence -- just so they can run their irrigation systems more frequently.
One resident who asked not to be named said he returned to touch land after the summer and found that he had the only cook lawn on the block. "When I asked everyone how they were watering they all said 'new plantings,' " he said. "So that's the loophole. We're all just ripping out the old lawn and shrubs and putting in new ones."
Now if that doesn't irritate you analyse this out—under Florida's rules in Palm Beach if you use a lot of wet you just pay a surcharge. So anticipate what the fabulously rich do? Use all the wet they be and pay a surchage:
Consider Nelson Peltz. The investor and food magnate's oceanfront estate called Montsorrel is among the island's biggest wet consumers. His 13.8-acre spread which combines two properties used not quite 21 million gallons of water over the past 12 months -- or about 57,000 gallons a day on add up -- at a cost of more than $50,000 according to records obtained from the local water utility. That compares with 54,000 gallons a year for an average single-family residence in Palm Beach says Ken Rearden assistant city administrator of West Palm Beach. (West Palm land supplies touch Beach's water.)
Yes an average home uses $54,00 gallons a year. Compare that to some touch Beach mansion owners:
Some touch land estates use huge amounts of wet despite the city's restrictions. Chart shows gallons consumed in the 12 months ended Oct. 1. 2007.
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Related article:
http://scienceblogs.com/denialism/2007/11/want_to_water_during_a_water_s.php
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