OKLAHOMA CITY -
Water restrictions are now in
effect in the middle of winter. It's another result of the
ongoing drought that has hit the state very hard.
The mandatory restrictions are
now in effect in Oklahoma City and any towns that get their water from OKC. Even in the coldest time of
the year, the drought is making an impact on the metro.
"There's reason to be
concerned and to start conserving," OKC Utilities Director Marsha Slaughter
said.
Conserving starts right in
your own yard. Everyone in Oklahoma City is
now on an odd-even numbered system for outdoor watering.
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"Our wettest months are March,
April, May and June, and the current forecast that came out just yesterday on
the drought monitor says we're going to get less rain than normal for those
months," Slaughter said.
The city's water supply lakes
right now are only half-full. The utilities department says
Lake Hefner is at its lowest level since the 1970s.
Derrick Herrington with EWF
Landscaping in Oklahoma City has been feeling the effects of the drought since
it started two years ago. But he says there are certain
fertilizers you can use when it's this dry.
"Try to use slow-release fertilizers,
nitrogen, to where the nitrogen and material will be there for the lawns when
we do get rain," Herrington said.
If you do choose to water
outside, home and business owners with addresses ending in an odd number may
water on odd numbered days. Addresses ending in an even
number, water on even numbered days.
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Oklahoma County
For most people, their lawns
look brown this time of year. The grass may look dead, but it's actually just
dormant and will come back in the spring. That's nature's way of
conserving energy.
The city says the mandatory
outdoor water restrictions will likely be in effect through the end of the
summer, as the drought continues.
Edmond water customers are not
under the mandatory restrictions. But
cities that buy water from Oklahoma City water are, including the following:
Moore, Norman, Blanchard, El Reno, Mustang,
Newcastle, Piedmont, Yukon, Canadian County Rural Water District #3, the Deer
Creek Rural Water Corporation, Tinker Air Force Base, and Pottawatomie County
Rural Water District #3.