REPORT
OF THE
SOUTHEAST
WATER SUPPLY ROUNDTABLE
Convened
in Peachtree City, Ga.
November
8-10, 1999
Sponsored
by:
Appalachian
Regional Commission
Southern
States Energy Board
Tennessee
Valley Authority
Tennessee
Department of Environment and Conservation
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency - Region IV
U.S.
Geological Survey
The
University of Tennessee
The
U.S.D.A. Forest Service
Organized
by:
The
University of Tennessee
Energy,
Environment & Resources Center
with
the assistance of Stewart, Wright & Associates, LLC
Authors
David
Lewis Feldman
Senior
Research Scientist
Ruth
Anne Hanahan
Senior
Research Assistant
Table
of Contents
Overview
of Roundtable Process
Tuesday
Discussion Groups
Data
Acquisition and Dissemination
Educating
the Public and Decision Makers
Planning
and Conflict Resolution
Conservation
and End-Use Efficiency
Wednesday
Discussion Groups
Strategies:
Common Themes
‘Next
Steps’
Appendices
(Coming soon)
A.
Roundtable Participants, Steering
Committee, and Core Group Members
C.
High Priority Strategies Emerging From Southeast Water Supply
Roundtable
D.
Roundtable Evaluations
E.
Volunteer Matrix
F.
Newspaper Clippings
In November 1999, 125
public and private sector water management professionals and others whose work
relates to water supply convened for the Southeast Water Supply Roundtable.
This meeting was the culmination of an effort to address water
supply problems and their solutions that formally began at the Southeast
Water Resources: Management and Supply Symposium held in Chattanooga,
Tennessee in August, 1998. The
overall goal of the Roundtable was to launch a long-term dialogue
designed to cooperatively address the water supply problems facing the
Southeast. In order to achieve this goal, the Roundtable set forth
three objectives, to: 1) develop practical, politically-acceptable strategies
for addressing current and future water supply issues facing the region; 2)
encourage participants to evaluate these strategies in the context of how they
could be applied in their own communities and states; and 3) develop a Roundtable
charter which would establish the structure and processes needed to
maintain a dialogue.
Over a three day period, Roundtable
participants met in professionally facilitated discussion groups to address
four water supply priority areas: 1) conservation and end use efficiency; 2)
data acquisition and dissemination; 3) educating the public and decision
makers; and 4) water supply planning and conflict resolution.
On Day 1, 26 participants met to finalize key water management issues
and strategies within these four areas that would frame the discussion over
the next two days. On Day 2, all
the participants participated in two of the four priority area discussion
groups and on Day 3, they participated in ‘wrap-up’ activities.
Following is a summary of the outcomes of Days 2 and 3.
For Day 2, we present the key challenges each priority area group faced
and a synopsis of their overall strategies for meeting these challenges.
For Day 3, we provide a summary of the participants’ views towards
the Roundtable’s future as well as its current status.
Data Acquisition and
Dissemination
Key Challenge:
To obtain and disseminate good data for ensuring a dependable water supply.
Strategy Synopsis:
An assessment of available data and its shortcomings and limitations should be
undertaken to lay the foundation for a sound data collection effort.
This effort, in turn, should identify key data needs, establish a
regional data collection effort headed by governmental agencies and
supplemented by citizen-based groups, and develop a consortium of states and
NGOs to serve as a clearinghouse for ensuring that data are useful and
accessible to decision makers and citizens.
Key Implementation
Consideration: Conferees widely
debated the advantages and disadvantages of various data collection and
dissemination approaches. Discussion
hinged on whether it would be better to establish a centralized clearinghouse
which might ensure data consistency as opposed to forming a decentralized
network that would reduce costs and provide greater agency control.
Educating the Public
and Decision Makers
Key Challenge:
To effectively educate citizens and decision makers on the urgency of water
supply problems and their possible solutions.
Strategy Synopsis:
An assessment of the current status of water-related educational programs and
their strengths and weaknesses should be conducted to provide the basis for
development of innovative, targeted educational programs and services.
These programs and services should be packaged in the form of a
‘toolbox’ that can be used by schools, government agencies, businesses,
and citizens. Partnerships should be formed to implement these programs and
services.
Key Implementation
Consideration: Conferees were
particularly concerned about the diverse audiences that need to be reached and
the need to send a clear, consistent message to each of them.
Planning and Conflict
Resolution
Key Challenge:
To promote effective local, state, and regional water supply planning which
integrates land and water issues and uses innovative conflict resolution
techniques.
Strategy Synopsis:
States and other key stakeholders should collectively seek to develop a
cooperative framework that encourages long-term, basin-wide water supply
planning in the Southeast. Individual states should also be encouraged to develop water
supply plans that are equitable and protective of instream flow and other
beneficial uses. Mediation and
alternative dispute resolution tools should be used to avoid and/or minimize
water supply conflicts.
Key Implementation
Consideration: Conferees debated the
possible benefits from a framework that promotes regional planning as well as
barriers to its development. Among the benefits of a regional framework,
conferees identified serving as a clearinghouse for planning information and
providing case studies of successful as well as unsuccessful planning efforts.
Among the barriers to achieving such a framework, conferees discussed
its cost, the lack of buy-in from public officials, and the incompatibility
among regional and local plans.
Conservation and
End-Use Efficiency
Key Challenge:
To more effectively conserve the region’s water supplies for the benefit of
current and future generations.
Strategy Synopsis:
A multipronged approach should be adopted to conserve water from regional to
local levels. Awareness-building
and educational activities should be promoted which target the public,
industries/businesses, and decision makers on why and how they should support
water conservation. Water
supply infrastructures must be better maintained and water conservation
technologies should be developed that are specifically tailored to the
Southeast. Existing regulations,
market incentives, and land use policies which support water conservation
should be bolstered and/or new ones should be
adopted. Finally, local initiatives aimed at conserving water should be
supported at regional and state levels.
Key Implementation
Consideration: Conferees considered
establishing a federal/state interagency coalition for the region to formulate
water conservation goals and objectives and to assist states in achieving
them. They also debated the value
of ‘reusing’ water (grey water) and decided that this issue is so
controversial that it should be addressed in a future conference.
Day 3 Roundtable ‘wrap-up’
activities began with participants being asked to evaluate conference outcomes
for common themes. Five
cross-cutting “needs” emerged: 1) better inter-agency coordination; 2) better educated and more aware decision-makers and
publics; 3) dedicated funding for strategy implementation; 4) stronger
partnerships at all levels within the Southeast; and 5) one or more
‘champions’ who share a common vision for the Roundtable’s future.
Participants were also
asked to identify the ‘next steps’ that should be taken in this effort.
Their suggestions fell into six general categories: 1) education --
to conduct a comprehensive educational effort throughout the Southeast on
water supply issues; 2) administration -- to develop a clear mission
statement containing a vision, goals, rationale, and structure; 3) regional
resource assessment -- to conduct a comprehensive assessment of
conservation, planning, education, and data management initiatives related to
water supply across the Southeast; 4) political legitimacy -- to obtain
political ‘buy-in’ and endorsement from top officials; and 5) increased
representation -- to pursue more diverse representation.
In general, participants
thought the Roundtable was productive and its timing and continuation
opportune. It should
strategically move forward so as not to lose momentum, set realistic
objectives, and be fiscally creative and prudent.
The Roundtable should be inclusive and serve as an “impartial
fact-based group.” In the
short-term, it should identify a “champion” to garner wide support and
respect for “initiating the most important first steps of the Roundtable
dialogue.” Over time, that it
should evolve into a long-term dialogue to produce cooperative solutions to
regional water problems.
Since the November Roundtable,
its Steering Committee has begun to enact the participants’
recommendations. A charter and
strategic plan have been developed and the University of Tennessee (UT) and
the Southern States Energy Board (SSEB) have established a partnership to help
move them forward. The strategic
plan defines the responsibilities for these two entities and provides an
organizational secretariat and “internal” and “external” advisory
committees to oversee implementation of programmatic objectives. The new secretariat has proposed, and is seeking funding
for, an assessment of water data needs for the Southeast over the next 20
years. This assessment is seen as
partly fulfilling the intent of the organizers of the Roundtable to
launch a long-term dialogue to cooperatively address the region’s water
supply challenges. Thanks to the
work of the Roundtable participants, the first steps have been taken
toward this goal.
On November 8-10, 1999,
125 public and private sector water management professionals from the
Southeast region of the United States met to develop practical,
politically-acceptable strategies for addressing current and future water
supply issues facing the region. This
meeting, the Southeast Water Supply Roundtable, was the culmination of
a scoping effort on water supply problems and their solutions that formally
began at the Southeast Water Resources: Management and Supply Symposium
held in Chattanooga, Tennessee in August, 1998.
This report reviews describes the Roundtable’s goals,
structure, and outcomes and summarizes the background of events leading up to
it and steps taken following it.
The general goal of the Roundtable
was to launch a long-term dialogue designed to cooperatively address the water
supply problems facing the Southeast. Toward
this goal, three specific objectives were adopted, to:
·
Draft water supply strategies
under four previously identified priority areas: 1) data acquisition and
dissemination; 2) conservation and end use efficiency; 3) educating the public
and decision makers; and 4) planning and conflict resolution;
·
Encourage participants to return
to their states and communities to determine how these strategies could be
locally adapted and applied; and
·
Develop a Roundtable Charter
to establish the structure and mechanisms necessary for maintaining a regional
dialogue on how to effectively address high priority regional water supply
challenges.
Changing land use,
population growth, and drought have placed enormous pressures on the
Southeast’s water supplies. Water conflicts similar to those which have
occurred in the Western United
States are becoming more commonplace in the region.
Such conflicts revolve around actual or contemplated interbasin
diversion, difficulties in reconciling multiple water uses during drought, low
streamflow, and efforts to balance instream needs and offstream demands.
They are also enmeshed in the challenges of protecting water quality
while sustaining economic growth.
Southeastern water
professionals have become increasingly aware of the pressing need to avoid as
well as minimize the problems experienced by their Western and Southwestern
counterparts. In the early 1990s,
a group of academics and public and private sector professionals, as well as
others whose work relates to water supply, began meeting to discuss how they
might cooperatively navigate these new and turbulent waters.
With initial seed funding from the Appalachian Regional Commission and
subsequent support from TVA, EPA Region IV, the University of Tennessee, and
several private sector organizations, they informally assessed the interest in
establishing a regional initiative dedicated to addressing water supply
challenges. Finding a high level of interest across multiple sectors, a
formal Steering Committee was established to begin shaping this initiative
(Appendix A).
Steering Committee members
agreed that in order to build a solid foundation for this initiative, a broad
cross-section of Southeastern water professionals should be convened to
systematically assess the complex regional water supply needs of the region
and their potential solutions. Funds
raised by the Steering Committee were used to hold a meeting.
In August, 1998, 180 experts gathered in Chattanooga for the Southeast
Water Resources: Management and Supply Symposium.
Over two and one-half days, case studies and management frameworks were
presented and discussed and attendees participated in break-out groups that
discussed economic, environmental, legal, and political trends affecting the
Southeast’s water supply. A
primary outcome of this meeting was consensus among participants on four
overarching, priority needs related to the Southeast’s water supply:
t
Improving acquisition and
dissemination of reliable and consistent regional water data.
t
Increasing state and regional
water conservation and end-use efficiency efforts.
t
Better educating the public and
decision makers on water management/supply issues.
t
Initiating and improving state
and regional water management planning, including conflict resolution.
As a result of these
identified priority needs, the Symposium’s Steering Committee
determined that a second regional meeting
-- a Southeast Water Supply Roundtable -- was in order.
This meeting would be comprised of mid-to high-level policy makers and
political advisors from the Southeast. They
would be charged with developing strategies to address these priority areas
and launching a long-term regional effort to facilitate their implementation.
To prepare for the Roundtable,
a “Core Group” of 26 decision makers responsible for water management
throughout the region met on September 16, 1999. Assisted by members of the Steering Committee, the Core
Group: 1) analyzed problems, issues, and concerns under four water management
priority areas; 2) discussed and debated strategies for addressing them; and
3) identified regional or inter-jurisdictional mechanisms or institutions for
facilitating strategy development. The
outcomes of this meeting were used to frame the Roundtable discussion.
Roundtable
Structure & Attendees
To make the most efficient
use of participant’s time, the Roundtable was conducted at a remote
suburban location (Wyndam Peachtree Executive Conference Center in Peachtree
City, GA) from noon on Monday, November 8, 1999 through noon on Wednesday,
November 10. Figure 1 provides a
schematic of the daily agenda including lists of tasks each of the discussion
groups were charged with completing by the end of their sessions.
Appendix B the Roundtable Program.
The reader should note that the information provided in the Roundtable
Program is not entirely consistent with that provided in Figure 1.
Minor mid-course changes as to what was expected of the discussion
groups were made by the meeting organizers and facilitators during the Roundtable
in order to keep discussions productive, focused, and representative of
diverse views.
A total of 125 individuals
attended the Roundtable including representatives of federal, state,
and local environmental, planning, and development agencies; environmental,
natural resource and community groups; and academics.
Attendees came from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
Twenty-six of these attendees were part of the ‘Core Group’ who, a
month earlier, helped generate draft strategies for addressing priorities.
These draft strategies were used as the point of departure for Roundtable
discussions (see “Background”). Appendix
A lists all Roundtable participants, including those who participated
as Core Group members.
| Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
|
| 8:00 | . | Plenary (all participants) 1.
Re-iterate Roundtable goals 2. Provide guidelines for concurrent session discussions |
Plenary (all participants) 1.
Conduct group reports from each issue area |
| 9:00 | .
|
.
|
Concurrent
Sessions
(all participants) 1.
Review & evaluate high priority strategies identified on
Tuesday |
| 10:00 |
. | Session
I
(all participants) 1. Evaluate
Core Group strategies & refine & add to them, as desired |
|
| 11:00 | .
|
News
Conference |
|
| 12:00 | Core
Group Assembly 1.
Review/revise draft strategies under four priority areas
|
. | .
|
| 1:00 | .
|
.
|
|
| 2:00 | Session
II (All participants) 1. Evaluate
Core Group & Concurrent Session I
strategies & refine & add to them, as desired |
.
|
|
| 3:00 | .
|
||
| 4:00 | .
|
||
| 5:00 | .
|
.
|
|
| 6:00 | .
|
Summary
Session
(Group Reps & Facilitators) 1. Prepare summary report of concurrent sessions’ outcomes |
.
|
Figure
1. Schematic of Roundtable’s
Daily Agenda
Overview of Roundtable
Process
Core Group and Steering
Committee members arrived on November 8, in advance of other Roundtable participants,
in order to finalize the key water management issues and strategies which
would frame group discussions involving all 125 Roundtable participants
over the next two days. Meeting
from noon to 5 pm, the Core Group members were charged with accomplishing
three tasks. First, they reviewed
and, as needed, revised the draft strategies developed in the September 16
meeting. Second, they clarified
and refined a strawperson Roundtable Charter and Vision Statement that
had been drafted by David Feldman, the Roundtable convener.
Third, they discussed the role they would play in the ‘priority
area’ discussion groups on November 9.
This role included serving as a technical advisor: being a resource to
those who had questions on the Core Group’s draft strategies and an active
listener. The Core Group
accomplished the first two tasks in four facilitator-led ‘priority area’
discussion groups. The
third task was accomplished under the guidance of David Feldman and Carl
Moore, the coordinator of the facilitation team, who together conducted a
‘coaching’ session for the Core Group members on the role they would play
the following day.
The November 9 Roundtable
began with a brief plenary session for all 125 participants in which the
overall goals of the meeting were re-iterated and guidelines for the
day’s discussion groups were provided.
Each attendee was asked to pick two discussion groups from the four
priority area topics (data acquisition and dissemination; conservation and
end-use efficiency; educating the public and decision makers; planning and
conflict resolution) in which to participate.
Concurrent group
discussions were conducted in the morning and, again, in the afternoon (see
Figure 1). Professional
facilitators led each group discussion. At
the outset of the morning session, the facilitators described the framework
for the ensuing discussion: the
group was asked to evaluate the ‘priority area’ strategies drafted by the
Core Group and refine and add to them, as desired.
Then, they were told to prioritize their revised list of strategies.
Third, for the four strategies which received the highest ranking, they
were to identify potential barriers to implementing each of them and to
identify possible enabling mechanisms for overcoming these barriers and make
them workable. The second round of concurrent sessions in the afternoon
followed the same discussion framework as the morning session. However,
rather than only reviewing the Core Group draft strategies, they were also
urged to refine and add to the work previously done in the morning session.
At the conclusion of the
afternoon session, all Roundtable attendees reconvened for a brief
closing plenary session. Reports,
provided by all eight discussion groups, highlighted two of the most
significant points emerging from group discussions. Later that evening, the
facilitators and group representatives met and prepared a consolidated summary
of the highest priority strategies, their barriers, and enabling mechanisms to
overcome them identified by the four priority areas groups.
Appendix C summarizes these.
Finally, on November 10,
all Roundtable participants were randomly assigned to four
facilitator-led discussion groups for five ‘wrap-up’ activities.
First, they reviewed and evaluated the prior day’s summary of the
high priority strategies (see Appendix C).
Second, they offered ideas on what the key ‘next steps’ for the Roundtable
should be. Third, they
identified one outcome they most wished to see emerge from the Roundtable.
Fourth, they provided final thoughts, comments, and reflections on
the Roundtable process. Due
to time constraints imposed by the flow of the discussion, the latter two
activities were not conducted by all groups.
Finally, all participants were asked to anonymously evaluate the Roundtable
(Appendix D) and identify whether he/she would be willing to volunteer to
participate in ongoing Roundtable efforts, and, if so, how (Appendix
E).
Tuesday Discussion
Groups
Roundtable
participants engaged in very thoughtful and thorough discussions of potential
strategies for managing the Southeast’s current and future water supply.
Following is a description of the outcomes of these discussions by
issue area. We first summarize
the challenge presented to each issue area group and identify how their
proposed strategies could potentially meet this challenge.
We then enumerate the overarching strategies which they developed.
In some instances, we synthesized these overarching strategies from
extensive lists of specific strategies generated by the groups.
In these cases, we summarize the specific strategies, along with any
pertinent discussion points, immediately following each overarching strategy.
Data Acquisition and
Dissemination
Participants in the two
Data Groups were given the challenge of finding a means to obtain and
disseminate valid, reliable, and comprehensive data in order to ensure a
stable water supply for the Southeast. They
responded to this challenge by recommending eight major strategies designed to
improve data compatibility, ensure that the “right” data are collected to
address current policy needs; make data accessible and useful to decision
makers and the public; and, improve the underlying infrastructure and support
system for data.
Their specific strategies
were to:
t
Adhere to a seven step data
gathering and dissemination process, as follows: 1) define the problems and
their geographic scales; 2) assess available data; 3) determine current and
future data needs (e.g., water-resources; instream flow vs offstream
withdrawal; demographic, socioeconomic, land use); 4) determine how to fund
the data collection process; 5) identify data collection methods; 6) determine
how to manage and store data; and, 7) determine how to disseminate data to
those who need it.
t
Undertake a comprehensive
assessment of currently available data including identifying the type of data
collected; how it is stored and managed; how it is disseminated; and who uses
it.
t
Have state and local governments
take the primary role, with federal assistance, in defining regional and local
water issues and related questions that need to be addressed and in
identifying the “core set” of
data needed to answer these key questions.
Conferees
felt that identifying these questions, as well as generating the core set of
data needed to answer them, would be particularly challenging and could
benefit from a benchmarking effort. This
effort could explore how other regions have dealt with these questions.
Furthermore, pilot projects could be established using a limited number of
data sets (e.g., precipitation, stream flow, water withdrawal, and return
flow).
t
Expand the data collection
network(s) to include a citizen-based effort to assist in collecting reliable
data that will meet the needs of state and local governments.
Conferees
discussed the importance of quality control/quality assurance (QA/QC) when
obtaining data from volunteer monitoring groups. Specifically, they discussed the need to provide
comprehensive training, the ongoing challenge of volunteer coordination, the
use of standardized collection systems across the region, and achieving buy-in
from agency heads for using volunteers.
t
Encourage states to expand and
improve their data collection and management programs and to develop systems
that afford greater flexibility in sharing their data with each other.
Conferees
felt that there are two major impediments to this strategy: 1) a lack of
adequate funds to establish these systems; and, 2) the lack of political will
in state legislatures that do not yet see this as a funding priority.
They also felt that this strategy could initially be implemented
through a pilot project to demonstrate its value.
t
Encourage formation of a
coalition of Southeastern states to request Congress to revise the missions of
data-collection agencies so they may collect data which are more appropriately
aimed at state and regionally-defined issues.
Conferees
agreed that a major challenge to implementing this strategy would be getting
agencies to first agree upon a common data collection system and to then agree
to alter their current missions to accommodate it. Some conferees noted that this common data, to be viable,
would have to be made mandatory.
t
Establish a Southeastern water
supply data clearinghouse that will serve as a regional repository for
archiving past, current and future data collected by all agencies.
(A statewide GIS-based clearinghouse for data currently exists in
Georgia. The underlying concept
behind this clearinghouse is that all data should be housed together to more
easily assess water problems.)
Conferees
debated the advantages and disadvantages of establishing a clearinghouse
versus establishing a decentralized network. The general consensus was that
the latter was preferable and that its features should include making data
accessible to all users, enabling data sharing, providing chat rooms,
promoting citizen group technical assistance, and facilitating the adding of
new data. Barriers to
establishing such a network, they felt, included reconciling the different
data collection methods and equipment among agencies and organizations,
resolving the issue of network ownership and control and protecting
proprietary rights of data collectors who wish to use data for their own
research and publication.
t
Establish a Council of
Southeastern States on Water to coordinate the collection of water data and
address water problems at varying scales in the Southeast.
The
conferees agreed that this Council should be comprised of representatives from
federal, state, regional, and local government agencies and should also
include representatives from universities, nonprofit groups, industries, and
citizen groups as well as other interested parties.
Educating the Public
and Decision Makers
Participants in the two
Education Groups were presented with the challenge of finding ways to
effectively educate the public and decision makers on current and anticipated
water supply issues and concerns. They
responded to this challenge by recommending over 40 specific actions that fell
under six broad strategies. Achievement
of these strategies, conferees felt, would enhance existing water-related
programs currently being conducted in the region and provide products and
services related to water education that could be effectively adapted to local
needs.
The six broad strategies
are to:
t
Assess the current status of
water-related educational programs in the Southeast and identify the programs
being offered by various entities.
Conferees
agreed that a ‘resource matrix’ should be developed that identifies who is
doing what in regards to water education in the Southeast.
In addition, model programs in environmental areas other than water
should be identified for inclusion in the regional toolbox since such programs
might offer valuable applicable lessons.
t
Identify target audiences at whom
educational programs should be aimed.
Conferees
brainstormed a number of potential target audiences that should receive water
education. These included, but
were not limited to, governors and other state officials; local decision
makers including planning boards and county commissioners; school teachers;
‘smart growth’ groups and water utilities.
They agreed that each of these groups would have to be educated though
unique delivery systems and that it is particularly important to provide these
services to hard-to-reach groups. Moreover,
they agreed that as a part of these delivery systems,
effective marketing strategies would need to initially be employed to
raise the audiences’ awareness of and interest in participating in these
educational programs. Finally, it
was suggested that key decision makers receive special ‘certification’
training on water supply issues.
t
Develop a toolbox of
water-related educational products and services that would benefit these
target audiences.
Conferees
want the toolbox to contain: 1) a range of educational programs comprised of
diverse themes which could be marketed and delivered to different audiences
through multiple educational media; 2) lists of water education resources
available to educators and the public throughout the Southeast; and 3) case
studies which would benefit decision makers by providing lessons learned.
The conferees agreed that the messages conveyed through this toolbox
should be consistent and simple.
t
Conduct an attitudinal and
behavioral assessment of target audiences in the Southeast to determine
opportunities for encouraging conservation-minded attitudes and
actions.
Conferees
discussed how this data could be used to determine which attitudes and
behaviors should be targeted for modification through educational programs.
They also suggested using the data to evaluate the effectiveness of
conservation education programs if coupled with a post-intervention
assessment.
t
Develop an integrated K-12
waterbasin educational program.
Conferees
suggested developing a water character similar to ‘Smokey the Bear’ that
would depict the essence of the education program and could be used to promote
it.
t
Maximize partnership
opportunities with educational and noneducational entities.
Conferees
offered examples of potential partnerships and their benefits.
These included involving scientists in data communication efforts
beyond their own research groups and possibly to the public (i.e., if first
translated to lay-terms);asking businesses and industries to contribute to the
support of educational programs in return for receiving good public relations
and improved local hydrologic conditions; and working with industry
associations’ education coordinators to potentially expand their programs’
service areas.
Planning and
Conflict Resolution
Participants in the two
Planning Groups were given the challenge of determining how water supply
planning and conflict resolution techniques could be more effectively
conducted in the Southeast in order to maintain a stable water supply.
They responded to this challenge by identifying approximately 20
separate actions that fell under six broad strategies.
These strategies, if implemented, would: 1) result in basin-wide (or
other appropriate hydrologically-defined area) planning supported at both the
regional and state levels; 2) promote policy development that better
integrates land use and growth issues with water supply planning; 3) encourage
the development and use of new and innovative water supply technologies; and
4) promote the use of alternative dispute resolution techniques and interstate
compacts as means of equitably resolving water supply conflicts while also
avoiding costly litigation.
Their strategies were to:
t
Develop a ‘regional
mechanism’ to support water supply planning.
Conferees
identified ways in which this ‘mechanism’ could support and benefit
planners. These methods included
maintaining planning data and models in an open access framework to promote
understanding and trust; operating as a clearinghouse in order to more
effectively share planning resources and knowledge; and providing case studies
that exemplify both water supply planning successes as well as failures.
t
Conduct integrated, long-term,
adaptive basin-wide (or other appropriate hydrologically-defined area) water
supply planning.
Conferees
prioritized various factors that would need to be considered in order to
effectively conduct such planning. First,
they felt that obtaining funding sources was of utmost importance.
Suggested sources of funding included having users pay a share of the
planning costs; redirecting existing resources; and seeking additional federal
funding. It was also suggested
that existing regional entities could be used in the planning process (e.g.,
Southern Governors Association; Southern States Energy Board) to reduce
overall planning costs. The
second priority was identifying the environmental, economic, and social
benefits and costs of comprehensive planning.
Decision makers could use these benefits and costs to promote
basin-wide planning and planners could use them in the planning process,
itself. The third priority was to
have clearly articulated and compatible goals at each level of planning (i.e.,
local, regional, state). Where
feasible, these goals should mutually benefit multiple water users (e.g.,
agriculture, environmental conservation; business; recreation).
The fourth priority was the need to define the scope and terms of what
to include in the planning process (e.g., coverage of both ground and surface
water). Finally, conferees
emphasized that water supply planning needs to be coordinated at all levels of
government.
t
Increase awareness of the linkage
between land use, urban growth, and water supply while
identifying innovative solutions to avoid crisis-driven situations.
Conferees
discussed how decision makers would need to become better educated about the
adverse impacts of land use decisions on water supply in order to develop
policies that proactively integrate land use and water supply. They also
suggested that states may need to consider applying regulatory approaches to
balance urban growth against water supply.
Conferees agreed that regulatory approaches should initially not be too
restrictive and should only become more restrictive, if necessary.
t
Recommend that all Southeastern
states take on certain water supply planning responsibilities.
Conferees
suggested that some of these responsibilities could include: 1) developing
statutes and programs that protect instream flows and are consistent with the
protection of other beneficial uses; 2) developing equitable and comprehensive
water management and allocation strategies that consider regional impacts; and
3) identifying an agency/organization that has a clear mandate and
responsibility for water supply and conservation issues.
They also identified the need to get governors more involved and
interested in water supply issues.
t
Increase the use of mediation and
alternative dispute resolution tools and interstate compacts as ways to avoid
or minimize water supply conflicts.
Conferees
suggested that to maximize the use of these conflict resolution techniques in
the Southeast, the following actions should be taken: 1) mediators should be
made available in all Southeastern states; 2) training should be provided to
all parties interested in using these techniques; and 3) the benefits of the
use of these techniques (e.g., cost savings of mediation vs. litigation)
should be promoted.
t
Fund and share new water supply
and conservation technologies.
Conferees
agreed that to expedite the development and use of new technologies,
additional research would need to be funded and that the process of
implementing new technologies would need to be streamlined.
One way the latter could be done would be to ensure that regulators are
well educated on a new technology’s use.
Conferees also advocated that new technologies be developed to improve
the efficiency of water delivery systems and to develop more ecologically
appropriate water supply sources.
Conservation and
End-Use Efficiency
Participants in the
Conservation Groups were given the challenge of how to more effectively
conserve the Southeast’s water supplies for the benefit of current and
future generations. They
responded to this challenge by identifying approximately 30 separate actions
that fell under six broad strategies. These
strategies, if implemented, would: 1) achieve a paradigm shift from the
perception that regional supplies are limitless to a more accurate assessment
that accounts for regional water supply constraints; 2) create a conservation
ethic that eliminates the win/lose mentality commonly found when
managing/negotiating regional and local water supplies; 3) help maintain a
more durable and efficient water supply infrastructure; 4) develop more
consistent, comprehensive regulatory and voluntary approaches to conserve the
Southeast’s water; 5) encourage greater participation, and thus, enhance a
sense of ownership by citizens, businesses and industries in local water
conservation efforts; and 6) develop better water conservation techniques that
can be tailored to the Southeast.
Their strategies were to:
t
Build awareness and educate
youth, the public-at-large, industries, and decision makers on why and how
they should support regional and local water conservation.
Conferees
discussed a range of actions that could be taken to promote and implement
water conservation education. To
better educate youth, they suggested incorporating water conservation programs
in the K-12 educational systems throughout the region. To promote water conservation among adults conferees
suggested providing information on utility bills on the economic and
environmental benefits of using water more wisely and tips on how users may do
so. To educate industrial and
business representatives and decision makers, they suggested establishing a
Southeastern Regional Information Clearinghouse that would distribute water
conservation information, models, case studies, and web-site links.
The clearinghouse could serve both as a resource and as a vehicle to
promote information exchange. They
also suggested creating a ‘toolbox’ of educational materials and programs
that agencies, businesses, and industries could use to conduct in-house
training. Finally, conferees also
suggested encouraging trade associations to conduct their national meetings in
the Southeast (e.g., American Water Works Association Symposium).
An overarching recommendation tied to each of these actions was to keep
the water conservation message straightforward and simple.
t
Improve current water supply
infrastructure, including its maintenance and rehabilitation.
Conferees
discussed the importance of tracking, correcting, and reporting ‘unaccounted
for water’ loss which largely results from leaks in customers’ service
lines and plumbing fixtures. Repairing
leaks conserves water and extends the life of the existing infrastructure.
Also, by replacing faulty meters and metering un-metered connections,
conferees pointed out that additional revenue could be generated to help fund
infrastructure maintenance, repair, and expansion.
t
Evaluate and consider adopting
new regulations, economic and/or market incentives, and land use policies to
support the conservation of regional and local water supplies.
Conferees
recommended lobbying for the retention of current federal legislation that
effectively conserves water and modifying or repealing legislation that does
not. An example of the former is the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of
1992 that has been considered for repeal, and which mandates a number of
effective conservation-related practices (e.g., use of low-flush toilets).
On the state level, conferees recommended that well-defined water
conservation programs be established, and legislation be enacted, that would
enable local governments to enforce water conservation practices.
They also suggested reviewing and modifying health codes that inhibit
water conservation. For example,
some state health codes prohibit the lodging industry from promoting water
conservation practices (e.g., reuse of towels).
Conferees suggested that a federal/state interagency coalition be
established that would be dedicated to promoting water conservation in the
Southeast. This coalition, among
other responsibilities, would develop common water conservation goals and
objectives for this region and assist states in achieving them. Conferees also advocated water conservation incentives
related to law, policy and pricing structure.
These incentives should apply to industries, businesses and wastewater
treatment plants. Finally,
conferees also recommended incorporating ‘smart growth’ strategies into
land use policies to deter urban sprawl.
t
Support local measures that
involve city and county governments and their citizens in conserving and
protecting the integrity of water supplies.
Conferees
suggested that local hydrologic assessments should be conducted to determine
how best to manage water supplies. Such assessments could include aerial
photography to determine the extent of impervious surface within local
watersheds and basins. Such
assessments would help local engineers and hydrologists to determine how to
most effectively treat runoff from developed areas.
They would also help to determine ways to retain water within basins
where the water originates, which, as conferees pointed out, can help to
alleviate downstream flooding and recharge
local aquifers. Conferees also
discussed the importance of citizens and businesses taking ownership of
local water conservation efforts.
For this to occur, they need to be provided information on actions they
could take to conserve water (e.g., landscaping with native vegetation in
order to lower water demands). Finally,
conferees suggested that water management agencies consider the use of
‘water harvesting’ as an option for storing water after rain events.
t
Promote water reuse as a viable means of conserving water supplies.
Conferees
discussed the value of water
reuse (e.g., the reuse of treated wastewater for drinking water sources).
However, they also acknowledged that this is a controversial area that should
be addressed by Roundtable participants at a separate meeting/conference in
the future.
t
Encourage research, development,
and demonstration of water conservation technologies.
Conferees
discussed the need to develop and improve water conservation technologies.
They also felt that the bulk of research conducted on water
conservation technologies has thus far been more directly applicable to the
arid West and Southwest than to our region and that
more research needs to be done on technologies and techniques that may
better meet the needs of the Southeast.
Wednesday Discussion
Groups
Roundtable ‘wrap-up’
activities were conducted within four facilitator-led discussion groups.
Following is a description of the outcomes of these discussions.
First, we identify the common themes participants found in the
summaries of the prior day’s concurrent session outcomes
(Appendix C). Second, we
describe the ‘next steps’ that participants felt should be taken following
this Roundtable. Third, we
list outcomes that participants hoped would emerge from the Roundtable.
Only one group participated in the latter activity.
Strategies: Common
Themes
Roundtable participants
first reviewed the education, conservation, planning, and data management
strategies they earlier developed to identify
any common links or themes that might possibly resonate
·
Coordination/Cooperation: There
is a need for better inter-agency coordination.
This will facilitate improved communication, build trust, and possibly
save resources by avoiding duplicating efforts.
·
Education:
The public and decision makers need to be made more aware of, and be
better educated on, the water supply issues facing the Southeast.
Both the lack of awareness and the sense of urgency of these water
supply issues are primary barriers to implementing many of the Roundtable’s
strategies, unless rectified. Further,
for all priority issue areas, the message should be tailored to the target
audience and be simple and
consistent.
·
Costs: Cost
was a key theme in all four issue areas in two different contexts.
The first was the costs of maintaining the Roundtable dialogue
and implementing many of its strategies as well as
the need to secure dedicated funding to support these efforts. The second context in which cost was discussed was in regards
to the actual cost of water use and the need to incorporate this cost into
rate structures, consumer incentive programs, educational programs, and water
management plans.
·
Partnerships:
There is a critical need to build partnerships at all levels within the
Southeast to address water supply issues.
More and stronger partnerships could improve overall coordination of
agencies and organizations, facilitate communication, allow for sharing of
resources and reduction of costs, and reduce ‘turf protection.’
·
Leadership/Champions:
One or more ‘champions’ are needed who share a common vision for the Roundtable
to continue to move it forward. Without
such leadership, a unified effort to address the region’s water supply
challenges is unlikely to emerge. A
‘champion’ may be an agency, organization, or individual.
A potential constraint to this entity is finding sufficient time to
shepherd the cause, given other responsibilities.
‘Next Steps’
In response to a request
to identify potential ‘next steps’ in the Roundtable effort, each
of the discussion groups generated lists of ideas.
These ideas were neither extensively discussed within the groups nor
were milestones imposed on when these ideas should be implemented. From our analysis of these lists, we found that ‘next
steps’ fell into six general categories.
Following is a brief discussion of each.
·
Education and Marketing:
A massive educational effort is needed throughout the Southeast.
The public, including youth, environmental professionals, and decision
makers, should all be targeted. Presentations
should be developed as part of a regional water supply education ‘toolbox’
to provide a consistent message to these target audiences.
As appropriate, technical workshops (e.g., conservation; water supply
planning) should also be
conducted. In the short term,
there should be a campaign to raise the public’s awareness of general water
supply issues and a special effort to inform Southeastern governors and
legislators about the Roundtable efforts.
·
Administration:
A clear Roundtable mission statement needs to be developed that
presents the vision, goals, rationale, and structure of this effort.
It should be accompanied by a strategic plan (“road map”) that
describes the steps for achieving the Roundtable goals.
One participant suggested that the Roundtable should consider
partnering with a compatible organization (e.g., Southern States Energy Board;
Interstate Council on Water Policy; Southeastern Water Resource Research
Institutes) to help carry out its mission.
Another stated that the Roundtable should be coordinated and
managed by multiple agencies and organizations.
In either case, it was suggested that those devising the Roundtable structure
avoid fostering a public perception that additional government bureaucracy is
being created and find ways to make it possible for citizens to participate.
Finally, to finance this effort, Roundtable organizers should
begin seeking potential collaborative funding arrangements and possible grant
sources
·
Regional Assessment of
Resources: A comprehensive
assessment of conservation,
planning, education, and data management initiatives related to water supply
across the Southeast should be initially conducted to determine baseline
assets and needs. The results of
this assessment may take the form of a resource matrix.
It may also encompass a mapping analysis of the decision-making
processes related to water supply management in the Southeast.
·
Political Legitimacy:
Political ‘buy-in’ and endorsement from top political leaders (e.g.,
governors, state cabinet members, legislators) should be sought.
·
Increased Representation: More
diverse representation (e.g., hydropower and other industries) on the Roundtable
should be pursued in order to broaden its collective perspective.
Reflections on the
Roundtable & its Future
Participants concluded
their Wednesday morning session by providing final thoughts on the Roundtable
and describing their aspirations for what it should ultimately try to
accomplish. Some groups conducted
an open discussion while others asked each participant to provide individual
written responses.
In general, participants
felt that the Roundtable was productive and that the process (i.e.,
“dialogue”) should continue. Specifically, participants stated that the
timing was right (i.e., “ripe”) for such an initiative and that there
truly appeared to be a “unity of purpose” among participants.
One participant noted that he at no time during the Roundtable heard
anyone express the view that water supply issues should not be
addressed on a regional basis. Others
stated that the Roundtable process should strategically move forward so
as not to lose momentum, while at the same time bearing in mind that this was
only the first step on a very long road; or, as another stated, “Rome was
not built in a day.” Other
comments also reflected this tone of realism and practicality.
Some emphasized the need to set achievable objectives while others
focused on the importance of being both fiscally creative and prudent.
Finally, others honed in on the need to broaden and diversify
perspectives and ensure that “all water issues” are addressed, not just
water supply.
Several participants
loosely defined a future role for the Roundtable. One aspired for it to become a “neutral forum for all
stakeholders.” Another
described it in a similar way, as an “impartial and fact-based group.”
Finally, a couple of participants very generally saw it as serving as
an ongoing “focal point for Southeast Water Supply” and as a “leader in
search of solutions to water quality and quantity for future generations.”
Participants also
identified a range of possibilities regarding what the Roundtable could
ultimately accomplish. One
participant desired that, in the short term,
it would identify and/or develop a “champion capable of garnering
wide support and respect” to “initiate the most important first steps of
the Roundtable dialogue.” Another
hoped to see the Roundtable evolve into a long-term dialogue that would
result in cooperative solutions to regional water problems.
Others hoped it would produce:
·
a
more regional perspective on water supply issues;
·
improved communication among
water resource professionals and decision makers;
·
better cooperation among
Southeastern communities and states in water supply planning;
·
a public with a heightened
awareness of water issues;
·
better informed decision makers
(i.e., “more aware of just how dynamic and fragile the Southeast’s water
resources are”); and
·
a forum to facilitate
comprehensive water quality and quantity programs throughout the Southeast.
The Roundtable concluded
with a news conference to brief the media on its outcomes.
Appendix F contains copies of newspaper and newsletter clippings that
specifically addresses the Roundtable’s outcomes and/or issues
discussed in it.
Since the November Roundtable,
its Steering Committee convened on several occasions to assess the
outcomes covered in this report, including the participants’ recommended
‘next steps.’ As a result of
this assessment, the first step taken by the Steering Committee was to develop
a charter and strategic plan which articulates a vision (“to help
achieve a balanced and sustainable future water supply for the region”) and mission
(“to provide a forum that ensures achievement of this vision.”
A key component of the strategic plan designed to achieve this vision
and mission is a partnership which has been established between the University
of Tennessee (UT) - the Roundtable effort’s founder - and the
Southern States Energy Board (SSEB), a consortium representing 16 states and
two U.S. territories, with experience in tackling an assortment of
environmental problems throughout the region.
The Steering Committee
believes that UT and SSEB can be two of the “champions” (which Roundtable
participants recommended were needed) to move this effort forward. Through their combined effort, the committee feels they will
be able to reach out to high-level state decision makers and non-governmental
organizations. They will also be
able to network with economic and community development interests in the
region whose involvement in, and support for reform of, water supply policies
will be crucial for successful implementation of recommended strategies,
particularly in such areas as conservation and water supply planning.
SSEB and UT also have
complimentary assets. SSEB provides
organizational strengths in fund-raising, networking, and decision maker
outreach, while UT’s assets lie in water policy research and education.
The strategic plan further outlines specific responsibilities for both
entities and provides an organizational secretariat and “internal” and
“external” advisory committees to oversee implementation of programmatic
objectives, including additional stakeholder meetings, research projects, and/or
mediation or facilitation services. A number of entities have endorsed the effort and serve on
the secretariat, including regional representatives of EPA, the Army Corps of
Engineers, U.S. Geological Survey, Tennessee Valley Authority, U.S. Forest
Service, and Southern Governors Association.
Following Roundtable
participants’ recommendations, the new secretariat has proposed, and is seeking funding for, an assessment of
water data needs for the region over the next 20 years. This assessment would feature a policy assessment of why
current water supply data and the means by which they are gathered are fraught
with inaccuracies; how these inaccuracies are products of systematic flaws in
existing data collection systems; why this data problem affects the ability of
decision makers to plan for impending user conflicts; and a prognosis of what
may happen if these data needs remain unaddressed while demands increase and
supply uncertainties remain.
It was the intent of the
organizers of the Roundtable to launch a long-term regional dialogue to
cooperatively tackle the region’s water supply challenges.
Its outcomes have provided strategies for addressing these challenges
and initial guidance on devising a structure to implement them. As one
participant stated, the Roundtable is only the “first step on a very
long road towards solving our region’s water problems.”
It has at least set us on a course with a common destination, and given
us a road map for reaching it.
311 Conference Center Building
Knoxville, TN 37996-4134
Phone: 865-974-4251
Fax: 865-974-1838