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AWWA ACE54357
- Water Resource Allocation for the Washington Metropolitan Area
- Conference Proceeding by American Water Works Association, 06/01/2001
- Publisher: AWWA
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The Washington, DC metropolitan area is supplied by three major utilites serving a total population of 3.6 million people. Planning for drought in the Washington, DC metropolitan area has been conducted for decades. In addition to the structural alternatives studied, an academic exercise conducted largely at the Johns Hopkins University in collaboration with the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin concluded that gains from coordinated use of existing water resources would meet demands projected for the region well into the 21st century. The results of that essentially nonstructural alternative were adopted as operating rules in 1982. Planning for drought has continued with the refinement and exercise of these regionally adopted rules for coordinated operations of the Potomac River and associated water supply reservoirs. Water supply conditions during the summer of 1999 necessitated the first use of the full range of resource operations to meet municipal and environmental needs. Creative management strategies were required becasue the extremely low flow conditions in the river caused releases from upstream storage to take longer to get to the intakes than expected. And at times, they also exceeded demands because of intermittent rains that fell unpredictably. Thus, the inefficiency of river regulation was encountered first hand. Recently completed variable yield analysis to assist the operation of the direct supply reservoirs was incorporated to quantify the risks involved in temporarily exceeding reliable yields. Briefings for an extraordinary number of hastily called meetings and responses to questions from all branches of the media consumed an unanticipated amount of time and resources, especially after mandatory restrictions were imposed in a jurisdiction served by only one of the regional utlities. Coordination of communication in future years should be greatly improved by the new "Metropolitan Washington Water Supply and Drought Awareness Response Plan" recently developed by the Task Force on Regional Water Supply Issues of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Includes figures.