FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Q. Does this bill restrict water withdrawals?

A. No, this bill simply improves the state’s ability to monitor withdrawals and improve planning. Natural resource agencies can then be more effective in managing and protecting this shared resource.

Q. What difference does it make how much water is left in a river?

A. The amount of water is critical for fish spawning, streamside habitat and wetlands, and recreational uses by people. Too little water can also concentrate toxics to harmful levels and destroy fisheries and other wildlife by increasing water temperatures and dissolved oxygen content.

Q. So how does withdrawal reporting help protect rivers?

A. It’s very hard for major water users to know when they are helping to damage a stream because they are each only one piece of the puzzle. With this legislation, state agencies can put the puzzle together, and then work to make sure that all the users are behaving responsibly to solve current problems and avoid future issues.

Q. How do water withdrawals impact human health?

A. Adequate and clean water supplies are critical for a high quality of life. Many communities depend on groundwater for household use. Without clean water, health and sanitation in our communities suffers. Local residents’ water needs have competed with those of the water bottling industry in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Henderson County, Texas, and Ontario, Canada.(1) In drought, the bottlers were able to continue, even when their large groundwater withdrawals drained others’ wells.
Source:
(1) Matza, Tomas. “Downstream Effects.” MoJo Wire. 27 May 2000. MotherJones.com. 22 October 2003 <http://www.motherjones.com/news_wire/water.html>.
This package was last updated on October 22, 2003.

State Environmental Resource Center
106 East Doty Street, Suite 200 § Madison, Wisconsin 53703
Phone: 608-252-9800 § Fax: 608-252-9828
Email: info@serconline.org