{"id":11205,"date":"2021-11-29t16:00:44","date_gmt":"2021-11-29t16:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/all-eyes-on-tucson-grassroots-efforts-give-rise-to-a-water-conservation-committed-city\/"},"modified":"2021-11-29t16:00:44","modified_gmt":"2021-11-29t16:00:44","slug":"all-eyes-on-tucson-grassroots-efforts-give-rise-to-a-water-conservation-committed-city","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/all-eyes-on-tucson-grassroots-efforts-give-rise-to-a-water-conservation-committed-city\/","title":{"rendered":"all eyes on tucson: grassroots efforts give rise to a water conservation committed city"},"content":{"rendered":"
eighteen years ago, brad lancaster picked up his rented jackhammer and began to demolish his neighborhood sidewalk\u2013\u2013tearing up concrete and asphalt, digging a trench large enough to support a rainwater basin. as an experienced water conservationist and passionate advocate, lancaster strived to give the sparse vegetation in his neighborhood of dunbar springs more water. the only problem\u2026 his curb cutting was illegal. <\/p>\n
instead of slapping sustainability vigilante brad lancaster<\/a> with a fine, the city of tucson listened to rallying cries of support from the members of the neighborhood and granted him an audience with the city planning division. the city used his expertise and example to rewrite the laws and begin a stormwater infrastructure program in tucson, arizona. this grassroots sustainability project was handed to tucson clean and beautiful<\/a>, a local non-profit, who then championed the spirit of renegade sustainability in several water harvesting projects. <\/p>\n one of the most successful projects is green stormwater infrastructure (gsi). the epa states<\/a> that \u201cgreen infrastructure filters and absorbs stormwater where it falls.\u201d gsi can range from rain barrels in backyards, trees placed in a basin along a street, roundabouts to collect water, or a rain garden. <\/p>\n now, nearly two decades after lancaster carved tucson\u2019s very first piece of gsi into a curb, the southwestern u.s. faces unprecedented climate conditions\u2013\u2013and the development of gsi is as pertinent as ever.<\/p>\n my home state of arizona has been in an intense state of drought for 20 years (as long as i\u2019ve been alive). human-caused climate change has exacerbated a natural cycle of drought into a historic mega drought, making the southwest the driest it has been since 1500 ce.<\/a> i live in a water-limited environment, where the conservation of life\u2019s most important resource is always at the forefront of planning decisions.<\/p>\n