Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, April 20, 2011, Image 5
A ROUNJD ToojfO FLuuE paerewDifJOj To ReAp A FAAJOr T5o°K voi/RE S£c«ETlv A MU6EO»*!C E£ook wefco iue GoTMGu)SPoC Vo/ •— — —^——— .. - -« LjQ UA i T cloic£ vnuui-Lowts pevr /S happening AT THE «-/O WATT TH6 wee-kE^D TH«S Co*WC IS (SoCD Plated) ^VEAH... AMD f PR.EtJ /TACL /A> y*\v< OvJM 0COOP At Floue people sell HAjJD WADC CfrMWCS To 6ACH OTHe^ Some r»rv)ts AT RipicoLOuScy LOU/ PK.JCES PoR.TME AWlOi/K/T OPWORK THEV pv/r /\/TO T- H £W^ ^Ovv/lcJ M<XcU Wu^^/.woWU^V P I IJ G C R S . WE“r Mayor & Commission Briefed on Bike Trails, Water Rates Could an "under-utilized" eastside park become a destination for local mountain bik ers? That's the plan, driven by the persistence of John Wares of the Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association (SORBA), ACC Leisure Services Director Pam Reidy told county com missioners at a work session last week. Local SORBA members are willing to build three- and-a-half miles of trails in East Athens Park (located just off Loop 10 at Peter Street), so the bike trails will cost taxpayers very little, Reidy said. The 113-acre park has several ballfields but is mostly undeveloped. Some areas are hilly enough to provide beginner- to-intermediate-level bike trails through the woods; the trails will also be open to hikers and joggers, she said. There are more mountain bikers in the United States than golfers, but—except for UGA's mile-long trail at Lake Herrick—there are no public trails in ACC, Reidy said. Local bikers must presently drive to Oconee County's Heritage Park (where SORBA also built the trails) or to Ft. Yargo State Park in Winder (which has 18 miles of trails and has become a regional destination for mountain bikers). "We want Athens people to be able to stay right here and mountain bike," she said. "It has become a very family-oriented sport. A lot of kids are getting into it." East Athens Community Park is "very underutilized," Reidy said; long-iange plans for the park include tennis and basketball courts, a nature build ing, and a multi-use trail that will connect the park to the Oconee River Greenway. If commissioners approve the trails plan next month, they could be ridable by late fall. SORBA would also host bicycling workshops for beginners of all ages. At the same work session, commissioners heard an upbeat evaluation of the county's "tiered" water rates, in place since 2008 to encourage conservation. The rates are a bit complex—basically charging people extra if they use much more water in summer than winter (typically for lawn-watering)—but customers seem to understand them now, consultant Bill Zieburtz said. As intended, citi zens are making "wise and efficient decisions" about water use, and that's reflected in lower peaks of water demand. The rates were care fully designed to discourage peak-level water use: those times when customers are demand ing the most water from the system. Peak use is rare, but the entire system must be built to meet it, and that's very expensive, Zieburtz pointed out. Commercial users (UGA and the two chicken processing plants are the biggest) are using less water, too, and "that's pretty encourag ing," Zieburtz said. Because of the threat of water restrictions during the recent drought, commercial users started "managing" their demand even before the rates changed. (There are tiered rates for businesses, too, but they use water more consistently than residences.) "The drought helped to highlight the urgency of reduced water consumption," Zieburtz said, but ACCs tiered water rates were not an emergency measure or a response to the drought. Water supply is a long-term concern, and such rates were being discussed even before the drought. And the public's reduced water use will enable ACC to accom modate 20 percent more growth without expanding the system, Zieburtz said: "All of this has gained us a lot of capacity." In her years on the ACC Commission, com mented Alice Kinman, "I don't think I've ever seen a better success story" than the success of conservation water rates. In her own case, she said, leaking faucets "doubled my bill, and that got my attention." Ben Emanuel of Altamaha Riverkeeper agrees that, despite being unusually hard- hit by the drought, ACC dealt with it better than most communities. "I suspect we've mostly addressed a lot of low-hanging fruit" in conserving water, he told Flagpole. But he warned against too much "backslapping" complacency. Emanuel said he'd like to see ACC expand its pilot program of supplying newer, more- efficient toilets to residents. Newer toilets cut water use dramatically from several gallons per flush to just over one (placing a closed half-gallon jug of water in the tank is one way to reduce the water use of an older toilet, he says). Restaurants can be big water users, and a Riverkeeper volunteer has been installing faucet aerators free of charge for local restau rants, Emanuel added. Free kits with sink aera tors and low-flow shower heads are available from ACC's utilities department. County utilities director Gary Duck told Flagpole he, too, would like to expand ACCs water-conservation efforts, but right now the county can't afford to sell any less water. ACC is now paying to replace three treatment plants, and water conservation translates into lower revenues, he said: "It's going to take a while to get our revenue stream back to where we'd like to see it" as the county grows. Even in hot weather, established lawns don't need watering more than once a week, landscaping professionals say, and bermuda grass is very drought-tolerant. (Watering in the evening reduces evaporation.) ACCs water rates are explained on its public utilities webpages; heavy water users pay more than double the base rate for the extra water. And because of the way rates are figured, house holds with more than two people may want to apply for an adjustment if their normal water use kicks them into the higher rates. John Huie You worked hard to graduate, don’t settle for a generic invitation. Bel-Jean offers custom, high quality and economical invitations with fast-turnaround. Each invitation is printed with your name and degree. Packages start at $35. Visit our website to view samples. 163 E. Broad Street 706-548-3648 Downtown Athens www.bel-jean.com NEW MENU! OF SJCLSX BROUGHT TO yOVR TJKBLE J-Yfcl HOUSE MXRGXRITKS ^ 1 *2.99 Qlxss or *11.99 pitcher xu- bottled beer *1.99 TfflTOI 120Z. 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