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CCCSD Residential Recycled Water Fill Station Open 7 days a week!

New Hours @ CCCSD recycled water fill station.

New Hours @ CCCSD recycled water fill station.

The Central Contra Costa Sanitary District will be open 7 days a week, starting this Sunday, August 2nd. Their new hours are as follows:

  • Monday through Friday 8AM to 6PM
  • Saturday & Sunday 8AM to 4PM

They have hired quite a few new fill stations attendants to help you obtain your Free Recycled Water. Their new signs, alerting you to the change should be out tomorrow.

We have compiled a complete list of all Residential Recycled Water Fill Stations in California, and keep it updated as data becomes available.

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We must sacrifice our lawns so MLB can keep theirs green

The Association of California Water Agencies and Sergio Romo of the World Champion San Francisco Giants have a message for you: “This summer, brown is the new green. Pretty much just let your lawn go brown, keep your watering to a minimum. That’s what’s up.

The real message: You need to let your grass die so “we” can use that water to keep our playing field green.

Sounds kind of hypocritical to me.

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Delivering recycled water to the masses

Recycled water hydrant.

Recycled water hydrant.

As we learned for #recycledwaterwednesday, “Water is cheap, maybe too cheap.” The biggest take away is hauling recycled water in 300 gallon loads is not economical. Even if you went with a larger truck load, like with Drought Savers, its still not priced appropriately. At no point in time will it be economical as you will exceed the weight limit on the road first. Better solutions must be found.

Today – lets discuss other ways to bring recycled water to the masses.

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Is Hauling Recycled Water Economical?

Water is a finite resource, much like oil. And water comes with a cost, much like oil. The difference is we need water to survive. Our bodies are made up of 55-65% water. Without it we dehydrate and eventually die. Some would argue that oil is the same way, except society lasted for thousands of years without it. However, the oil industry charges a steep price for oil. With those profits they build pipelines for the largest users, like airports use jet fuel and ships at port use diesel.

When it comes to water, we as a society have built pipelines to deliver water from faraway lands to other remote places. We’ve run pipes to our homes, businesses and parks. There are drinking water mains in the street that have charged hydrants for firemen to use, baseball and football stadiums are plumbed with the stuff and yes, even oil refineries use drinking water to manufacture the oil we need to keep everything mechanical running.

But water is cheap, maybe too cheap.

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“Freak” rainstorm refills dry rain barrels

Hurricane Dolores – the same one whose moisture just ravaged I-10 near the California/Arizona border spawned some isolated storms in SF Bay Area. Those storms arrived around 1AM on Sunday morning as signified by a tweet from @NWSBayArea.


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In The News… Recycled Water Video Clips

This page is meant to showcase all the news stories from the various agencies on Recycled Water in the SF Bay Area. If the videos don’t play, click the link to watch them on their respective stations websites. Enjoy!

News stations are mixed together. Tried to sort the video news stories with newest first. Will add more to the top when they become available.

Want to know how you can get started with recycled water? Or looking for a recycled water fill station? We have the information you need to water your yard with Recycled Water.

Posted: September 9, 2015

Free recycled water available for landscape use

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If El Niño is coming – Lets Talk Stormwater Management

FacebooktrendingYou’ve seen the head lines. “Strongest El Niño On Record May Be Brewing In The Pacific“, “El Niño weather event is biggest since 1997, may trigger soaking winter storms“, or “Drought to deluge? El Nino’s impact on California“.

The “best management practice to reduce stormwater runoff” is rainwater harvesting. It is small-scale, but it works.

If this all holds true, then what can we as Californian’s do now to help our chances of saving all that rainwater and putting it back into the water table or the underground “savings accounts” when it does fall?

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Ironhouse Sanitary District Recycled Water Fill Station Usage Statistics

Ironhouse Sanitary District Recycled Water Blog

Ironhouse Sanitary District Recycled Water Blog

After my recent post about usage stats from CCCSD, I figured it would be only fair to see if the other area Residential Recycled Water Fill Stations posted data of their own. The only other district to do so is Ironhouse Sanitary District in Oakley.

Ironhouse Sanitary District has their own website where they blog about news and updates for their Residential Recycled Water Fill Station. You can access it here: http://isdfillstation.blogspot.com/

On Friday, July 10th, they published their Residential Recycled Water Fill Station stats dating back from June 20th, 2015 up to July 8th, 2015.

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CCCSD Recycled Water Fill Station Usage Statistics

Source: centralsan.org

Source: centralsan.org

I was perusing the latest board meeting agenda from July 9, 2015 at the Central Contra Costa Sanitary District website and found some very interesting statistics from their Recycled Water Fill Station.

Much like I posted the other day, CCCSD Fill Station Routes Traffic Along New Route, which included some statistics… now I’ve got bar and pie charts. Fancy spreadsheet madness, probably courtesy of Microsoft Excel!

“CCCSD has the Best [Customer] Service.” – a Danville fill station user

Since CCCSD started their Residential Recycled Water Fill Station, they have given away 1,557,538 gallons of free Recycled Water! WOW!

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