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Recently I received an e‐mail from a colleague who was writing out of frustration about why there is so much negative media rhetoric about water conservation. Admittedly my colleague is a leading expert on water conservation strategies and knows, better than most, the benefits of water conservation and also why sometimes it is mistakenly cast as a scapegoat. I find it interesting that not that long ago, water conservation was a “crazy” idea. At best it was thought of as a public relations program to appease the “enviro” types. But today, despite the media rhetoric, we know differently.
Recently I received an e‐mail from a colleague who was writing out of frustration about why there is so much negative media rhetoric about water conservation. Admittedly my colleague is a leading expert on water conservation strategies and knows, better than most, the benefits of water conservation and also why sometimes it is mistakenly cast as a scapegoat. I find it interesting that not that long ago, water conservation was a “crazy” idea. At best it was thought of as a public relations program to appease the “enviro” types. But today, despite the media rhetoric, we know differently.
Is Water Conservation Dead?
LaFrance, David B. (author)
Journal ‐ American Water Works Association ; 108 ; 10
2016-02-01
1 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Arsenic and Dead Bugs: Conservation Peculiarities in the American West
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1991
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