Wednesday September 14, 2022
SEP 14, 2022
Play
Description Community
About
After an August flood tore through downtown, Moab City has stayed pretty busy. They are tasked with working on infrastructure repair - and figuring out how to pay for it. Today on the news, a rundown on the numbers. Plus, the Colorado River is drying up, and the major cities in the West that depend on it are scrambling to boost their supplies and keep taps flowing. Climate change is already cutting into the amount they get from mother nature, which leaves those cities to turn to reusing the water they already have.

// Show Notes:

// Photo: Debris flows along 300 South on August 21, 2022, the day after major flooding tore through downtown Moab. City officials are figuring out how to pay for repairs. KZMU/Serah Mead

// Grand County Pre-Disaster Hazard Mitigation Plan 2018
https://moabcity.org/AgendaCenter/ViewFile/Item/5213?fileID=6162

// Grand County Sheriff’s Office Emergency Management Director
https://grandcountyutah.net/Jobs.aspx?UniqueId=97&From=All&CommunityJobs=False&JobID=GCSO-EMERGENCY-MANAGEMENT-DIRECTOR-182

// KUNC: As the Colorado River shrinks, water managers see promise in recycling sewage
https://www.kunc.org/environment/2022-09-14/as-the-colorado-river-shrinks-water-managers-see-promise-in-recycling-sewage
Comments