Friday, January 25, 2008

Low Flow Toilet Rebates and Radar Speed Signs near Schools


The Atlanta City Council has moved a step closer to offering rebates for single family residential customers in the city’s drinking water service area that install low flow toilets. City Councilmembers on Tuesday authorized the Mayor to enter into a memorandum of agreement with the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District for the establishment of the Toilet Rebate Program for customers of the City of Atlanta Department of Watershed Management – one of the largest drinking water providers in the region. “By providing rebates, we will encourage accelerated installation of water-saving, low flow devices,” said City Council President Lisa M. Borders. “We are taking this measure to incent our fellow citizens to adopt conservation practices that will protect our resources and sustain our city for future generations.”

Atlanta has set aside $1 million for the program. The funds, which were set aside from Water and Wastewater Budget reserve funds in December, will go toward a region-wide program to encourage water conservation – a measure that the City Council also endorsed. The Council expressed its support through a resolution (Legislative Reference # 07-R-2431), sponsored by Councilmembers Clair Muller, Mary Norwood , Ivory Lee Young, Jr., Joyce Sheperd, H. Lamar Willis, Carla Smith, Jim Maddox, Ceasar C. Mitchell, Cleta Winslow and Kwanza Hall. In response to the drought in northern Georgia, Gov. Sonny Perdue signed an executive order declaring a state of emergency in 85 counties. Municipal water systems in the affected area, including City of Atlanta, have been required to reduce water use by 10 percent.

The rebate program starts on February 5, 2008, according to officials with the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District – a planning entity dedicated to developing comprehensive watershed, wastewater and water supply and conservation plans to be implemented by local governments in the 16-county metro Atlanta region. The rebate program will be administered by Water Planning District. The amount of each rebate will depend on the volume of the fixture purchased.

To receive a rebate, Atlanta water/sewer customers must:

Live in or rent a single family residence that was built prior to 1993 and have fixtures not currently in compliance with current water efficiency plumbing code standards; Have a water account in good standing with one of the participating utilities; Purchase and install a toilet from an approved list of 1.6- or 1.28-gallon-per-flush (gpf) toilets ; Provide the District with their most recent water/sewer bill; and Provide the District with proof of purchase (showing make, model, flow rate and installation.)

Customers who replace their old toilets with 1.6-gpf toilets can receive a $50 rebate, and those who install 1.28-gpf toilets can receive a $100 rebate. There is a limit of two rebates per household. Only toilets purchased after September 28, 2007, are eligible.

Toilets purchased prior to 1993 use between 3.5 and seven gpf. There are an estimated 46,000 structures within Atlanta’s service area with pre-1993 toilets. Replacing a 3.5-gpf toilet with a 1.6-gpf model saves about two gallons a flush or 54 percent of an average household’s water use. Replacing a 7-gpf toilet with a 1.6-gpf model saves 5.4 gallons a flush or 77 percent of an average household’s use. “Changing our older, inefficient toilets is one of the most important things we can do to conserve water in North Georgia,” said Kit Dunlap, chairman of the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District. “I applaud the City of Atlanta for appropriating these funds to give homeowners the incentive to replace older fixtures with new, low-flow ones. These funds will go a long to helping us meet out conservation goals.”

For more information, including guidelines and how to apply call 404-463-3256 or reference the “toilet rebate program” at
http://www.northgeorgiawater.org/ or visit http://www.atlantawatershed.org/

In other news, the Atlanta City Council:

Approved a resolution by Councilmembers Clair Muller, Joyce Sheperd and Anne Fauver encouraging the installation of Radar Speed Signs in all School Zones in the City of Atlanta (Legislative Reference # 07-R-2603).

The above legislation and a complete list of other items on the council’s agenda can be viewed in their entirety on the Web at:
http://apps.atlantaga.gov/citycouncil/2008/fca0122.htm

Video of the Atlanta City Council meetings can be viewed at:
http://apps.atlantaga.gov/citycouncil/video.htm

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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