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June 29, 2025

Groundwater Rules SAVED Houston's Land From Sinking

Groundwater Rules SAVED Houston's Land From Sinking

Regulation stopped Houston’s sinking ground—and it’s working again. Some areas near the Houston Ship Channel had sunk nearly 10 feet due to groundwater overuse. But since the Harris-Galveston Subsidence District began regulating groundwater withdrawals in the late 1970s, water levels have rebounded and subsidence rates have dropped to nearly zero.…

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June 26, 2025

How Science Uncovered Houston’s Sinking Ground

How Science Uncovered Houston’s Sinking Ground

Science revealed why Houston was sinking. As groundwater demand surged starting in the 1930s, U.S. Geological Survey scientists built a network to monitor water levels across the Houston region. “We saw rapid declines through the 1970s — the peak of withdrawals,” says Jason Ramage of the USGS. That long-term data…

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June 25, 2025

The Hidden Disaster That Sank Houston Neighborhoods

The Hidden Disaster That Sank Houston Neighborhoods

Homes started sinking—and no one knew why. In 1950s Houston, residents of the Brownwood neighborhood were baffled when property surveys no longer matched and homes had mysteriously dropped multiple feet. “They didn’t realize it was subsidence,” says Christina Butcher, who grew up in the neighborhood. Subsidence is the slow sinking…

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June 24, 2025

How Purple Pipes Became A Symbol Of Recycled Water

How Purple Pipes Became A Symbol Of Recycled Water

Purple pipes started in California—and now they’re everywhere to mark recycled water. In the 1980s, Irvine Ranch Water District pioneered the use of purple pipe to safely distribute recycled water and clearly distinguish it from drinking water and sewer lines. The color has become a global symbol of water reuse,…

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June 23, 2025

How Does Rockville Keep Water Rates Low?

How Does Rockville Keep Water Rates Low?

What keeps water rates affordable? Meticulous, long-term planning. Yaolin Fennell is a principal civil engineer for the City of Rockville, where strategic upgrades to water and sewer systems are carefully mapped out—before things break. By setting annual rehabilitation goals, modeling risks, and prioritizing fixes, her team avoids sudden rate spikes…

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June 23, 2025

How Science Saved Houston From Sinking

How Science Saved Houston From Sinking

Decades of overpumping groundwater around Houston caused the land to sink by as much as 15 feet, forcing neighborhoods to flood and entire communities to relocate. This episode explores how land subsidence developed, and how science, regulation, and infrastructure are now stopping the ground from sinking. Chrissy Butcher of Baytown…

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June 22, 2025

How Groundwater Pumping Makes the Land Sink

How Groundwater Pumping Makes the Land Sink

Pumping groundwater can make the land sink — here’s why. When too much water is pulled from underground aquifers made of sand, silt, and clay, those layers lose pressure and begin to compact. This process, called land subsidence, causes the surface above to sink, sometimes irreversibly. Subsidence can damage roads,…

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June 19, 2025

In The Newsroom With Tony Schick: Snake River Dams, Salmon Collapse, & Broken Promises To Tribes

In The Newsroom With Tony Schick: Snake River Dams, Salmon Collapse, & Broken Promises To Tribes

The hard-fought plan to restore salmon runs in the Pacific Northwest has been abruptly derailed, threatening one of the most significant tribal and environmental agreements in decades. In this episode of In The Newsroom, Tony Schick of Oregon Public Broadcasting breaks down how the Trump administration scrapped a landmark deal…

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June 19, 2025

Water Wars Escalate Around The World

Water Wars Escalate Around The World

David Michel of the Center for Strategic and International Studies: Water is no longer just a vital resource—it’s a growing flashpoint for global conflict. From Mexico to Iran, farmers are seizing infrastructure to protect their fields. Downstream nations along the Nile and Indus threaten war to stop upstream dams. And…

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June 17, 2025

The Beer That’s Fighting Water Waste in California

The Beer That’s Fighting Water Waste in California

Beer is 90% water—and brewing uses even more behind the scenes. That’s why Stone Brewing, located in drought-prone Southern California, has made water sustainability core to its operations. They reuse cooling water, treat wastewater on-site with a reclamation system, and even capture steam to reduce hot water demand during cleaning—cutting…

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June 17, 2025

America’s Water Crews: Essential, Invisible — and Underpaid

America’s Water Crews: Essential, Invisible — and Underpaid

The unsung frontline of water: utility collections crews. Eric Velasquez manages collections and distribution in Altamonte Springs, where the silver tsunami is hitting hardest. As older workers retire, utilities struggle to hire and retain the next generation for these essential underground jobs—maintaining pipes, clearing sewer backups, and keeping systems running…

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June 16, 2025

Making Water Reuse Simple: The ABCs Every Community Needs

Making Water Reuse Simple: The ABCs Every Community Needs

Explaining water reuse can be one of the biggest barriers to public support — but Carollo Engineers has created a simple, creative solution: The ABCs of Water Reuse. The resource uses an A-to-Z format to break down 26 key concepts, turning technical terms into clear language and artistic illustrations that…

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June 12, 2025

How Membranes Became Water’s Quiet Billion-Dollar Tech

How Membranes Became Water’s Quiet Billion-Dollar Tech

Membranes are one of the hottest technologies in water — but the innovation curve may be flattening. Antoine Walter of the (Don’t) Waste Water podcast says membranes combine high-tech appeal with a SaaS-like business model: once the hardware is installed, utilities replace membranes regularly, generating steady revenue. But while new…

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June 10, 2025

Step Inside the Future of San Diego's Drinking Water!

Step Inside the Future of San Diego's Drinking Water!

Welcome to the future of San Diego’s drinking water. This is the construction site for the massive Pure Water project, which will recycle 83 million gallons of wastewater into drinking water every day by 2035. Pure Water San Diego will supply half of the city's drinking water, securing a resilient…

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June 10, 2025

Desalination Is Nearing Its Limits—Now What?

Desalination Is Nearing Its Limits—Now What?

Despite billions in investment and global urgency, desalination is reaching its thermodynamic limits—there’s only so much energy you can save when separating salt from water. While engineers continue to chase innovations, future gains may be incremental, not transformational, says Antoine Walter of the (don’t) Waste Water podcast. It’s a reality…

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June 9, 2025

50% Don’t Trust Tap Water — How Utilities Win It Back

50% Don’t Trust Tap Water — How Utilities Win It Back

Nearly 50% of Americans don’t trust their tap water. Jonathan Medeiros of Veolia North America is working to change that. As Assistant Chief Operator for the Chatham Water Department, Jonathan helps ensure water is safe, reliable—and trusted. His team is building community confidence through plant tours, interactive newsletters, and regular…

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June 9, 2025

Is The Water Business BOOMING or NOT?

Is The Water Business BOOMING or NOT?

The water industry as a business sector is at a turning point — but many still don’t even realize it exists. Inside the sector, major change has accelerated over the past three to five years, yet from the outside, it's still just a "confetti on the map," says Antoine Walter…

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June 9, 2025

Making Water Reuse Simple: The ABCs Every Community Needs

Making Water Reuse Simple: The ABCs Every Community Needs

💧H2O Minute News ⏰ Explaining water reuse can be one of the biggest barriers to public support — but Carollo Engineers has created a simple, creative solution: The ABCs of Water Reuse. The resource uses an A-to-Z format to break down 26 key concepts, turning technical terms into clear language…

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June 6, 2025

In The Newsroom: Antoine Walter On The Business Of Water In 2025

In The Newsroom: Antoine Walter On The Business Of Water In 2025

Billions of dollars are finally flowing into the water industry, but the financial landscape is still far behind energy, climate tech, and other booming sectors. In this episode of In The Newsroomn, Travis Loop is joined by Antoine Walter, host of the (Don’t) Waste Water podcast, for an insider look…

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June 4, 2025

How Forest Protection Lowers Water Costs for U.S. Cities

How Forest Protection Lowers Water Costs for U.S. Cities

Utilities across the U.S. are increasingly investing in upstream watershed protection—saving money and securing cleaner water at the source. Cynthia Koehler of WaterNow Alliance explains how cities from Arkansas to New York and Utah are partnering with the U.S. Forest Service to fund forest restoration, reducing long-term treatment costs while…

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June 3, 2025

70 City Laws Were Blocking New Orleans From Going Green

70 City Laws Were Blocking New Orleans From Going Green

When New Orleans set out to make every street, park, and parking lot part of its green infrastructure system, outdated municipal codes stood in the way. Cynthia Koehler and WaterNow Alliance stepped in to audit the city’s ordinances—finding 70 conflicting regulations. By building a customized roadmap to modernize local codes,…

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June 3, 2025

How Does San Diego Recycle 30 Million Gallons Of Wastewater?

How Does San Diego Recycle 30 Million Gallons Of Wastewater?

For a quarter century, North City Water Reclamation Plant has recycled 30 million gallons of wastewater a day—supplying irrigation for Torrey Pines Golf Course, Qualcomm, and parks across San Diego. But its role is evolving. With major upgrades underway, North City is expanding capacity and advancing treatment to support Pure…

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June 3, 2025

How Federal Funding Supercharged Milwaukee’s Lead Pipe Fix

How Federal Funding Supercharged Milwaukee’s Lead Pipe Fix

Funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has helped Milwaukee accelerate replacement of lead service lines from 1,000 to 3,500 a year and replace the private side with no cost to the homeowner, says Janet Meissner Pritchard of the Environmental Policy Innovation Center (EPIC). Episode at https://lnkd.in/evgu73fN Subscribe to catch every…

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June 3, 2025

Fighting Lead Poisoning with EDUCATION in Milwaukee

Fighting Lead Poisoning with EDUCATION in Milwaukee

Amanda Clark conducts community outreach about lead in a Milwaukee neighborhood. She says even more education is needed, particularly by meeting people where they are, whether that's talking to people at stores or knocking on doors. Episode at https://lnkd.in/evgu73fN Subscribe to catch every video: https://www.youtube.com/@waterloop waterloop is a nonprofit news…

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