OAK PARK ā€” Because of the historic drought, Los Angeles residents are limited to two days per week for outdoor watering.


What You Need To Know

  • Areas dependent on water from the State Water Project are limited to watering outdoors once per week

  • One Oak Park homeowner is paying big money to install a drip irrigation system

  • Households disobeying the rules could be fined or have their water use physically throttled with a flow restrictor device

  • Parks and other common areas in Oak Park are kept green using recycled water

The restrictions are more lenient than the once-a-week limit ordered by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California for areas dependent on water from the State Water Project.

Ripping out her lush backyard was a huge ā€” and necessary ā€” decision for Dalia Kenig.

"Some areas, even as much as I was watering, it was so hot that I had to change," she said. "It just felt like itā€™s a struggle. It didnā€™t feel like fun anymore."

Getting rid of the grass took hundreds of dollars off the Oak Park homeownerā€™s monthly water bill. What lawn that remains is still green because Kenig closely follows the once-a-week watering rule, and sheā€™s paying big money to install one of the only exceptions to this rule: a drip irrigation system delivering water drop-by-drop to targeted areas.

Even the most strategic of plans though wonā€™t guarantee the survival of her grass through the summer.

"I say, 'You donā€™t need to be sad twice. Let me be sad when it happens, if it happens, when it happens, so for now Iā€™m going to enjoy it.'"

Kenig gets water from the Triunfo Water and Sanitation District, where Dave Rydman is the operations manager. Heā€™s seeing many customers cut back, but itā€™s one of those things where everyone has to do it.

ā€œSo we either implement this one-day restriction, or it could get even worse,ā€ said RydThe restrictions are more lenient than the once-a-week limit ordered by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California for areas dependent on water from the State Water Project.

Ripping out her lush backyard was a huge ā€” and necessary ā€” decision for Dalia Kenig.

ā€œSome areas, even as much as I was watering, it was so hot that I had to change,ā€ she said. ā€œIt just felt like itā€™s a struggle. It didnā€™t feel like fun anymore.ā€

Getting rid of the grass took hundreds of dollars off the Oak Park homeownerā€™s monthly water bill. The lawn that remains is still green because Kenig closely follows the once-a-week watering rule, and sheā€™s paying big money to install one of the few exceptions to this rule: a drip irrigation system delivering water drop-by-drop to targeted areas.

Even the most strategic of plans though wonā€™t guarantee the survival of her grass through the summer.

ā€œI say, ā€˜You donā€™t need to be sad twice. Let me be sad when it happens, if it happens, when it happens, so for now Iā€™m going to enjoy it.ā€™ā€

Kenig gets water from the Triunfo Water and Sanitation District, where Dave Rydman is the operations manager. Heā€™s seeing many customers cut back, but itā€™s one of those things where everyone has to do it.

ā€œSo we either implement this one-day restriction, or it could get even worse,ā€ Rydman said.

Heā€™s already sent out the first warning letters to households using too much water. The next step will be fines. Then, if all else fails, thereā€™s the flow restrictor, a device which physically throttles the incoming flow of water for a household so that thereā€™s just enough to perform basic cooking and hygiene tasks.

ā€œWeā€™re really hoping to not have to use this,ā€ Rydman said.

Parks and other common areas in Oak Park are kept green using recycled water. Residents may also use recycled water on their lawns since itā€™s exempt from the one-day-per-week watering restriction.

ā€œWhen youā€™re in an area thatā€™s 100% dependent on one source of supply, if thereā€™s a limited amount of water available from that supply, then drastic measures have to be taken,ā€ Rydman said.

As hopeful as Kenig is, itā€™s impossible not to see the writing on the wall ā€” or rather, the shrubs disappearing from the surrounding hills.

ā€œItā€™s funny, when you accept things, you see the beauty in them also when theyā€™re brown,ā€ Kenig said.