Assemblyman Mike Gatto’s Water Conservation Bill Clears Final Legislative Hurdle with Bipartisan Support

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Assemblyman Mike Gatto

A key water-conservation bill introduced by Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Los Angeles) passed the Legislature on Wednesday with strong, bipartisan support. The bill has cleared its final legislative hurdle and now awaits the signature of Governor Jerry Brown. AB 2230 requires new carwashes in California to use at least 60% recycled water. Carwashes are among the biggest users of water around, but they also use water that by its nature (not to be ingested or used for agriculture), could come ideally from a recycled source. A state task force on water conservation estimates that this simple requirement will conserve enough water to supply 46,000 California families with water each year.

California has struggled for years to establish standards to reduce water waste and compel homeowners to install higher efficiency toilets and showers, but AB 2230 is the first step to adopt a sensible policy for a major commercial use. “Rather than spraying gallons of valuable drinking water on a mud-crusted jeep, it makes better sense to use water that has already cycled through a carwash but has been stripped of detergents and dirt,” said Gatto. “This is therefore a sensible and significant way to conserve water.”

Recycled water technology for car washes is readily available and easy to install. 25% of car washes in California have already installed the necessary equipment. Simple on-site water-recycling systems allow conveyor and in-bay car washes to reclaim water used to wash cars, filter it, and reuse it in the early stages of subsequent washes, when the quality of the water is less important.

AB 2230 now moves to the Governor for signature. “I believe the common sense and pragmatism behind this bill is why it has received such strong, bipartisan support in both the Assembly and Senate,” said Gatto. “I hope the Governor signs it into law.”

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