Editorials
State's water resources become precious as oil
An elected official, speaking at a state conference years ago, said fresh water would be as precious as oil some day. Cities and farmers need it to survive and grow. Without it in abundant quantities, communities wither and die.
The governor's water conference in Oklahoma City this week addressed the long-term vision for managing the state's water resources. Participants know a "good spring rain" is not part of the solution.
The state's growing demand and shrinking supplies are part of the $13 million planning process. The four-and-a-half-year effort will produce a report that aims to carry the state 50 years into the future.
Conference participants, according to the Associated Press, were trying to get their arms around such issues as public versus private ownership of water supplies, tribal sovereignty and the right of communities to sell water to other communities inside and outside of Oklahoma.
The drought that has plagued Oklahoma for months has dropped lakes to some of their lowest levels ever. Lake Thunderbird, a water supply for Norman and other central Oklahoma communities, is more than eight feet below normal.
Come spring, meetings will be held throughout the state for citizens and communities to air their concerns. They will be followed by regional meetings and then a draft plan of action.
Lawmakers put the brakes on a tribal water sale a few years ago with a moratorium. The sale of water in southeastern Oklahoma to fast-growing Texas communities was a gentle reminder that water is a shrinking resource. The drought and resulting low lake levels is the wake up call.
- Editorials
-
-
Millions don’t have much to celebrate
For the millions of Americans who are unemployed not by choice, there is little to celebrate today, Labor Day, It’s traditionally a time to close the plant gate or the office doors and honor the working man and working woman who toil daily ...
-
Win No. 800 and counting ...
We knew it would happen some time soon, but you can never be too confident. The OU Sooners’ 800th football win came Saturday night on Owen Field. The Sooners escaped Utah State 31-24. It wasn’t pretty, but it sure beat last year’s opener ...
-
August deadliest month for kids left in hot cars
August was a record month for child deaths in hot cars. In the United States, at least 41 deaths were reported in August, making it higher than any previous month. Temperatures were relatively high throughout much of the nation but it ...
-
Facebook and Target are friends
The slowly-increasing commercialization of Facebook will grow this weekend. Facebook and Target are now friends. Big time....
-
Obama walked tightrope
Tuesday night, ... President Barack Obama announced the end of combat operations for American forces in Iraq. ... He described an end to a war that hasn’t really ended, one that he never wanted to occur in the first place, yet one that he ...
-
The season begins today
There are some sports fans who know only two seasons. Fall OU football and spring OU football practice. For them, the new season starts today....
-
Economic numbers douse talk of recession
The back-to-school shopping season has implications way beyond third quarter retail numbers. It is often used as a predictor of holiday sales. This year’s numbers, while not all available, look better than expected, retail analysts told ...
-
Anger won’t resolve problems
Economic stress, politics devoid of hope and the dangers of taking an airplane on vacation have acted to push the thermometer of the American psyche into a pan of boiling water....
-
State’s illegal immigrant population on the rise
A report from the Pew Center suggests the United States’ population of undocumented immigrants has declined. Nationally, it is estimated there are about 7.8 million illegal immigrants with about 60,000 in Oklahoma in 2009. The state’s ...
-
Let’s toast: Lindsey reopens
The long-awaited reopening of Lindsey Street on the south side of the OU campus is worth celebrating. It came Wednesday afternoon and followed reports in August that the street would not likely be open for Saturday’s home football opener....
- More Editorials Headlines
-
Millions don’t have much to celebrate





