Water is for Fighting Over Press Kit

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Jaime Jennings, 202-232-7933x44 jjennings@islandpress.org Katharine Sucher, 202-232-7933x43 ksucher@islandpress.org

PRESS RELEASE

Water Is For Fighting Over… And Other Myths About Water in the West By John Fleck Washington, DC (September 1, 2016) — From fights over gold and land, the West has long been plagued by conflict. Now, newspapers detail how years of drought predictions have come true, Lake Mead water levels have dropped lower than ever, and headlines proclaim that water wars have arrived in the West. But are battles truly raging? In his two decades of reporting on water in the Southwest, longtime journalist John Fleck argues that rather than fighting over water, he has seen stories of successful compromise. In his new book Water is for Fighting Over...and Other Myths about Water in the West, he offers a unique, fresh perspective on the catastrophe narrative of the West, showcasing how this region is less of a battlefield and more of a place where individuals and communities find common ground amid a changing geography. He delves into a deep history of water in the West and shares the stories of the unique individuals who save and conserve water, wildlife, agriculture, and even lawns and fountains. Underlying each of these success stories is a person or city ready to adapt and compromise rather than fight for every drop of water in an already shrinking system. In Los Angeles County, a coastal community banded together to save a common good—their water supplies –from encroaching sea water. In the Colorado River delta, an environmentalist and an Arizona water manager found enough common ground to create a sustainable wildlife habitat and reduce water shortage of the Lower Colorado River Basin. In Water is for Fighting Over, Fleck shows that even in the depth of the worst droughts, positive stories can still be found. As California suffered in the early years of the 20th century, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California relied on ongoing rural-urban partnership with multiple water districts allowed them to bank water in underground ISLAND PRESS | PRESS RELEASE | 1


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