Wesley Roe
PR Contact for Oasis
Design/Greywater
Contact 805-683-8997
email lakinroe@silcom.com
PR/ PRESS CONFERENCE TUESDAY AUG
4, 9:00-9:30 AM 2009
Revolutionary Graywater Code Passes California
Building Standards Commission with Art Ludwig of Oasis
Design
Santa Barbara Public Library Faulkner Gallery 40 E
Anapamu St
Santa Barbara CA 93101
Graywater Standards
--Media resources
http://www.oasisdesign.net/greywater/press/
In Historic
Move, California Building Standards Commission Green Visionaries
Approve New Graywater Standard
Dawn of a new
era
Half of
all carbon emissions are from buildings. Buildings built to current
codes are sucking the groundwater out from under California. Graywater
permits are part of an outdated system that focuses on microscopic
risk as our species is engulfed by huge, emerging
risks.
"On August 4th, 2009, California can legally install simple
laundry and single fixture systems without a permit. For the first
time, licensed professionals can legally help
with the 1.7 million existing graywater systems in the state.
"
--Art Ludwig, graywater researcher and
educator
Art Ludwig will be giving a press conference Tuesday
August 4th, 2009 from 9:00 to 9:30 am, at the Santa Barbara
Library Main Branch Downtown , at the start of his free, City of Santa
Barbara-Sponsored workshop on Laundry to Landscape systems currently
with over 100 registrants
Art Ludwig, who participated in the historic graywater code
adoption meeting last week in Sacramento at the behest of the City of
Santa Barbara Water Resources Division, will tell the story of this
code's process (which involved the biggest stakeholder meetings for
any code promulgated by CA Department of Housing and Community
Development (HCD)). He will also discuss the significance of the
Building Standards Commission's historic shift from considering only
occupant safety to also taking into account off-site and future
impacts of a building's systems. (California Building Standards
Commission (www.bsc.ca.gov) is currently revising California's
Green Building standards, another sea change).
A
collision of world views was in full evidence at the July 31st hearing
of the California Building Standards Commission that considered the CA
Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD)'s proposed new
graywater standards. Emergency standards pertaining to new
Graywater Standards for residential construction (EF 01-09)
In a hearing lasting all day,
highly qualified stakeholders spoke passionately for and against the
adoption of the new standards as the hearing roller-coastered
dramatically to its historic conclusion.
The commissioners are to
be congratulated for their leadership. It is always more work to
set up a new system than to fit into an existing one.
It would
have been a lot easier to stand aside as legal buildings continue to
waste resources and pollute the environment. However, in the
face of deeply entrenched, powerful opposition, the commission is
rising to the challenge of revising all of California's building codes
to allow/ require better building systems and besides its emergency
approval of the new graywater standards yesterday, the California
Building Standards Commission is also revising California's Green
Building Standards to include many new mandatory and voluntary
measures to reduce negative impacts and increase positive impacts of
California buildings.
RESOURCES
Media
resources, links to how to educational materials for the
public
http://www.oasisdesign.net/greywater/press/
BACKGROUND
On June 4, 2008 Governor
Schwarzenegger signed Executive Order S-06-08 proclaiming that a
statewide drought condition existed and directed the Department of
Water Resources (DWR) www.water.ca.gov/ to take specific action
to counter the drought.
In 2008, Senate Bill 1258 (Ch. 172, Stats. Of 2008) was signed
by the Governor enacting new statues in the Health and Safety
Code(section 17922.12 and 18941.7) and amending existing statute in
the Water Code ()Section 14877.1) These statutes, effective January 1,
2009, including requirements that directed the Department of Housing
and Community Development(HCD) to propose to the California
Building Standards Commission (CBSC) building standards for the
construction, installation, and alteration of graywater systems for
residential indoor and outdoor uses.
On Feb 27 , 2009, Governor Schwarzenegger issued a
proclamation declaring a drought to be in existence and a state of
emergency to exist in California. This proclamation was based upon the
circumstances of severe drought conditions that by the reason of their
magnitude is beyond the control of the services , personnel, equipment
and facilities of any one local entity and requires the combined
forces of a mutual aid region or regions to combat.
Existing
Graywater standards contained in the California Code of Regulations
(CCR) Title 24, California Plumbing Code, Part 5, Appendix G are based
upon requirements for private sewage disposal. Theses standards have
been found to be overly prescriptive and antiquated, and not readily
usable by persons seeking to install graywater systems for the purpose
of water conservation.
The graywater regulation
revolution was started in 1989 in Santa Barbara, California. It spread
from there to four other communities, then the whole state, via the
Uniform Plumbing Code, in 1992.
The approach the commission
has now adopted is being used successfully in the states of Arizona,
New Mexico, Texas, and soon Nevada, Montana, and Oregon. With this
change, California is regaining its leadership role for graywater
reuse.
(end)