With a population boom in metro Atlanta people in Augusta worry that the statewide water plan will dry up their water supply in eastern Georgia.
Governor Sonny Perdue sought to quash those concerns today.
"Look closely and read my lips: You have nothing to fear," Perdue told a small gathering of community leaders and media at the Daniel Field airport in Augusta on Wednesday. His stop here with Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle (R) and House Majority Leader Jerry Keen (R-St. Simons) is part of a two-day series of press conferences across the state to promote their legislative agenda.
People in the Augusta area worry that the water plan plan might make it easier for metro Atlanta to raid the Savannah River, which is the area's main water supply.
The governor says the water plan does not authorize or even suggest that interbasin transfers would happen.
He also says the transfers would not be feasible.
But he stopped short of ruling them out completely.
"We can't preclude everything in our state that we might be paranoid about," he said. "A statewide water plan doesn't mean a plan imposed on every community. It means a structure and protocol that would empower local communities within commonly held topography or watersheds to make the decisions that are in their best interest."
There are also concerns over how each district in the water would be designed, and how the plan would be funded.
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Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Governor addresses statewide water plan in Augusta
Posted by
Mary Ellen Cheatham
at
1/09/2008 04:22:00 PM
Labels: Augusta Georgia, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, Savannah River, statewide water plan