RedNeckGeek
Super Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2011
- Messages
- 8,754
- Location
- Butte County & Orcutt, California
- Tractor
- Kubota M62, Kubota L3240D HST (SOLD!), Kubota RTV900
Just about everything I mention such as tree removal permits, rent control, water restrictions, ban on new lawns, design review have all come since I was a child... I am old enough to remember a different California... one where a 1/4 of my public school class each year were newcomers and I was able to collect all 50 state license plates from people transferred to California by the time I was 10 years old...
Most of these maladies are still confined to the heavily populated urban counties in California. But some, like building permits and design reviews, are moving out even into the hinterlands. So far, at least in Butte County, there have been no water restrictions, rent control, bans on new lawns, or tree removal permits. I just hope it stays that way. It's also quite easy to apply for and obtain a concealed carry permit here. So not all the state has gone to He11 in a hand basket. Just those counties that voted for Billary.:laughing:
BTW, it was announced on the TV news last night that all of Northern California, essentially everything north of the San Francisco Bay Area, is no longer in drought. In just the last 5 or 6 days, Lake Oroville has collected about 800,000 acre feet, about 25% of its total capacity. It'll take about that much more to completely fill the reservoir, but if it keeps raining like it has, that could happen with just one more storm. That's why Shasta Dam and Oroville Dam have been releasing water over and above amounts needed for power and environmental mandates. Clicking the Oro Info link below the chart will take you to a page where you can chart inflows, outflows, and many other parameters that will help show just what's going on with the lake's hydrology. And this link is a table of the other reservoirs in the state.