Where Can We Get The Water We Need?


From what only a few days ago looked like an unusually drab fall, something glorious has emerged. For whatever reason, leaves have remained on the trees longer, and this has provided an opportunity for oranges and reds to develop more fully. Autumn 2007 lifts the spirits.

One of the perquisites of being a quasi-retired perambulator is to be able to get acquainted with many of the nooks and crannies of the Tri-State corner. Or, rather, nooks. I didn’t know what a cranny is until I looked it up; it is a small narrow opening. Anyhow, we drove up the Mt. Riga and Mt. Washington roads twice last weekend and opened the camcorder to a continuing panorama of bright yellow and orange sugar maple, beech, aspen and birch leaves contrasting with dark conifers and laurel.

Among our favorite spots for viewing foliage is a little-known mountain bowl along High View Road south of Copake Falls, N.Y. Another is the hillside above the east shore of Long Pond viewed from Maria Peters Park in Salisbury. The feast of color here is one of October’s most inspiring gifts.


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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi did the Democratic majority in Congress no good by her attempt to pull a fast one with the resolution condemning Turkey for the genocide in Armenia in 1915. Not only was the effect on modern Turkey, a valued ally, poorly thought out, but the amount of pandering to local constituencies by supporters of the resolution spoke poorly of the preparedness of congressional Democrats to conduct a balanced foreign policy. Even without this millstone, they are not making a very good case for a plausible alternative to George Bush’s war.


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Catherine Roraback, the renowned civil liberties attorney who died last week, managed to achieve a national reputation while retaining her Canaan roots. She was a pioneer among women lawyers, and she won a lasting place in history for her work to overturn the Connecticut law that banned contraception. She had the courage to champion many unpopular causes, and she befriended the lowly in taking on the mighty. A few years ago she shared her expertise in Supreme Court cases with a class at the Taconic Learning Center and the experience was memorable.

Among her great interests was Music Mountain, and it is appropriate that a memorial service for her will be held there on Nov. 10.


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Connecticut U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman has returned to the news by sponsoring a bill with Sen. John Warner of Virginia aimed at cutting greenhouse gas emissions through a cap-and-trade system. Industries that cut their emissions significantly would be granted credits they could sell on the open market to polluters not in compliance. Forty-nine percent of the credits would be given during the first phase to industries in compliance with the goals, and another 27 percent would go to cooperating state governments, farm and forest groups. The remaining 24 percent would be auctioned on the open market.

The proposal to give away pollution credits understandably has brought much criticism from environmentalists. But something has to enlist the cooperation of industry quickly if emissions are to be significantly reduced and the Lieberman-Warner bill is at least a start.

 


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Two stories about water problems in The New York Times caught my interest. The first was in the Sunday magazine about vastly overcommitted water resources in the Southwest and the plan of Aurora, Colo., to provide drinking water in the future by recycling its wastes. The second described the problem with falling water levels on the Great Lakes that reduce the amount of cargo ships can carry.

Most of us are familiar with the dire forecasts about rising ocean levels that may inundate some countries and many ports accustomed to today’s sea levels. What ought to be causing more concern in the hitherto well-watered East is that possibility that fresh water sources may begin to dry up here as salt water becomes more of a problem.

Canada and Russia are the nations that contain a very large percentage of the world’s fresh water resources. It is not far-fetched to imagine a situation in the not too distant future when access to fresh water may be more important than access to oil. Indeed it might be no more than prudence for environmentally minded officials in this country — perhaps of another administration — to initiate talks with Canada on the possibility of buying water in the future on a large scale. Transporting water, perhaps by large pipeline, would be a massive project and we ought to be envisaging the necessity for it.


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Incidentally, might it be possible to tap some of Greenland’s fresh water resources for export as the mile-thick ice cap melts? Already pieces of iceberg have been towed to Saudi Arabia. If some of the ice melt could be channeled into reservoirs and then used to fill tankers, a profitable industry might be established.


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News stories told of the election of the first Indian-American to win election as governor of Louisiana, Bobby Jindal. Won’t it be nice when we regard such a person, not as an Indian-American, but as an


Americanof Indian descent?

 

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