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- THE WEEK, Page 29SOCIETYWrung Dry
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- The usually rainy Pacific Northwest is learning to live with
- less water
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- Wet weather is such an inescapable part of life in the
- Pacific Northwest that the Seattle tourism industry touts it as
- "liquid sunshine." This year, though, the slogan will have to be
- shelved in the face of the worst regionwide drought in decades.
- Along with other legendarily soaked cities like Portland, Ore.,
- and Vancouver, B.C., Seattle has imposed water restrictions,
- urging citizens to take shorter showers and banning the use of
- lawn sprinklers. The lush, green vegetation has begun to turn
- brown. Mule deer does are having trouble finding enough food in
- the woods to produce milk for their fawns. The spring chinook
- salmon run on Oregon's Rogue River had the largest die-off level
- in 15 years, attributed in part to low water levels. The
- situation is worst in Oregon, whose drought is expected to be
- the most severe in 120 years.
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- Some smaller cities and towns in the region are less
- affected because they get their water from wells. The big cities
- get theirs, though, from snow melting off the Cascade Range to
- the east. Not only was precipitation less than normal last
- winter, but temperatures were warmer. Much of the snow fell as
- rain and ran off right away, at a time when city reservoirs
- were full anyway.
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