That's not as daunting as it may sound -- unless your suburban lawn slurps up water. According to Denver Water, the average use of its customers is already at 85 per capita per day, below the 90 gallon benchmark of this program. But in thirsty Parker, residential users average 123 GPCD.
More than 6,000 people called in to the teleconference. "The response we had on the call was tremendous," Ritter said. "Clearly Coloradans understand the singular nature of the 800,000 jobs and 35,000,000 drinking water consumers that the Colorado River supports. To sustain and restore the river, we need to adopt 90 By 20 and like measures."
According to the campaign, if every community along the Colorado River basin were to adopt the 90 By 20 benchmark, the water savings in one year would be enough to service the entire city of Denver for three years.
And forget Parker!
Find out more about the initiative at www.90by20.org/pledge.html . And watch a video of Ritter discussing the Colorado River campaign below:
Barack Obama will be back in Colorado tomorrow. Last month, protesters sent him another message. See it in "Photo: Colorado River crop design activists want Barack Obama to see."