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Town of Erie
File #: 2026-222    Version: 1 Name:
Type: General Business Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 3/12/2026 In control: Town Council
On agenda: 3/24/2026 Final action:
Title: Drought and Water Restrictions
Attachments: 1. Presentation, 2. Memo, 3. Water Conditions Monitoring Committee Climate Update February 2026, 4. Drought & Supply Shortage Plan
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
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SUBJECT:
Title
Drought and Water Restrictions

Department
DEPARTMENT: Utilities
Environmental Services

Presenter
PRESENTER(S): Todd Fessenden, Utilities Director
Dylan King, Sustainability and Water Conservation Specialist
end

Time
TIME ESTIMATE: 30 minutes
end

Fiscal
FISCAL SUMMARY:
N/A

Policy
POLICY ISSUES:
The Council must decide whether to support best practice water conservation efforts including implementing a restriction of a two-day per week watering schedule with a potential third day based on specific temperature and drought triggers.

Recommendation
STAFF RECOMMENDATION:
Support two-day mandatory water restriction implementation.

Body
SUMMARY/KEY POINTS
* Staff are bringing this to Council to discuss current drought conditions, confirm support for a two-day per week mandatory water restriction (potential third water day based on specific temperature and precipitation triggers), and begin the conversation and process for potential additional drought-based restrictions in the 2026 irrigation season.
* To date, the 2025-2026 winter season in Colorado is unusually warm and dry, with roughly 50% less snow than a typical season and among the lowest levels recorded since late 1987. These conditions have created "snow drought" conditions for much of the state, raising concerns for the spring runoff, potential water restrictions, and increased wildfire concerns.
* Staff are monitoring conditions and collaborating with partners across the state to ensure that Erie is ready to respond as needed to water conditions and needed drought response.

BACKGROUND OF SUBJECT MATTER:
Colorado is experiencing a significant winter snow drought, driven largely by unusually high temperatures and limited snowfall across the state. According to the Colorado Climate Center, snowpack measured through SNOTEL sites across the state reached its lowest mid-winter level since at least 1987 this season. November through January ranked among the warme...

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