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Elk County added to drought watch

Harrisburg, PA (WTAJ) – After a meeting of the Commonwealth Drought Task Force, the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) today moved Potter County to drought warning status and added three counties — Elk, Lycoming, and Tioga — to drought watch.

Blair, Cambria, Cameron, Centre, Clearfield, Elk, and Huntingdon counties join the list of 18 along with Armstrong, Butler, Clinton, Fayette, Indiana, Juniata, Lycoming, McKean, Mifflin, Perry, and Tioga.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN:

Residents on drought watch are asked to reduce their individual water use 5-10%, based on a statewide average of 62 gallons per person per day. This means a reduction of three to six gallons of water per day.

Potter County residents are asked to reduce their individual water use 10-15%, or by six to nine gallons a day.

“We’re asking residents in these counties to use water wisely and follow simple water conservation tips to ease the demand for water,” said DEP Secretary Patrick McDonnell.

There are many ways to reduce water use around the house and yard, including:

DEP is notifying all water suppliers in these counties of the need to monitor their supplies and be prepared by updating their drought contingency plans as necessary. Varying localized conditions may lead water suppliers or municipalities to ask residents for more stringent conservation actions by residents. Sixteen water suppliers in these counties have begun asking or requiring residents to reduce their water use.

DEP makes drought watch, warning, or emergency declaration recommendations based on four numeric indicators. The agency gets streamflow and groundwater level data from a statewide network of gauges maintained by the U.S. Geological Survey. In addition, DEP monitors precipitation and soil moisture. DEP also factors in the information it receives from public water suppliers.

A drought emergency has not been declared for any county.