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Here's how Roseville has lowered water usage while accommodating growing population

Here's how Roseville is conserving water while supplying growing population
Here's how Roseville is conserving water while supplying growing population 01:58

ROSEVILLE — Even though we've had back-to-back wet winters, state officials say drought is still one of California's most severe environmental threats.

One Placer County city is reducing its overall water usage with the help of homeowners, businesses, and even space-based technology.

Roseville is one of the most rapidly growing cities in the region, and it's been able to accommodate all these new homes without needing any extra water.

"Since 2013, the population of Roseville's grown by 25%. Yet, water usage is down 17%," said Sean Bigley, the City of Roseville's assistant environmental utilities director.

Bigley said the key has been conservation.

"We're seeing deliberate behavior changes by our customers," he said.

Roseville has a popular Cash for Grass rebate program.

"We've been able to work to get rid of some of the turf area," Bigley said.

A recent project at a shopping center replaced lush green grass with drought-tolerant landscaping. It now saves an estimated 500,000 gallons of water each year.

Roseville also has a team of water waste inspectors. Last year, they launched nearly 4,000 investigations including the bathroom of Beauty Solutions.

"We had an issue with our toilet and it was just running, running, running, and he was like, 'Hey, your water's kind of spiking. What's going on? Let's figure it out,' " said Maylene Roper with Beauty Solutions.

The city even uses satellites that can pinpoint underground water leaks from space.

"They can actually do ground penetrating scans, and they can actually determine where some leaks are, we have many circumstances where that technology has helped us," Bigley said.

It's an effort to meet state rules taking effect in 2030 that limit people to using just 42 gallons of water per person, per day.

"Agents that after some warnings aren't able to get there, they could be subject to fines and penalties," Bigley said.

State law will also prohibit most decorative grass landscaping on public property beginning in 2027 and that will expand to commercial and industrial properties in 2028.

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