Groundwater and Public Policy

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Uploaded by on Mar 6, 2007

Dr. Kent Butler, of the University of Texas School of Architecture, explains the relationship between economic growth and restrictive water supplies.

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News & Politics

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  • I live on a ranch on the border of mexico in South Texas. We have a lot of oilfield activity and I can tell you that the major oil companies here could care less about ground water contamination. Our fresh ground water is at 20 feet. In the old days, ranchers dug wells by hand for the cattle. Now a days, we have oil and contamination coming up our wood fence posts. Abandoned pipelines spread the contamination. It is really frustrating.

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