News

Actions

Area lake levels signal actions in city’s drought contingency

Posted at 1:54 PM, Jun 05, 2018
and last updated 2018-06-05 14:54:41-04

Lake levels in the Coastal Bend are monitored for more than just keeping an eye on popular recreation spots.

Water level data from Lake Corpus Christi and the Choke Canyon Reservoir also triggers different stages of the city’s drought contingency plan.

Stage 1 of the plan is activated when levels drop below 40 percent. Mandatory restrictions under stage 1 include limiting lawn watering to once a week, using only hose-end sprinklers or an automatic irrigation system.

If lake levels drop below 30 percent capacity, tighter restrictions kick in, including restrictions on watering golf courses, and limiting home lawn watering to once every other week.

Stage 3 restrictions are triggered when levels dip below 20 percent, and bans watering all together.  Washing vehicles is limited to only commercial car washes, and pools or hot tubs cannot be filled unless it is with a non-city water source.

KRIS 6 News continuously monitors combined lake levels, and that information is available on the KRIS 6 Weather page.

The city of Corpus Christi’s current drought contingency plan is available here: