By Brad Haire
University of Georgia
To sustain its growth, Georgia must begin to
manage its water wisely, Georgia’s Environmental Protection
Division director told farmers and water experts here.
Agriculture will have a prominent seat at the table of any
future policy decisions.
“Agriculture has been the foundation of Georgia’s economy,” said
EPD Director Carol Couch, “and water is the lifeblood of
agriculture.”
Farm water
Couch met with about 30 farmers and University of Georgia
researchers at UGA’s C.M. Stripling Irrigation Research Park
July 15 in Camilla, Ga.
She came to learn about farm water research, usage and
management and to listen to area farmers who depend on
irrigation for the health of their crops, especially during
extended dry spells, like the 1998-2002 drought.
Her visit was arranged by State Rep. Richard Royal (D-Camilla).
She toured farms and met with farmers in Decatur and Miller
counties, too.
“We just want to make sure that we have the opportunity to be a
player and have input in however the state decides to manage
water,”
said Bubba Johnson, farmer and president of the Mitchell County
Farm Bureau. “We are thankful she came here and is willing to
listen to our concerns.”
Georgia is the 10th most populace state in the U.S. It is the
world’s 17th largest economy. But if Georgia is to continue this
pattern of growth and economic vitality, water management must
be a top priority, she said.
Water plans
Georgia’s General Assembly approved H.B. 237 this year. It
charges the EPD to develop a statewide water plan. Stakeholders
in each region or watershed in the state will develop a plan for
their area. EPD will look at these plans when they develop the
statewide plan, Couch said.
EPD must have a water plan ready to be considered by the 2007
Georgia General Assembly. The plan will then get an up or down
vote in 2008’s General Assembly.
Southwest Georgia and metro-Atlanta already lead the rest of the
state in water management, she said.
“(Stakeholders) here in the lower Flint basin have been pioneers
and a lot of what has been done here will be a lesson for other
regions on how to (manage water) right,” she said.
The Stripling irrigation park is a 130-acre farm where UGA
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences experts test
and develop new irrigation equipment and conduct research for
major Georgia crops like cotton, peanuts, corn and vegetables.