As I understand it in some arid locations each property owner is allotted a portion of the water, all water be rain water or water from a stream or well.
If you collect water you prevent that water from going into the streams where everyone would be given an allotment of it. Not sure how they proportion the water out but they have a method that works for them.
In Florida we have plenty of water but we have a water district that likes to play God. They are the South West Water Management District or swiftmud for short. Talk about bureaucrats, they made a law that all ran water that falls onto your property must remain on your property unless you are connected to a public storm water collection system.
Many stores and banks are now built over holding tanks that catch the water from the building and parking lot. I have seen places that bought 25 acres of land and had to use better than 16 acres for a retention pond.
Before you build you must have Swiftmuds approval of a master plot plan that shows how you will retain the water.
In my development we have 28 homes each with approx one acre lots. In each case a portion of our property is designated as a retention pond easement. So we have 4 ponds between 1 ½ acres to 3 1/2 acres in size .
My property ends up being ¾ acre useable land.
Works for me I have a really nice pond and not so much lawn to mow. But some didn’t take care of their ponds and they are a mess, yeech!:eek:
Since they are easements the county works on them last.
If I wanted I could pump from the pond to water but since I'm on a well I just water. However Swiftmud says I can only do it legally once a week. Go figure my land, my well and my retention pond and I have to follow their guide lines.