Denver's Water Crisis: Drought Restrictions and Record Low Snowpack Explained
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概要
The most recent information available in the search results is from March 25-26, 2026, which includes:
According to Denver Water and Colorado Sun reporting, Denver Water unanimously voted for two-day-a-week watering restrictions due to unprecedented drought conditions. Customers can water only two days per week, with even-numbered addresses on Sunday and Thursday, and odd-numbered addresses on Wednesday and Saturday. Apartments and commercial properties water on Tuesdays and Fridays.
The Colorado River Basin snowpack within Denver Water's collection system sits at 55 percent of normal, the worst on record. The South Platte Basin is at 42 percent of normal, also the worst recorded. According to Colorado Climate Center data, the statewide snow water equivalent across 115 mountain stations was just 38 percent of the 1991-2020 average as of March 25. Denver Water stated that the slopes providing the region's water are 7 to 8 feet of snow behind what's needed.
Denver Water's reservoirs are currently at 80 percent of capacity, down from the normal level of about 85 percent for this time of year. The agency warned that without Stage 1 restrictions, reservoir storage would drop to 57 percent by 2027.
According to AccuWeather historical data and local weather reporting, an unprecedented March heat wave accelerated snowpack melting, with temperatures reaching 90 degrees. This record-setting heat is rapidly disappearing what little snow remains.
Denver Water specifically urged customers not to turn on lawn irrigation systems until mid or late May, instead hand-watering trees and shrubs to preserve reservoirs. The agency announced that surcharge pricing for outdoor watering will be announced later in the season, while necessary indoor water use remains at current prices.
I cannot provide the specific 48-hour water quality, precipitation, or drinking water safety details you requested, as this information is not available in the search results. To create the article you envision with those specific metrics, you would need access to real-time water quality reports and current precipitation data from Denver Water or the National Weather Service.
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