The deal announced today gives the City of Waukesha a supply of diverted Lake Michigan water through the Milwaukee Water Works at a lower cost to Waukesha water users than what an Oak Creek connection would have carried, while bringing Milwaukee a revenue stream and some Waukesha-provided lead abatement funding.
The deal follows geographical restrictions which Milwaukee had urged to limit Waukesha's plan to redistribute some diverted Great Lakes water to other Waukesha-area communities - - a sprawl-inducing plan endorsed by then-DNR Secretary and development-friendly Cathy Stepp - - but those Milwaukee-endorsed restrictions on sprawl-inducing water export were eventually validated by the governing organization of Great Lakes states which sets the rules on who may divert water and why:
So a water deal which suits Milwaukee, Waukesha and the other Great Lakes states - - and which reduced the amount of the diversion while limiting sprawl to the benefit of the region - - finally moves forward after years of foolish, costly and self-inflicted delay predicted in 2010:
The deal follows geographical restrictions which Milwaukee had urged to limit Waukesha's plan to redistribute some diverted Great Lakes water to other Waukesha-area communities - - a sprawl-inducing plan endorsed by then-DNR Secretary and development-friendly Cathy Stepp - - but those Milwaukee-endorsed restrictions on sprawl-inducing water export were eventually validated by the governing organization of Great Lakes states which sets the rules on who may divert water and why:
So a water deal which suits Milwaukee, Waukesha and the other Great Lakes states - - and which reduced the amount of the diversion while limiting sprawl to the benefit of the region - - finally moves forward after years of foolish, costly and self-inflicted delay predicted in 2010:
The weakest link in the application - - and what will raise questions all the way from the Town of Waukesha to the City of Milwaukee, and with reviewers and regulators in all the eight Great Lakes states, is Waukesha's plan to send Lake Michigan water into parts of Pewaukee, Genesee and the Town of Waukesha.
Expanding the current service territory land mass by 80%.
That expansion - - mapped out and green-lighted by the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission for the Waukesha application administatively, without public review - - plays some role in Waukesha's request for up to 18.5 million gallons of Lake Michigan water daily.... Can annexations be far behind?