Governor Jerry Brown announced last week the state of California's first-ever mandated water reduction measures. The state is enjoined to reduce their water consumption by 25%. The mandate is directed at homeowners who overwater their lawns. Jerry Brown even went so far as to say that the days of the nice green lawn getting watered every day is a thing of the past. With these stringent new regulations being put into effect, artificial grass is looking more and more attractive and less and less like a secondary choice.
One resident in Orange County says that she and her mother live in a house with a natural grass yard. The natural grass has been there for sixty years. However, she says that if the drought worsens, she and her mother will consider installing artificial grass. They won't however install xeriscaping because having lawn that is suitable for sportive activities is important to her family and her children.
Her mother even went so far as to call artificial grass the wave of the future. Indeed, artificial grass will soon displace natural grass as the standard surface material for residential yards.
The California Water Resources Board will announce how it will achieve statewide cuts in two weeks.
Synthetic Grass Saves Water Amid California Drought
If you've been thinking about installing synthetic grass in your lawn, now is the best time to make the jump. It will save you time and money, and will save the community water. Not only that, it will make your lawn the envy of the neighborhood by always appearing perfectly manicured and green all year round.
This is a great time to do it, especially if you live in California. Jerry Brown announced that water agencies that supply 90% of California's residents' water will be forced to reduce water consumption by 25% or face punitive consequences. The water agencies can use their own discretion on how to impose the water restrictions to the residents in their territories, but it has been posited that the directive is intended to target homeowners with lawns. Watering lawns and gardens is the main source of excess water usage among homeowners. The water agencies will more than likely raise the rates on water over users and reward those who spend water sparingly.
Thus, installing synthetic grass in your yard especially if you're a California resident is the most prudent and shrewd thing you can do if you want to retain a nice lawn that you and your family and pets can play on and yet save water.
Synthetic Turf Sports Complex Coming to Kent County, Delaware
A sports complex in Kent County, Delaware, is planned to be constructed which has 12 synthetic turf fields. The project will cost $24 million and will have a $24 million yearly impact on the local economy after it has been built. The plan is for the synthetic turf sports complex to be like a tournament site rather than simply a sports complex.
Organizers hope that the synthetic turf sports complex will attract important sports tournament games. The organizers have used as a model a similar sports complex in Maryland which opened in 2000 that has been a very large source of revenue for the entire area of the complex. The organizers hope that the same revenue generation will occur after the synthetic turf sports complex is built in Kent County.
The organizers also hope that the synthetic turf sports complex will be host to other non-sports activities and foresee it being used as a space for festival-like activities with music, food and entertainment going on along the sports activities.
Financial benefits are augmented by the fact that the synthetic turf fields will cost only ÃÂü of what it would cost to have natural grass installed therein.
Synthetic turf in sports fields is certainly a new standard in sports field surfaces.
Is Synthetic Grass Safe for Children?
Is synthetic grass
safe for children? A queries asked by many individuals who are considering
synthetic lawn because of their homes. The answer is absolutely yes! For 40
years, under EPA supervision and OSHA- not one individual fabricating, has ever
documented bad effects related to any substances associated with synthetic
lawn.
In July 2010, the Connecticut Division of
public-health announced that a new study of the threats to children and adults
playing on artificial turf fields containing crumb rubber infill reveals
"no elevated health dangers."
A December 2009 U.S. Environment Protection
Agency scoping study of the health dangers from inhalation, ingestion, and
dermal contact with artificial turf and crumb rubber found every evaluation
result to be "below levels of concern."
The Ca EPA launched a study dated July 2009
which signified there is an insignificant individual health threat from inhaling
the atmosphere above artificial lawn.
Impartial evaluations conducted from the
New York State Department of Environment Conservation and New York State
Division of Health, released in May 2009, proved there were no important health
concerns at artificial grass fields.