City of Bozeman Adopts 2023 Water Conservation Plan

Plan includes seven new measures to help reduce future water supply and demand gap

BOZEMAN — Bozeman has taken another step towards managing their water supply and demand. Last night, Bozeman City Commission adopted the 2023 Water Conservation Plan, a tool that will serve as a roadmap for the water conservation program through 2040.
 
“This plan is truly forward-thinking and ensures that the city implements cost-effective program measures,” Jessica Ahlstrom, Water Conservation Program Manager explained. “Bozeman is drought-prone and located in a closed basin that poses a challenging legal framework to developing new water supplies, making conservation a key component of the city’s water resource management strategy. Existing program efforts have been successful in reducing water use, thanks to community members doing their part to conserve. Because of these improvements in water conservation, we have been able to see stable levels of water usage, despite having more residents move here.”

 
The Plan includes a water demand analysis, an evaluation of the existing water conservation program as well as additional program measures for future implementation and an implementation plan and schedule. The Plan recommends seven new measures be implemented in addition to existing ones, including a landscape ordinance that requires new development to install landscape features that reduce water use. That ordinance is set to be reviewed by the Commission in the coming months.

 
In 2013, the City Commission adopted an Integrated Water Resources Plan (IWRP), which identifies water supply and use policies and practices for future consideration and recommends that water conservation be a cornerstone of Bozeman’s water resource management. Specifically, the IWRP recommends that water conservation measures reduce the projected water supply/demand gap by fifty percent by the year 2062. 

 
The City has implemented numerous water conservation education and incentive-based initiatives, including education campaigns, four indoor rebates, six outdoor rebates, free product giveaways, free sprinkler system assessments, free commercial site assessments, five drought-tolerant demonstration gardens, a free customer water use portal, free publications, and community event participation in which over 9,000 people have been reached.

 
Some of the major regulatory measures that have passed include drought management plans, water conservation-based rates and drought rates, and permanent time of day and day of week outdoor watering restrictions.
 
More information on water conservation, including a link to the full Plan, is available at www.bozemanwater.com.