HARRISBURG, Pa. — The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection announced Friday that four Central Pennsylvania counties are among those that have had their drought watch status lifted.
Conditions have returned to normal in Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon, and Perry counties in Central PA, the DEP said. Conditions in Bucks, Huntingdon, Montgomery and Northampton counties are also back to normal, according to DEP.
Elsewhere in Central PA, Adams and Cumberland counties remain in drought watch status, while York County has been switched from drought warning to drought watch.
Franklin County remains in a drought warning, according to DEP.
Conditions in Juniata and Mifflin counties remain normal, DEP said.
For a map of drought declarations updated daily, see the DEP drought web page.
Residents on drought warning are asked to reduce their individual water use by 10 to 15 percent, or a reduction of 6-9 gallons of water per day, according to the DEP.
Varying localized conditions may lead water suppliers or municipalities to ask residents for more stringent conservation actions. See the list of public water suppliers that have requested or mandated water conservation in their communities.
Ways to Conserve Water at Home
- Run the dishwasher and washing machine less often, and only with full loads.
- Shorten the time you let the water run to warm up before showering and take shorter showers. The shower and toilet are the two biggest indoor water guzzlers.
- Check for and repair household leaks. For example, a leaking toilet can waste up to 200 gallons of water daily.
- Install low-flow plumbing fixtures and aerators on faucets.
- Replace older appliances with high-efficiency, front-loading models that use about 30 percent less water and 40 to 50 percent less energy.
You can find more tips on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s website.
How DEP Determines Drought Conditions
To determine drought conditions, DEP assesses information from public water suppliers and data on four indicators: precipitation, surface water (stream and river) flow, groundwater level, and soil moisture.
The DEP Drought Coordinator monitors the indicators in close partnership with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), which maintains gauges in streams and wells in many locations across Pennsylvania.
There are normal ranges for all four indicators. DEP makes drought status recommendations after assessing departures from these ranges for all indicators for periods of 3-12 months. For a map that’s updated daily to show the status of all four indicators for each county, see the USGS Pennsylvania drought condition monitoring website.
DEP shares these data and its recommendations with the state and federal agencies and other organizations that make up the Commonwealth Drought Task Force. Declarations are determined by DEP, with the concurrence of the task force.
For more information on how DEP monitors conditions and makes drought status declarations, see the drought management fact sheet.