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dimondpark
Nov 12, 2007, 4:57 AM
From WISN ABC12 Milwaukee

New List Ranks Driest US Cities

California Cities Hold Top 4 Spots
http://www.wisn.com/2007/1109/14555264.jpg

http://www.wisn.com/2007/1109/14555291.jpg

SoCal is the driest area in the United States and Texas is the wettest.

That's according to a new list from livability expert Bert Sperling that measures the drought severity for the 100 largest metro areas in the United States. Nearly 200 million people reside in these 100 metros, comprising nearly 60 percent of the U.S. population.

"This drought is having a deep and lasting effect on the choices regarding where we will want to live in the future," Sperling said. "The crisis has been growing slowly, but it is finally getting attention in the national spotlight."

Topping the list was Los Angeles, with its recent annual rainfall only 25 percent of normal. The Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana metro area was joined in the top four spots on the list by other Southern California cities.

Coming in at No. 2 was the San Diego metro area, which includes Carlsbad, Calif., and San Marcos, Calif., followed by the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura and Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario metro areas.

Other top-10 driest cities include Salt Lake City, Nashville, Tenn., and Birmingham, Ala.

At the other end of the list are cities suffering from too much water. Cities in the central Texas region such as San Antonio, Dallas, Houston, and Oklahoma City were afflicted by flood conditions this summer. Ironically, Sperling notes, these floods, which have caused deaths and property damage in Texas are the product of abnormal climate patterns that prevented the moisture-laden clouds to be carried northward to the already-parched Deep South.

National Drought Effects

It's not just particular areas of the country that experiencing droughts. Sperling said the entire United States is in the middle of a nationwide drought, producing a crisis that some scientists believe will have greater consequences than rising sea levels.

The devastating brush fires in Southern California are one side effect of this continuing drought. The Deep South is also gripped by a prolonged drought, endangering the water supply for the 4.4 million residents of the Atlanta area.

The effects can also be seen in the shrinking Great Lakes, Sperling said. The historically low water levels are threatening shipping commerce, he said. The Florida Everglades are also being affected by Florida's continuing water emergency, he said.

"Brush fires in California, the shrinking Great Lakes, Atlanta's dwindling water supply –- these are some of the effects we're seeing today from our nation's drought crisis," Sperling said. "Water shortages are projected to increase as our population grows and a warming climate produces abnormal precipitation patterns."

Measuring Drought Conditions

The study is based on the Sperling Drought Index, which Sperling created as a way for the public to easily understand and compare the severity of drought conditions.

Sperling has made a living for more 20 years through his firm "Sperling's BestPlaces" by helping people find their own "Best Place" to live.

"My work is all about measuring our livability and helping people find the best places for their life," said Sperling. I wanted to produce a metric that allows any city or neighborhood in the country to assess the current effect of the drought in their area."

The Sperling Drought Index is based on the scale where 100 represents the historic norm. Scores greater than 100 indicate drought conditions, and those less than 100 indicate abnormally wet conditions. Sperling and his team base the index on the latest drought and weather statistics from the National Climatic Data Center.

The complete database of Sperling Drought Indices have been put online, in a specialized Web site named www.DroughtScore.com.

DroughtScore.com is an example of a "micro-site", one of the newest trends in web design. Instead of a large site containing a wide variety of information, a micro-site focuses on a narrowly-defined subject.

Visitors to the site can assess and compare the drought risk for every city, town and zip code in the United States, representing more than 50,000 places in all.

In addition to the single score measuring the present drought situation in any area, DroughtScore.com graphs the scores for the last 13 months, comparing the local area to state and national averages.

http://www.wisn.com/weather/14555704/detail.html#

Austinlee
Nov 12, 2007, 5:06 AM
I see that Texas is exceptionally moist.

Derek
Nov 12, 2007, 5:14 AM
Ironically, it's raining right now.

dimondpark
Nov 12, 2007, 5:37 AM
Ironically, it's raining right now.
HA! We had something fierce yesterday afternoon that lasted well into the late night...saw a bunch of spinouts on the freeway..LOL

Today was absolutely perfect though(imo). Azure skies with brilliant sun-not a cloud in the sky, Id say we were in the high 60s..although we could use a lot more of the wet stuff

AaronPGH
Nov 12, 2007, 5:53 AM
Nowhere gets me moist like Texas.

Austinlee
Nov 12, 2007, 6:19 AM
Aaron: You have an exceptionally moist vagina.

BnaBreaker
Nov 12, 2007, 6:33 AM
Up in South Bend we're abnormally moist. Fabio must've rolled through town last night.

Rail Claimore
Nov 12, 2007, 11:42 AM
I hit South Bend after coming through an abnormally moist area.

KevinFromTexas
Nov 12, 2007, 12:05 PM
At the other end of the list are cities suffering from too much water. Cities in the central Texas region such as San Antonio, Dallas, Houston, and Oklahoma City were afflicted by flood conditions this summer.

Oklahoma City is not in Texas. :D Dallas and Houston are not in Central Texas, they're in North Texas and East Texas respectively. And San Antonio is usually considered South Central Texas. Austin is in Central Texas.

Exceptionally moist? Oh yeah, that just sounds lovely.

Actually we got very little rain in Austin last month. Just about none actually. We ended up 3 inches behind for that month which is usually our 2nd wettest of the year.

Anyhoo, it's foggy this morning, and we even have a chance for thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow with a cold front. Yay!

AaronPGH
Nov 12, 2007, 1:00 PM
Aaron: You have an exceptionally moist vagina.

You know it!

krudmonk
Nov 12, 2007, 11:48 PM
I've been soaked in almost all parts of the Bay Area this past week. I'd say we're a bit less dry now.

SunDevil
Nov 13, 2007, 4:55 AM
This seems to be measuring drought, not actual precipitation.

dave8721
Nov 13, 2007, 3:47 PM
Interesting to see South Florida on the map and how most of it is "exceptionally dry" except for the eastern sliver (the populated part) which is "abnormally moist". Of course it is all relative to what the normal state is for the area so even the "exceptionally dry" area is wetter than pretty much every where else in the US.

brickell
Nov 13, 2007, 5:24 PM
Right, but Lake Okeechobee, which also happens to be a major source of water for South Florida is quickly drying up. So even though Miami has gotten it's share of rain this summer, the lake did not. They're talking about making water restrictions even tighter.

alleystreetindustry
Nov 16, 2007, 3:00 AM
shouldn't the driest city be atlanta? we are on schedule for running out of water within.. 1-2 months. our drought is ridiculous. 3,000,000 of us will be parched.

Trae
Nov 16, 2007, 3:30 AM
Oklahoma City is not in Texas. :D Dallas and Houston are not in Central Texas, they're in North Texas and SouthEast Texas respectively. And San Antonio is usually considered South Central Texas. Austin is in Central Texas.

Exceptionally moist? Oh yeah, that just sounds lovely.

Actually we got very little rain in Austin last month. Just about none actually. We ended up 3 inches behind for that month which is usually our 2nd wettest of the year.

Anyhoo, it's foggy this morning, and we even have a chance for thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow with a cold front. Yay!

Fixed. ;)

I don't really associate Houston with those in the backwoods of Lufkin, etc.

bnk
Nov 16, 2007, 3:36 AM
I dislike dry areas.

How long do you think it will take for Coke a Cola plants to move to more greener pastures, ie the great lakes?

jk


Seriously something must be done down there otherwise real business will relocate.

sprtsluvr8
Nov 16, 2007, 3:48 AM
shouldn't the driest city be atlanta? we are on schedule for running out of water within.. 1-2 months. our drought is ridiculous. 3,000,000 of us will be parched.

Atlanta normally receives 51" of rain annually...according to the map, we are exceptionally dry or 2" or more below normal. Even if we're down 5" this year, that still means we get 46" of rain. That's twice as much as some cities...

It will be "more greener" once again in the drought areas when we begin to get normal rainfall again. It would take much more than a dry year for Coca-Cola to relocate its corporate headquarters, and I'm not sure there are any "Coca-Cola plants" in the area.

alleystreetindustry
Nov 17, 2007, 1:14 AM
Atlanta normally receives 51" of rain annually...according to the map, we are exceptionally dry or 2" or more below normal. Even if we're down 5" this year, that still means we get 46" of rain. That's twice as much as some cities...

It will be "more greener" once again in the drought areas when we begin to get normal rainfall again. It would take much more than a dry year for Coca-Cola to relocate its corporate headquarters, and I'm not sure there are any "Coca-Cola plants" in the area.

well, it seems hell isn't coming to atlanta anyways. and i severely doubt coca-cola would ever pack up and leave the a. also, im pretty sure there is a bottling plant within 30303, i believe.

dante2308
Nov 20, 2007, 12:53 AM
Atlanta normally receives 51" of rain annually...according to the map, we are exceptionally dry or 2" or more below normal. Even if we're down 5" this year, that still means we get 46" of rain. That's twice as much as some cities...

It will be "more greener" once again in the drought areas when we begin to get normal rainfall again. It would take much more than a dry year for Coca-Cola to relocate its corporate headquarters, and I'm not sure there are any "Coca-Cola plants" in the area.

Atlanta is at 26.11 inches for this year. We are substantially less than 5" less than normal... In fact we are between 30 and 60 percent of our normal rainfall, just look at that map above and below. We've had 0.14 inches of rain in this city this month after out governor literally prayed for it.

http://www.srh.noaa.gov/ffc/images/907a_pct.gif
http://drought.unl.edu/dm/pics/ga_dm.png
http://drought.unl.edu/dm/pics/ca_dm.png

Worse thing is that this is our second year of drought...