The unprecedented drought impacted many families throughout the San Joaquin Valley who rely on ground water for their daily lives.
As the drought unfolded, Self-Help Enterprises took an active role in providing emergency drought relief by developing a temporary water tank prototype that supplied a limited amount of water to homes with dry wells. The water tank system puts onsite a 2,600-gallon tank with a small pump that is connected directly into a house's plumbing. Water is delivered by a water hauler and the system restores water for sanitation purposes.
In Tulare County, the Tulare County Office of Emergency Services implemented this interim solution, which helped keep families in their homes while working toward a long-term solution, through a partnership with Self-Help Enterprises, Community Services Employment Training (CSET), and United Way.
In communities like East Porterville where homes have been connected to the City of Porterville's water system, the water tanks are being removed as the homes are connected. Rather than dispose of the tanks and add to local landfills, Self-Help Enterprises, in partnership with the Tulare County Resource Conservation District (RCD), helped to distribute over 300 water tanks to areas across Tulare County including rural communities, small ranches and farms.
The Tule River Indian Reservation received 58 tanks allowing them access to over 145,000 gallons of residential, livestock and fire suppression water capabilities. The rural communities of Allensworth, Terra Bella and Sultana also received water storage equipment. In addition, water tanks were distributed to many different foothill ranchers to allow for fire suppression and livestock water, which will benefit both water and air quality for the San Joaquin Valley.
Self-Help Enterprises is seeking to distribute water tanks in other counties as families connect to a permanent water source.
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