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Arizonas Short-Term Challenges The Colorado River system, which supplies 36 percent of Arizonas total water use, has experienced extensive drought conditions for the past 19 years. This has resulted in Lake Mead dropping to historically low reservoir levels.
The Colorado River Basin is in a Tier 1 shortage for 2024. This represents a 512,000 acre-foot reduction to Arizonas Colorado River water supply, constituting 30% of CAPs normal supply, about 18% of Arizonas Colorado River supply, and just under 8% of Arizonas total water use.
For years, Scottsdale had allowed haulers to fill their trucks at a water station to provide water to Rio Verde residents. But recently, it cut off the haulers access in response to shortages on the Colorado River, the citys main source of water.
Scottsdale uses some of the most technical and advanced water treatment processes available to provide you with the best drinking water available.
But three weeks ago, Scottsdale turned off that water pipe, cutting off Rio Verde Foothills residents supply. Scottsdale said it was forced to make the move because of the prolonged mega-drought affecting the US south-west.
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Rio Verde Foothills is an unincorporated community, meaning it is not within the boundaries of a city. That makes it far out of reach of municipal water pipes. Instead, the area is simply part of Maricopa County, which oversees large swaths of land that arent under a city or town government.
Scottsdale says that because of water scarcity and drought, they will no longer be providing water to unincorporated Rio Verde Foothills residents who rely on water being trucked in.
Prior to the mid 1980s, Scottsdale relied almost entirely on groundwater for its water supply. Today, about 90 percent of our drinking water comes from two surface water sources: the Central Arizona Project and the Salt River Project.

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