City of Aspen staffers may recommend some changes to the water-efficient landscaping regulations adopted by the city last May before the most stringent aspects of the new rules kick in after a yearlong pilot phase, The Aspen Times newspaper reported.
The new regulations, which city staffers say have been well-received, require new or substantially remodeled residential projects in the city’s water-service area to include a landscape plan, an irrigation plan and a water budget for the site. According to Aspen Times, the city now requires that an irrigation audit be completed after a new landscaping system has been installed, and that audit has to be done by a third-party certified landscape irrigation auditor.
Trouble is, such certified auditors are rare in Colorado, Aspen Times reported. The city is also exploring setting up a local training program to increase the number of certified auditors to make it easier for people to comply.
To read the full story from the Aspen Times, click here.
Latest from Lawn & Landscape
- Develon unveils -9 Series heavy excavators
- News you might've missed last week
- Lifescape Colorado's Hupf moves to regional role as Ostheimer becomes president
- Your most reliable predictor of success
- LandCare names McCallon, Miller as branch managers
- Takeuchi-US names Paul Wade, Eric Wenzel as dealer development managers
- CASE continues partnership with country artist Jon Pardi
- Greenlee debuts new battery-powered remote pruner