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Local Water Supply Plan Template March 2016 <br />Low Flow Fixtures/Appliances - Plumbing fixtures and appliances that significantly reduce the amount <br />of water released per use are labeled "low flow". These fixtures and appliances use just enough water to <br />be effective, saving excess, clean drinking water that usually goes down the drain. <br />Maximum Daily Demand - The maximum (highest) amount of water used in one day. <br />Metered Residential Connections - The number of residential connections to the water system that <br />have meters. For multifamily dwellings, report each residential unit as an individual user. <br />Percent Unmetered/Unaccounted For - Unaccounted for water use is the volume of water withdrawn <br />from all sources minus the volume of water delivered. This value represents water "lost" by <br />miscalculated water use due to inaccurate meters, water lost through leaks, or water that is used but <br />unmetered or otherwise undocumented. Water used for public services such as hydrant flushing, ice <br />skating rinks, and public swimming pools should be reported under the category "Water Supplier <br />Services". <br />Population Served - The number of people who are served by the community's public water supply <br />system. This includes the number of people in the community who are connected to the public water <br />supply system, as well as people in neighboring communities who use water supplied by the <br />community's public water supply system. It should not include residents in the community who have <br />private wells or get their water from neighboring water supply. <br />Residential Connections - The total number of residential connections to the water system. For <br />multifamily dwellings, report each residential unit as an individual user. <br />Residential Per Capita Demand - The total residential water delivered during the year divided by the <br />population served divided by 365 days. <br />Residential Water Use - Water used for normal household purposes such as drinking, food preparation, <br />bathing, washing clothes and dishes, flushing toilets, and watering lawns and gardens. Should include all <br />water delivered to single family private residences, multi -family dwellings, apartment buildings, senior <br />housing complexes, mobile home parks, etc. <br />Smart Meter - Smart meters can be used by municipalities or by individual homeowners. Smart <br />metering generally indicates the presence of one or more of the following: <br />Smart irrigation water meters are controllers that look at factors such as weather, soil, slope, <br />etc. and adjust watering time up or down based on data. Smart controllers in a typical summer <br />will reduce water use by 30%-50%. Just changing the spray nozzle to new efficient models can <br />reduce water use by 40%. <br />Smart Meters on customer premises that measure consumption during specific time periods and <br />communicate it to the utility, often on a daily basis. <br />A communication channel that permits the utility, at a minimum, to obtain meter reads on <br />demand, to ascertain whether water has recently been flowing through the meter and onto the <br />44 <br />78 <br />