A Wake-Up Call for Manatee County’s Drinking Water Supply

Manatee County could face a drinking water shortage within the next decade. According to County projections reported by the Bradenton Herald, daily water demand is expected to rise by 13%, increasing roughly from 48 million gallons per day to 54 million. This increase is not inevitable. It’s a wake-up call signaling that current policies are pushing the County toward a shortage that can still be prevented with smarter planning and stronger protections.

Rather than scrambling for new water sources, Manatee County must first take responsibility for how it manages and wastes the water it already has. The County should strengthen protections for recharge areas, reduce water losses (currently estimated at nearly 10 percent), curb demand on freshwater supplies, and adopt smart-growth policies aligned with real water limits.

Conservation alone will not secure our future. Long-term water security depends on protecting the natural systems that supply our drinking water. Recharge wetlands, headwater streams, and their buffer zones in the Manatee River watershed filter and deliver water to the Manatee River and Lake Manatee. These areas were once safeguarded through Watershed Overlay Districts, but those protections were dismantled in 2023 and have not yet been fully restored. Even full restoration would only be a first step. Stronger protections are needed to reflect today’s development pressure and increasing demand on our water supply…

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