This was sent to Beverly Perdue, Lt. Governor of NC in late February 2008 - No response has been received as of the date of this posting.
   
I am writing on behalf of the PWNC  (Power Washers Network of the Carolinas) to get your position on the water  crisis currently affecting our state of North Carolina.
   As a part of an industry whose  lifeblood runs with the availability of water, we are a not only a group of  professionals but also, taxpayers, homeowners and families.  We as a group are  concerned about conservation of water, particularly where proper management of  this precious resource is concerned.
   The pressure washing industry was  chosen out of many to be one of the first professions to have our livelihood  restricted without anyone clearly understanding exactly how much we give to our  cities and towns.  Pressure washing should not be regarded as a luxury but a  necessity to keep our homes and property clean, safe and healthy environments in  which to live and work.  While car washes are allowed to continue operating and  numerous other businesses who utilize hundreds of thousands of gallons of water  a day inside, how many of those  companies actually provide vital services for the community in which they  reside?  Does it affect your health to have dirt on your car?  Is it a matter of  safety to have your hair washed at a salon?  I personally, as a concerned  citizen have to say NO.
   From the side of my profession, does  it affect your safety when buildings are tagged and unable to be cleaned?  If  graffiti is not removed immediately, the potential threat of gang activity  increases with each day it is left unattended.   Would you take your child to an  outdoor cafĂ© for ice cream if the sidewalks surrounding the tables had spilled  food or drinks on the ground?  Are you going to enter a store if the concrete at  the entrance is littered with chewing gum and stepped on cigarette butts?  The  pressure washing industry provides our cities, towns and neighborhoods with  services that are needed as much as they are desired.  If people want to have a  clean car, doesn’t it stand to reason that they want the rest of their world  clean as well?
   One last benefit to pressure  washing, and possibly the most important…… Pressure washers alleviate many of  the problems associated with contaminated run-off.  If impervious surfaces are  not cleaned regularly, atmospheric pollutants, heavy metals and a host of other  environmentally unfriendly particulates are left to accumulate.  When it rains,  these contaminates are carried by the run-off to various places including storm  drains or other water places.  Two things occur afterward – US waters are  more polluted than necessary or water has to be treated more aggressively in  order to bring it back to an acceptable level.  The industry that cleans these  surfaces and prevents this “downstream contamination” should be considered one  of the most important conservation efforts available……yet, we are the first  disposable industry when water becomes in short  supply.
   I cannot begin to, nor will I even  attempt to voice the arguments that other industries have.  I do, however, speak  for the industry known as Pressure Washing and the contractors who live in and  work in the Carolinas.  We are doing our part  to conserve water, to protect the beauty of North Carolina and also to continue to run our  businesses in this State.  We are not a huge number in the grand population as  an industry, but we are a part of small business in the Carolinas and we are not  disposable.
   Thank you for your  attention,
   Celeste  Gothorp
 PWNC
 www.pwnc.org
 Graham, NC