Planning commissioners and residents used public comment time on May 13 to press staff for more proactive outreach on well depth and quality as the region faces low groundwater levels.
A planning board member who prepared an analysis of long‑term hydrologic trends said several indicators point to a serious drought season and urged the county and property owners to measure well depths across the aquifer to identify shallow domestic wells at risk. Commissioners said the city’s water department briefing supported a conservation posture and agreed the county should assist residents with technical information and coordinate with state agencies for sampling and guidance.
Multiple residents echoed those concerns. Jan Hart, who lives near the Laramie River, said she and neighbors worry that continued new wells will worsen local supply for existing households and pointed to the low river flows and shallow wells in the area. “We’re really, really concerned,” she said, citing both garden needs and long‑term reliability. Resident BJ Edwards, who lives nearby, supported an industrial subdivision application but also emphasized water questions be addressed to protect neighbors.
Staff acknowledged DEQ and the state engineer have regulatory responsibility for water quality and quantity, but commissioners said local notice and clear plat language would better inform buyers. Planning staff agreed to probe the DEQ language on recommended sampling and to pursue additional outreach and data collection (including potential depth measurements) so residents with shallow wells can be advised about options.
What comes next: staff will contact WDEQ for clarification on recommended plat language and coordinate potential well‑depth measurements and technical outreach; the planning commission flagged this as a near‑term follow‑up item.
Sources: Planning staff presentation, resident public comment and planning commission discussion on May 13.