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Cedar Creek Lake is a fourth water source for Tarrant Regional Water District's water supply. Its normal system capacity is 322.00 ft (98.15 m) above sea level. When the lake gets over that point, gates from the spillway are opened, releasing water; 2005 and 2006 were dry years, sending the lake to a record low on December 12, 2006.
The Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD) is a water district in Texas.It provides raw water for over 2.1 million people, implements vital flood control measures and creates recreational opportunities for the residents of 11 North Texas Counties.
The reservoir was built by the Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD) who retains most of the water rights. TRWD is a water wholesaler to 11 counties in Texas. This water is pumped from Richland-Chambers via a 90-inch (2,300 mm) pipeline to balancing reservoirs and on to Lake Benbrook for storage before moving to the water treatment plants or ...
Cedar Creek Lake in east Texas was then built in 1965 as a reservoir for Tarrant County. It now serves as one of the area’s largest lakes, with the smallest and oldest attached pipeline. Cedar ...
As the heat and drought in North Texas persist, when will Fort Worth have to worry about its water supply? Tarrant Regional Water District say not to panic.
The Tarrant Regional Water District owns the lake. The district’s monitoring program has not detected any impacts to water quality, according to spokesperson Chad Lorance.
The lake was created by damming the West Fork of the Trinity River and sits upstream from Eagle Mountain Lake. The lake is owned by the Tarrant Regional Water District and the water impounded is used for flood control, residential and commercial sales, irrigation, and recreation.
Fort Worth sources its water from the Tarrant Regional Water District, a system fed primarily by a network of lakes and reservoirs. The city’s water department treats and transports the raw ...