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Published Feb 28, 2026 | 07:22pm ETUpdated Mar 3, 2026 | 07:25pm ET1 min read

Public Infrastructure

School Districts Turn to Water Reuse Retrofits as Drought Pressures Grow

Published Feb 28, 2026 | 07:22pm ET

Updated Mar 3, 2026 | 07:25pm ET

District maintenance teams are installing low-cost reuse systems that cut non-potable demand on large campuses.

School campus with drought-tolerant landscaping
Portrait of Elena Ortiz

Elena Ortiz

Senior Climate Correspondent

Elena reports on the intersection of climate policy, infrastructure resilience, and city planning.

More from this author

District facilities leaders in Arizona and New Mexico are moving beyond temporary conservation notices and investing in permanent reuse systems. New retrofits capture condensate from HVAC units and route it to storage tanks for irrigation.

At large middle school campuses, the recovered volume is modest per building but significant districtwide. Officials reported seasonal reductions that allowed them to keep athletic fields open during local watering restrictions.

Engineers said the systems succeed when paired with leak detection and smart scheduling. Without those controls, campuses risk shifting waste from one part of the network to another.

Procurement officers favored modular equipment with local service contracts instead of bespoke installations. The approach lowered upfront risk and made board approval easier in districts with tight capital budgets.

Public Infrastructure

Parents initially questioned whether reuse programs would affect classroom health standards. Districts responded with public dashboards that separate potable and non-potable flows and include third-party testing summaries.

With another dry summer forecast, administrators expect the retrofit queue to grow and are negotiating group purchasing terms to avoid long equipment lead times.

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Maintenance worker checking a water reuse control panel