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2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act
January 7, 2015Dan McManus
[email protected](530) 529‐7373
Butte County Water Commission
Presentation Overview:
Legislation Background : How did we get here and what were some of the key drivers?
2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act DWR Implementation…Next Steps
http://water.ca.gov/groundwater/
Major Milestones toward Sustainable Groundwater Management
2002 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
SBx7-6CASGEM Program
2003
Bulletin 118-03
AB 3030
SB 1938
California Water Action Plan
Governors Drought Proclamations
(Jan/Apr)
Governor Signs Groundwater Legislation
(9/16/14)
DWR Initiates Sustainable
Groundwater Management
AB 303 Local GW
Assistance Grants
AB 359
1992 2000
CWP GW Report
2005 – 2010Average Annual Use
Statewide Groundwater Use
Total Supply: 43 MAF/yr
GW Use = 16.5 MAF/yr39% of total supply
Sacramento River Hydrologic Region Groundwater Use
vs Total Water Supply…
by Planning Area
Total Water Supply: 9,008 TAF
Use met by GW: 2,743 TAF
~30%
2014 = 4.054th Lowest Since 1906
Change in Groundwater Elevation Contour MapSpring 2005 – Spring 2010
withEstimated Change in Groundwater in
Storage by Hydrologic RegionLevel Change
DWR CWP 2013 Update, Volume 4
SR: -0.7 to -1.7 MAFSJR: -1.0 to -2.6 MAFTL: -3.7 to -8.9 MAF
CV Total: -5.4 to -13.2 MAF
Groundwater Level Change Historic Spring Low
(1900 - 1998)vs
Recent Drought Spring Low (2008 - 2014)
DWR April 2014, Drought Report
Chico
Summer 2004 – Summer 2014Well Depths: < 200’
Long Term Groundwater Elevation Change Map
Chico
Willows
2004
Renewed Land Subsidence
Renewed land subsidence threatens infrastructure, buildings, water deliverysystems, and long-term water supply
capacity.
Adapted from Ireland, 1983.
2012 Groundwater Management
Planning
California Water Action Plan
http://resources.ca.gov/docs/california_water_action_plan/Final_California_Water_Action_Plan.pdf
Final Released: January 22, 20145 year Plan to improve sustainability of CA’s Water Resources
California Water Action PlanGoals:
10 Broad Actions:
Reliability: Develop more reliable water supplies Restoration: Restore important species and habitat Resilience: Establish a more resilience, and sustainably managed
water resource system
1. Make Conservation a California Way of Life2. Increase Regional Self‐Reliance and IWM Across all Levels of Gov.3. Achieve the Co‐Equal Goals of the Delta Plan4. Protect and Restore Important Ecosystems5. Manage and Prepare for Dry Periods6. Expand Water Storage Capacity and Improve Groundwater Mgmt.7. Provide Safe Water for All Communities8. Increase Flood Protection9. Increase Operation and Regulatory Efficiency10. Identify Sustainable and Integrated Financing Opportunities
California Water Action Plan
Action #6: Expand Water Storage Capacity and Improve Groundwater Management
Provide Essential Data to Enable Sustainable Groundwater Mgmt
Support Funding Partnerships for Storage Projects
Update Bulletin 118, California Groundwater Plan
Improve Sustainable Groundwater Management
Support Distributed Groundwater Storage
Increase Statewide Groundwater Storage
Accelerate Clean-up of Contaminated Groundwater and Prevent Future
Contamination
2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act
The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act of 2014
KEY PRINCIPLES Groundwater best managed at the local or regional
level, and local agencies should have the tools and authority they need to sustainably manage their resources.
When local or regional agencies cannot or will not manage their groundwater sustainably, the State will intervene until the local agencies develop and implement sustainable groundwater management plans. 17
AB 1739: Dickinson SB 1168: Pavley SB 1319: Pavley
The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act of 2014
KEY INTENDED OUTCOMES Establish effective local governance to protect
and manage groundwater basins
Achieve sustainable management of groundwater basins
Manage regional water resources for regional self-sufficiency and prepare for dry periods
18
Requires that a groundwater sustainability plan (GSP) be adopted for the most important groundwater basins in California
• Limited to “high & medium priority basins” 127 out of 515 basins in the state
• Adjudicated basins are exempt, except for minimal reporting
• “Low & very low priority” basins are exempt, though they are encouraged to adopt plans.
2014 Sustainable GW Management Legislation
* Initial Basin Priority = June, 2014 Results---
Basin Priority will be updated to Include impacts to habitat and stream flow
June 2014 Basin Prioritization Resultshttp://water.ca.gov/groundwater/casgem/basin_prioritization.cfm
Establishes a timetable for adoption of GSPs By 2017, local groundwater sustainability agencies (GSA) must be
identified. By 2020, overdrafted basins must be covered by a groundwater
sustainability plan (GSP). Other high & medium priority basins not in overdraft must have plans by 2022.
By 2040, each high & medium priority basin must achieve sustainability, though this can be extended by 10 years for good cause.
2014 Sustainable GW Management Legislation
2020 2021 2022
Groundwater Sustainability
AgenciesIdentified
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Groundwater Sustainability Plans
(Non-Overdrafted High & Medium Priority Basins)
Groundwater Sustainability Plans(Basins in Overdraft)
Governor Signs Sustainable
Groundwater Management Legislation
9/16/14
2040
All High & Medium Priority Basins Achieve
Sustainability
“Local agency” means any local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land us responsibilities within a groundwater basin.
2014 Sustainable GW Management Legislation
Exempts local groundwater sustainabilityplans (GSPs) from CEQA
Empowers local agencies to manage their basins sustainably Gives local agencies new authority to:
• Adopt and enforce rules, • Require registration of groundwater wells,• Measure and manage groundwater extraction,• Groundwater use reporting• Fee assessment• Request revisions of groundwater basin boundaries.
2014 Sustainable GW Management Legislation
Establishes Basic Requirements for GSPs: • Description of physical setting• Identification of groundwater conditions: (levels, quality,
subsidence, groundwater – surface water interaction)• Historic and projected water demands and supplies• Maps: basin and agency boundaries, recharge areas.• Measurable Objectives with Interim Milestones (every 5 yrs) to
achieve sustainability in 20 yrs.• Description of how GSP is given consideration in General Plans
• Undesirable Results• Chronic lowering of gw levels that result in significant and unreasonable
depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon.
• Significant and unreasonable reduction in groundwater storage• Significant and unreasonable degradation of water quality• Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that significantly interferes
with surface land uses• Surface water depletions that have significant and unreasonable adverse
impacts on beneficial uses of surface water
2014 Sustainable GW Management LegislationKey Definitions
• Sustainable Groundwater Management“The management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.”
• Subject to Critical Conditions of Overdraft“A basin is subject to critical conditions of overdraft when continuation of present water management practices would probably result in significant adverse overdraft-related environmental, social, or economic impacts.”
• Provides for a limited state role• DWR will evaluate groundwater sustainability plans within two
years of submission.• State Water Board may temporarily intervene in four limited
circumstance.• No governance structure for a basin after 2 ½ years• No plan after five years (overdrafted basins) or ten years
(other basins)• Plan is inadequate and the basin has serious groundwater
problems• Local agency has not adequately implemented the plan and
the basin has serious groundwater problems
• State Board must return control to local agencies as soon as they adopt an adequate plan.
• State Board may limit its temporary control to the portion of the basin not being managed.
2014 Sustainable GW Management Legislation
2014 Sustainable GWM Near-Term Timeline
2014 Sustainable GWM Expanded Timeline
DWR Implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Program
Describes DWR role and responsibilities under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act and outlines related actions from the California Water Action Plan.
Groundwater Sustainability Program
Strategic Plan
Objectives:1. Groundwater sustainability agency governance and sensible
regulations
2. Provide Technical Assistance to GSAs
3. Provide Planning Assistance to GSAs
4. Provide interregional assistance to local agencies acknowledging interaction with adjacent basins
DWR Implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Program
Sustainable Groundwater Management
Groundwater Sustainability Assessment
Basin Groundwater Budget
Basin Boundaries, Prioritization, and
Budget
GSP Assessment
State Technical Assistance
Groundwater Management
Information System
Statewide Data Collection
Groundwater Evaluations
State Planning Assistance
Statewide Groundwater
Planning (B-118)
Statewide Water Planning (B-160)
Recharge/Supply Planning
Financial & Regional Planning Assistance
Regional Agency Capacity Assistance
Financial Assistance
Statewide-Regional Integration
Interregional Assistance
Evaluate Storage & Conveyance Projects
Improve Surface Water Reliability
Assess Surface Water & Groundwater
Interaction
DWR Sustainable Groundwater Management Program
Functional Areas
DWR Rollout: Phased Implementation of Legislation to Achieve Sustainable Groundwater Management
Sustainable Groundwater Management
(20 years from 2020 or 2022)
Development and Adoption
of Groundwater Sustainability Plans (GSPs)
(2017 to Jan 2020 or 2022)
Initial Management
through Water Budgets
(Jan 2020 or 2022 plus 5‐10 years)
Realignment of
Governance and Areas
(Oct 2014 through 2017)
Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4
DWR Near Term Implementation…recapJanuary 2015 to December 2016
Develop Initial Basin Priority…done (for now)
Identify Basins Subject to Overdraft Conditions…2015 - 2016
Adopt Regulations to Revise Basin Boundaries…January 2016
Adopt Regulations to Evaluate and Implement Groundwater Sustainability Plans…June 2016
Publish Report on Water Available for Groundwater Replenishment…Dec. 31, 2016
Implementation Challenges Imbalance of water supply to demand Coordinated water management with a basin Regulatory oversight and enforcement Development of regulations and criteria On-going degradation of basins Data management and lack of adequate data Funding and resources Communications and outreach Uncertainties
DWR Implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Program
Communication and Outreach Tools and Information: State agency committees Public stakeholder meetings…leverage existing
meetings associations/foundations/organizations Regional workshops and forums Groundwater sustainability advisory panel Topic-specific webinars One-on-one meetings
DWR Implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Program
http://www.groundwater.ca.gov
Questions?
(530) 529‐7373
DWR Groundwater Information Center: http://water.ca.gov/groundwater/index.cfm