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Published byAimee Tune Modified over 10 years ago
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Overview -- Groundwater Management in California Western States Water Council April 2004
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GW resources background Supports about 30% of California urban & ag needs in average water years Important drought resource Supplies majority of state’s public water systems (largest urban agencies use surface water, almost all small systems use groundwater)
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Rights to use of groundwater Not administered by State (unlike surface water) Developed through case law
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Case law examples City of Los Angeles v. City of San Fernando (1975) – mutual prescription not applicable between public agencies Niles Sand & Gravel Co. v. Alameda County Water District (1974) – public agencies can store water underground & recover stored water
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Impetus for GW management Seawater intrusion – widespread by 1950s Overdraft, land subsidence Fear of exports State financial assistance Other
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Physical realities of GW management Limit/regulate extraction Develop new in-basin surface supply Bring in new imported water source Storage/conjunctive use projects require available aquifer capacity, conveyance, and surface water source
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GW management techniques Basin adjudication in court (19) Special or general act districts AB 3030 plans (>160 agencies) County ordinances (28)
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Basin adjudications Expensive Entail years in court system
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AB 3030 plans Enabling legislation enacted in 1992 Plan adoption is voluntary Hydrologic/hydrogeologic/political boundaries often differ Plans may be multi-agency Are they effective?
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GW storage projects increasing Existing “large” projects w/ ballpark of 10 MAF total managed capacity More than $500M in state financial assistance authorized 1996-2000 Many “small” and “medium” projects now in planning stages, reflecting availability of substantial state funding
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