Assembly Committee Holds Groundwater Oversight
Hearing RCRC (Regional Council of Rural
Counties) Report 2/4/11
The Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee, chaired by
Jared
Huffman (D-San Rafael) held an oversight hearing on Tuesday on
the “Management
of California’s Groundwater Resources.”
On the first panel, Thomas Harter and groundwater hydrologist
from U.C.
Davis provided a primer on groundwater basics, the Legislative
Analyst’s
Office (LAO) presented the LAO report Liquid Assets: Improving
Management of the State’s Groundwater Resources; and Mary
Scruggs of the
Department of Water Resources updated the Committee on the
implementation of SB 7x 6, the statewide groundwater monitoring
program.
The LAO concluded their presentation with four recommendations
for
improving groundwater management: 1) Phase in a comprehensive
monitoring
system and require local water districts to submit standardized
extraction from all groundwater wells; 2) Establish Active
Management
Areas (AMA’s) with jurisdiction over groundwater basins that are
especially vulnerable to contamination or overdraft; 3) Remove
the legal
distinction between percolating groundwater and subterranean
streams;
and, 4) Consider phasing in statewide groundwater permitting.
The LAO presentation can be accessed at:
http://www.budgettrack.net/Portals/21/BudgetTrack/Docs11/1160.pdf#xml=http://www.budgettrack.net/desktopmodules/b
udgettrack/pdfhitbuilder.aspx?file=1160.pdf&btsession=4&uid=575
Of interest to some member counties, DWR’s Scruggs indicated in
her
comments that more flexibility in the law to
address the difficulties of monitoring remote groundwater basins
was
desirable.
The second panel, consisting of representatives of the Sonoma
Valley
Groundwater Management Program, the Orange County Water
District, and
the Kings River Conservation District briefed the committee on
their
groundwater management programs.
The third panel, discussing current and future challenges, was
made up
of representatives of the Northern California Water Agency (NCWA),
the
Community Water Center, and The Nature Conservancy. David Guy,
President
of NCWA, suggested that a program similar to the Cooperative
Snow Survey
established for groundwater management could coordinate the
various
state agencies with groundwater information, while creating a
public
advisory committee that includes local entities. Additionally,
Guy
suggested that the issue of protection of important recharge
zones
should be further advanced this legislative session, and that
the
Legislature would benefit from a report on the status of
existing law
relating to water supply and land use planning and whether they
are
working effectively as part of active groundwater management in
California.
Based on comments made by the Chair, it is expected that
Assemblymember
Huffman will introduce one or more bills dealing with
groundwater this
legislative session.
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