This is a site mirroring the emails of California Water News emailed by the California Department of Water Resources

[Water_news] 2. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: SUPPLY - 6/29/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment 

 

June 29, 2007

 

2. Supply

 

HETCH HETCHY SYSTEM:

SF to release report on Hetch Hetchy system revamp - Modesto Bee

 

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WATER ISSUES:

Water Authority board approves rate hike - North County Times

 

WATER CONSERVAITON PLANNING:

Water Agencies Agree to Develop Long-Term Plan - Santa Clarita Signal

 

 

HETCH HETCHY SYSTEM:

SF to release report on Hetch Hetchy system revamp

Modesto Bee – 6/29/07

By Michael G. Mooney, staff writer

 

Later today, the San Francisco Planning Department will release a massive draft environmental report, outlining the potential effects of a $4.3 billion plan to retool the Hetch Hetchy water system.

 

Critics already are attacking a key section of the 3,000-page document: a proposal by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission to divert an additional 25 million gallons of water daily from the Tuolumne River by 2030.

 

Such a diversion would swell San Francisco's take from the Tuolumne to about 300 million gallons of water a day.

 

The proposed diversion, however, is just one aspect of the SFPUC's ambitious plan to revamp the Hetch Hetchy's aging network of pipes and tunnels, which is used to move water from the Sierra to San Francisco.

 

Representatives of the Modesto and Turlock irrigation districts also are tracking San Francisco's plans, though they have not yet reached any conclusions.

 

Earlier this week, the SFPUC briefed both MID and TID staff on the pipeline portion of its plan.

 

Representatives for both irrigation districts said a possible increased water diversion from the Tuolumne River was not discussed.

 

"The concern is San Francisco and its28 wholesale water customers want more water," said Eric Wesselman, executive director of Tuolumne River Trust, an environmental advocacy group. "And they want it to come from the Tuolumne or other rivers in Central California.

 

"Taking more water from the Tuolumne River will jeopardize fish and wildlife species, degrade recreational opportunities and adversely impact the (Sacramento-San Joaquin) Delta," Wesselman said.

 

The Tuolumne River Trust, with offices in San Francisco, Modesto and Sonora, promotes stewardship of the Tuolumne River and its tributaries with a goal of keeping watershed environmentally healthy.

 

Tony Winnicker, SFPUC director of communications, said the whole purpose of the environmental review is to seek comment on the agency's plan, which identifies potential harmful effects, as well as suggesting ways to eliminate or lessen those effects.

 

"This (release of the report) starts a 90-day public comment period," Winnicker said. "We will be holding public hearings in September in all of the counties affected by the project, including one in Modesto.

 

"We want to urge folks not to rush to judgment; not to adopt abunker mentality about this. The 25 million-gallon-a-day diversion is just one of the scenarios the city planning department was asked to study."

 

While acknowledging that the diversion was the SFPUC's "preferred alternative" when it submitted its plan almost two years ago, Winnicker said, "other scenarios take less water from the (Tuolumne) River."

 

Both the MID and the TID have legal rights to use water from the Tuolumne River that supercede the water rights held by San Francisco.

 

San Francisco is talking to theOakdale Irrigation District about a possible water transfer, beginning in 2010, that would enable the SFPUC to store more water in its Hetch Hetchy Reservoir near the Tuolumne's headwaters.

 

The SFPUC would pay Oak-dale to take surplus water, drawn from the Stanislaus River, shipping it to Modesto Reservoir via canal or pipeline. The amount of water would be equal to San Francisco's diversion from the upper Tuolumne.

 

Winnicker, however, said a potential water transfer agreement with Oakdale, if it materializes, isn't part of the multibillion-dollar Hetch Hetchy proposal.

 

"That's a separate negotiation," Winnicker said.

 

A long way to go

 

The San Francisco Planning Department has spent two years studying the SFPUC's proposal, Winnicker said, adding that the process still has a long way to go.

 

He said the final version of the document would not be completed before summer 2008.

 

Winnicker said each piece of the project, including its pipeline renovation plans, also will require separate environmental review.

 

Nearly two years ago, the SFPUC dropped a plan to route a new water pipeline across Stanislaus County after objections were raised by environmental groups, led by the Tuolumne River Trust.

 

Under a compromise, the SFPUC would add shorter sections of pipe near Oakdale and Vernalis, avoiding Modesto.

 

The new sections of pipelines would make it easier to upgrade the SFPUC's three existing pipelines, Winnicker said, and also make it easier to keep water flowing to San Francisco in the event of drought or other natural disasters such as earthquakes.

 

Wesselman of the Tuolumne River Trust said he's not worried about the scaled-back pipeline proposal, which would add about 17 miles of new pipe rather than the 47 miles originally envisioned.

 

Diverting more water from the upper Tuolumne is a different matter, however.

 

"All of the water they're talking about is for the southern East Bay and San Francisco peninsula, not the city and county of San Francisco," Wesselman said. "And most water would be for commercial growth and outdoor landscaping.

 

"We say there are cheaper, faster and less destructive ways to meet San Francisco's future water needs." #

http://www.modbee.com/local/story/13739556p-14323755c.html

 

 

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WATER ISSUES:

Water Authority board approves rate hike

North County Times – 6/29/07

By William Finn Bennett, staff writer

 

Water consumers in San Diego can expect an increase in their water rates in the coming year if local water districts decide to pass an 8 percent wholesale rate hike to their customers.

The hike was approved Thursday by the board of the San Diego County Water Authority, which sells water to local utilities.

 

The new rates, effective Jan. 1, are likely to increase average monthly water bills by up to an average of $2.25 per household.

 

Authority officials said Thursday they decided on the increase because their suppliers have raised prices on water the agency buys, and because construction and maintenance costs are on the rise for the authority's projects. The water authority sells water to 24 water districts and agencies in the county.

Water authority spokesman John Liarakos said that while the rate hike may be unpopular, the change in rates is "not that significant overall.

"More importantly, it is an investment in the long-term water reliability in San Diego County," he said.

The 8.1 percent increase comes to $51 an acre-foot for 2007, and will bring the estimated cost of an acre-foot of water to $679 each calendar year.

An acre-foot of water is roughly 325,000 gallons of water, or enough to sustain the water needs of two families of four for a year.

Among other things, the rate increases will help pay for several water authority projects, officials say, including a 100 million-gallon-per-day water treatment plant, the completion of a pipeline connecting the San Vicente Reservoir to the region's water distribution system and the creation of the All-American canal-lining project in Imperial County.

Most of the rate hike was made up of the rate increase the authority received from its own wholesale supplier, Los Angeles-based Metropolitan Water District. That water district supplies about half of Southern California's water.

In April, Metropolitan voted to adopt a $30 per acre-foot raise for its customers, raising its rates from $478 an acre-foot of treated water to $508 per acre-foot. Metropolitan officials blamed the rate increase on increasing costs of electricity used to carry the water and the spiking costs of treating water to make it safe to drink.

In general, the cost of water consists of what it takes to maintain the dams, reservoirs, treatment plants and pumps and pipelines that deliver the water from its source.

Locally, only about 22 percent of the county's water comes from local sources, such as ground water, local surface water, recycled water and through conservation. The rest is imported. Of that, about 60 percent comes from the Colorado River, and 40 percent from Northern California. #

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/06/29/news/top_stories/23_18_096_28_07.txt

 

 

WATER CONSERVAITON PLANNING:

Water Agencies Agree to Develop Long-Term Plan

Santa Clarita Signal – 6/29/07

By Katherine Geyer, staff writer

 

Aiming to develop a plan to conserve the Santa Clarita Valley's water, the Castaic Lake Water Agency and the Santa Clarita Water District entered into an agreement Wednesday with local water purveyors to develop a long-term strategy.

 

At their meeting, the CLWA board of directors approved the memorandum of understanding that states CLWA will contribute $34,000 to the plan, while the Santa Clarita Water District will contribute about $54,000. Valencia Water company will contribute the majority of the funds at $59,000.

 

"It's basically to work up a long-term program to try to achieve 10 percent conservation that we set forth in the Urban Water Management Plan," said Dan Masnada, CLWA's general manager. "We've got the consultant on board and the purveyors and the agency will be working to come up with a long-term strategic plan."

 

He said the plan could result in suggested ordinances for the county and the city to adopt that will help the Santa Clarita Valley utilize water more efficiently. He said it could include restrictions for certain types of landscaping.

 

In other business, the board approved CLWA's 2007-08 budget.

 

The $115.5 million budget is one of the largest in the agency's history. #

http://www.the-signal.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=49285&format=html

####

No comments:

Blog Archive