A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
July 31, 2009
2. Supply –
Drought-Proofing California by 2020;
Higher water bills spark ratepayer revolts but may also dampen Californians' proclivity to use more wet stuff than necessary.
Miller-McCune
Moorpark considers water desalination plant;
With water rates rising, city hopes to curb future costs
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Drought-Proofing California by 2020;
Higher water bills spark ratepayer revolts but may also dampen Californians' proclivity to use more wet stuff than necessary.
Miller-McCune – 7/29/09
By Melinda Burns
This spring, more than 2,000 people living in and around the populous High Desert community of Palmdale — 60 miles north of Los Angeles — wrote letters of protest after their water district, teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, dramatically raised hikes in rates and service charges. Residents are just now getting their bills, and the district's phone is ringing off the hook with customers asking for waivers.
The city of
"They perceive that they're being the champions of the people," district General Manager Randy Hill said of city officials, "but we don't have sufficient water supplies. We're at the point that our demand is dangerously close to our supply. We should have been raising rates all along, and we didn't."
It's a conservation rule of thumb that if a resource is underpriced, it will be overused. And California needs every drop, experts say, to cope with recurring droughts, serve the growing population and restore the fragile Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the source of much of the state's fresh water, including Palmdale's.
"Sooner or later, California will be hit with the same kind of prolonged, severe drought that Australia is facing now," said Rick Soehren, assistant deputy director for water use efficiency at the state Department of Water Resources and co-chair of the "20x2020" planning team. "Either we're going to be ready, or the economy takes a terrible hit and people lose a huge investment in landscaping."
The draft plan was made public this year by a state and federal team under a directive from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. It opens with the statement that
Palmdale residents use 200 gallons per capita daily. John Mlynar, a city spokesman, said the city has been trying hard to cut water use on its own property, reducing it 27 percent in recent years, even installing artificial grass in front of city hall.
"We have gone to great lengths to conserve water," Mlynar said. "The district needs to look at cutting some expenses before passing on costs."
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge declined to temporarily halt Palmdale's water rate increases this month, but the city's lawsuit is going forward. In the meantime, the water district is spending tens of thousands of dollars on legal costs — money that Hill, the general manager, said he could be using to pay residents to put in low-flow toilets and take out grass.
Statewide, experts say, water districts like Palmdale will have to change the way they do business to meet the proposed 20 percent reduction in urban water use. It's an average: State Assembly bill AB 49 would allow water districts to use different formulas for meeting the goal, taking into account differences in climate and levels of conservation already achieved.
"In areas where there has been more aggressive conservation, the reduction could be 17 percent, whereas in other areas it could be as high as 30 percent," said Chris Brown, executive director of the California Urban Water Conservation Council, a nonprofit group that helped develop the plan.
After some fine-tuning by a joint committee of the state Assembly and Senate, AB 49 is expected to go to vote this fall. It is sponsored by the National Resources Defense Council, a national environmental group, and the giant Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. It also has the support of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce and numerous other business and environmental groups and water agencies.
Proponents of the 20x2020 plan say it means cutting back on water waste, not lifestyle — fixing leaks; installing low-flow toilets, showerheads and washing machines; adjusting irrigation; and putting in drought-tolerant plants.
"Most homeowners in
Bob Wilkinson, a
"The No. 1 source for new water is urban water use efficiency," Wilkinson said. "It's not a sideshow, and it's important that people not think of this as a sacrifice. It wouldn't take draconian measures. We just need to get price signals in place to help people understand the real price and cost of water."
That's what's happening in Montecito, a wealthy community on the coast northwest of Los Angeles, where residents were paying three times as much for water as in Palmdale but didn't care about the cost because they could afford it. Newcomers who had no memory of the drought of 1986-91 tended to build big homes with big lawns.
While water demand flattened out in the rest of Southern California, including
"Everybody put in their lush landscaping," recalled Tom Mosby, the Montecito Water District general manager. "Money wasn't an issue. I would see trucks going up the street with sod and I was just having a heart attack."
Suddenly, Montecito was confronting the possibility of a chronic, long-term water shortage. In the short term, the district spent nearly $900,000 buying surplus water from the state aqueduct to make ends meet. For the long term, it set a limit on water for new development and restored a tiered rate structure similar to the one it had implemented during the last drought. Now customers are charged progressively more for each successive tier or "block" of water they use — a pricing method recommended by the state.
Montecito is on track to achieving a 10 percent reduction in water use by this October, a year after the new rates went into effect, Mosby said.
"At first, the bills were a major shock for everyone," he said. "The community's got the message, and we are very pleased."
Yet even with a 10 percent reduction, Montecitans would still be using nearly three times as much water per capita as the residents of
During the last drought,
After the last drought ended in 1991,
"Historically, this district has been preaching conservation and, in my humble opinion, doing a damn good job," said Jack Cunningham, a member of the Goleta Water District board of directors. "It's taking hold and being retained by a lot of users because they can remember the last drought. We don't feel an urgent need for '20x2020.' I do my own rationing as a house owner in
http://www.miller-mccune.com/SCIENCE_ENVIRONMENT/DROUGHT-PROOFING-CALIFORNIA-BY-2020-1367
Moorpark considers water desalination plant;
With water rates rising, city hopes to curb future costs
Ventura County Star – 7/30/09
A water agency serving Moorpark is looking into building a groundwater desalination plant to reduce the city’s dependence on imported water and stabilize water rates in the future.
Ventura County Waterworks District No. 1, which serves Moorpark and unincorporated areas north and west of the city, is looking to build the desalter to treat South Las Posas Basin groundwater for use by its customers.
The Ventura County Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 last month, with Supervisor Linda Parks abstaining, to approve a $189,000 contract with Kennedy/Jenks, a local engineering and environmental sciences consulting firm, for a preliminary design report on the desalination plant.
Kennedy/Jenks recently helped the city of
Ventura County Waterworks District No. 1 currently gets its water from local sources and imported water supplied by Calleguas Municipal Water District. Calleguas gets its water from the Metropolitan Water District, a wholesale water supplier.
About three-fourths of Moorpark’s water is imported and the remainder is from local groundwater, supplied from five groundwater wells operated and maintained by the Waterworks District.
Because of rising costs from its suppliers, Moorpark residential and industrial customers saw their basic, or Tier 1, water rates increase by 15 percent in February; agricultural customers’ rates increased 22.7 percent.
Another double-digit water rate increase is anticipated next year, according to water officials. This month, customers throughout
At the county’s Board of Supervisor’s meeting, Reddy Pakala, director of the county’s Water and Sanitation Department, said the Los Posas Basin is full, but to be potable the water must be treated because of the relatively high total of dissolved solids, sulfate and chloride concentrations. The only way to remove those concentrations is through a membrane treatment process such as “desalting,” which uses reverse osmosis.
Pakala said that the cost to construct the desalter would be $15 million to $30 million, depending on how much water it could pump. Operation costs would be extra.
“(The desalter project) is very expensive but with imported water rates going up, we think this will be an economically feasible project,” Pakala said.
Pakala said the report will identify what kind of desalting treatment is needed, as well as funding options, which include low interest loans and grants. New growth and a portion of the water rates would also fund the project.
“Instead of sending that money to Metropolitan, we will be using that money here for this project,” Pakala said.
The district is also looking into using solar power to reduce energy costs.
The desalination plant could be located near
It would also be near Calleguas’ proposed Brine Line, renamed the Regional Salinity Management Conveyance Pipeline. The pipeline is proposed to run from
Calleguas is working on a plan where cities take part ownership of regional desalination plants in
Pakala said the Waterworks District is taking the lead role with its desalter project, but is still working with Calleguas to make use of the pipeline. They are independent projects, but the two agencies are working together.
Ventura County Supervisor Linda Parks abstained from voting in favor of the Moorpark desalter report because she felt that other, less-expensive solutions could be available.
The project would still need to be approved by the Fox Canyon Groundwater Management Agency, which manages the groundwater basins within the district’s service area and controls groundwater extraction. A California Environmental Quality Act report would also need to be completed. #
http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2009/jul/30/moorpark-considers-water-desalination-plant/
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