August 23, 2016 Water Right Measurement and Reporting in California

August 23, 2016 Water Right Measurement and Reporting in California

Yesterday, the California Water Quality Control Board shared the new water right measurement and reporting requirements to water right holders of California. A clear understanding and fair enforcement of prior appropriative and riparian water rights requires accurate information on historic and current water use, flow rates and volumes at diversions and storage locations through time. It will cost some money and it adds to an already busy life of water users, but it creates benefits that are realized when drought denies us the water that we need.
 
Some people feel this data will never be used by the regulating community. Others feel it will be used against them. I consider the generation of monitoring data as an opportunity to identify water solutions that help us by increasing the certainty that we will have water when conditions are limited. We want to protect our water rights and optimize water’s use in a fair and equitable manner.  Without accurate data, we find it difficult to maintain certainty when drought hangs over our land.
 
When dealing with a water resource, information is critically important. See the benefits and start collecting water data. In fact, exhaust the usefulness of all your monitoring data, groundwater and surface water. You will come out better than you realize.

May 17, 2016  Assume the best prepare for the worst

May 17, 2016 Assume the best prepare for the worst

When citizens and local agencies take the bull by the horns, the state doesn’t need to engage in mandatory requirements. Felicia Marcus, State Water Resources Control Board is messaging this very thing. Assume the best and prepare for the worst. Continuing water conservation practices is an action that builds strength and brings communities together through the resourcefulness created from these actions.  Get the message out. We will always have water working together and working together means responding to the uncertain water conditions of the future now.

May 10, 2016  Groundwater management is important to everyone!

May 10, 2016 Groundwater management is important to everyone!

Groundwater management is important for everyone. Find out how much interest your groundwater users have in monitoring their water conditions and solving their groundwater problems. A high level of public engagement yields staying on target. Low public participation sets your groundwater management efforts up to become dysfunctional in design and implementation. Public buy-in is critically important.

Encourage an activate public. This creates opportunity when building a Groundwater Sustainability Agency and is especially good for the long run.  And yes, you guessed it, the Operation Unite® Relationship Building program gets it done! Give us a call.

May 3, 2016  Yes, the state will step in if people don't manage their groundwater!

May 3, 2016 Yes, the state will step in if people don't manage their groundwater!

Everyone has been wondering. Will the State of California really take over groundwater management in regions that communities are inactive or ineffective? The State doesn’t want to see failures however actions will be taken.

Assistant Chief Council, Andrew Sawyer, of the State Water Resources Control Board announced at a recent American Groundwater Trust conference on California Groundwater Law that the state is prepared and staffed to manage non-compliant medium or high priority water basins. He also pointed out state implementation comes at a much greater cost than locally implemented programs.
 
The state will exercise the highest degree of care. This translates into a high cost. Come on. Let’s keep local control.

April 26, 2016  India population of 1/2 million in jeopardy because of drought!

April 26, 2016 India population of 1/2 million in jeopardy because of drought!

It really isn’t farfetched to think that drought can completely erase a water supply for large cities.  A 50-wagon train is traveling 212 miles every week to deliver water to a population of a half a million people right now in Latur, India. They are out of water after four years of drought!  When you know something like this can happen, it is best to correct your behavior before catastrophe develops.  California’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act offers an approach that balances water demand with surface and groundwater availability, every year. It's all about adjusting to the available water resource not the other way around.