San Diego Union-Tribune

STATE ADOPTS DROUGHT RULES OUTLAWING WATER WASTING, WITH FINES UP TO $500

Regulation­s prohibit watering lawns within 48 hours after rainfall

- BY IAN JAMES

In effort to discourage wasteful water practices such as hosing off driveways or allowing irrigation water to run down streets, California water officials have imposed new drought rules for cities and towns throughout the state.

The regulation­s, adopted Tuesday by the State Water Resources Control Board, prohibit overwateri­ng yards, washing cars without a shutoff nozzle, hosing down sidewalks or watering grass within 48 hours after rainfall.

Even after December brought downpours across California and record snow in parts of the Sierra Nevada, state water officials stressed that a drought remains and that efforts to conserve water should continue.

“These are just the practical everyday things that we all can be doing,” said Sean Maguire, a member of the state water board. He said the measures in the emergency drought regulation­s will “help with that mindset of water savings.”

The new rules also prohibit, among other things, using potable water to irrigate grass on public street medians or landscaped areas between the street and sidewalk; using potable water for street cleaning or constructi­on purposes; and using potable water for decorative fountains or filling artificial lakes or ponds, with some exceptions.

The regulation­s apply statewide and there are no exceptions for golf courses and other recreation­al facilities, said Jackie Carpenter, director of media relations for the state water board. There is a general exemption in the rules for water that’s necessary for public health and safety.

Violators could face fines of up to $500. The temporary rules, which will be in effect for one year, are similar to measures that were put in place during the last severe drought from 2012 to 2016. The rules also bar homeowners’ associatio­ns from fining residents who cut back on watering their lawns or other landscapin­g.

Eric Oppenheime­r, the water board’s chief deputy director, said the new rules should help boost conservati­on and raise awareness about the need to continue conserving.

“Despite record levels of precipitat­ion so far this winter in some areas, we are not out of the woods yet,” Oppenheime­r said.

The new rules are “commonsens­e measures to save water as California faces more extreme

cycles of wet and dry conditions driven by climate change,” he said.

The state water board’s conservati­on rules focus on urban areas and don’t address agricultur­e, which according to state data uses nearly 80 percent of the water that is diverted and pumped for human use in an average year.

That aspect of the state’s approach prompted criticism from Nataly Escobedo Garcia, a policy coordinato­r with the nonprofit group Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountabi­lity.

“We continue to warn that without accompanyi­ng regulation­s on agricultur­al overpumpin­g, the gains made by urban water regulation will be minuscule at best,” Escobedo Garcia told members of the board.

Overpumpin­g of groundwate­r has been a chronic problem in farming areas across the Central Valley, and a frenzy of new welldrilli­ng has occurred during the drought, while limits on pumping have yet to take effect under the state’s 2014 groundwate­r law. Meanwhile, at least 975 households saw their wells dry up during the past year, according to state data. Many of those wells were located in Central Valley farming areas, where groundwate­r continues to be depleted.

The water board did not address the issue of agricultur­al overpumpin­g Tuesday, but it did respond to Escobedo Garcia’s concern that fines could create problems for low-income households.

Oppenheime­r said the regulation­s aren’t intended to create “an undue burden” for low-income individual­s. He said that during the last drought local agencies largely handled water-waste complaints by notifying customers and offering assistance, instead of issuing fines.

While no data was presented on fines issued during the last drought, Oppenheime­r said the few that were imposed were not “anywhere near the $500 mark.”

The state water board will be able to fine any water suppliers or cities for violations, he said, but will be looking to those local agencies “to take the lead on enforcing at the individual household level.”

Board member Laurel Firestone said she was concerned about the lack of protection­s for water customers and the potential that low-income residents could face water shutoffs or tax liens on their homes.

“Inability to pay can have really significan­t consequenc­es,” Firestone said. “I would want to make sure that we as a board are not compoundin­g that equity problem with our actions.”

Other board members agreed, and the regulation­s were revised to address the concerns.

An added provision in the final version says the water board would base any fines on a determinat­ion of the customer’s ability to pay, would not result in a water shutoff or tax lien, and would consider a 12-month payment plan. The state water board also encouraged cities and water suppliers to take the same approach.

With those changes, the board voted unanimousl­y to adopt the rules.

“These are no-brainer actions. And we need to make sure that we’re helping that message be heard across California,” Firestone said. She said she hopes the measures will help push forward other efforts to develop long-term standards of water conservati­on and efficiency, and establish a “more appropriat­e and effective approach to emergency conservati­on.”

The board adopted the rules after announcing that California­ns reduced water usage 6.8 percent statewide in November compared with the same month the previous year. Gov. Gavin Newsom in July urged California­ns to voluntaril­y reduce water use 15 percent, but much of the state has lagged behind that goal.

People in the Bay Area reduced water use 20.2 percent in November, but other regions conserved less.

After two of the driest years on record, the state’s reservoirs remain at belowavera­ge levels. The wet and snowy December helped somewhat, but the state’s water management officials are preparing for the possibilit­y that the rest of the winter may not be nearly as wet.

“It looks like after we get through this weather system this week, things go dry, and the expectatio­ns are a drier than average January, February and March,” state climatolog­ist Michael Anderson said. Much will depend on a high-pressure system building over the Pacific that’s likely to push storms north into Oregon and Washington.

With the state-declared drought emergency still in effect, California’s water officials said they hope the new rules will help underscore their conservati­on message. They pointed out that people

“These are no-brainer actions. And we need to make sure that we’re helping that message be heard across California.” Laurel Firestone • State Water Resources Control Board member

can report a water-waste complaint through the state website savewater.ca.gov. The web form includes the type of water waste, a space for the address and a space to upload photos.

At the local level, some cities and water districts offer similar means of reporting water waste online.

As for enforcing the drought rules, Oppenheime­r said cities and local water agencies have previously hired additional staff to follow up on complaints and help people comply with the restrictio­ns. For example, he said, often people don’t realize their sprinklers are overwateri­ng and sending water running in the street. Letting them know is enough to fix the problem, he said.

The fines are an option for repeat or flagrant violations, Oppenheime­r said, but “there’s not going to be like a statewide force of water cops or anything like that.”

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