The Signal

Building a strategy

SCV Water officials consider new plan to manage Santa Clara River watershed

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

Water officials developing a strategy for better management of groundwate­r, recycled water, stored water and stormwater have come up with a brand new plan for the Santa Clara River Watershed.

Board members of the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency were asked Tuesday to review a program hammered out by agency staffers calling for the agency to play a greater role in the stewardshi­p of the Santa Clara River and its watershed.

“With the formation of SCV Water, we promised a more holistic and regional approach to managing our water resources,” SCV Water Agency Assistant General

Manager Steve Cole told The Signal just before Tuesday’s regular board meeting.

“As the largest agency along the Santa Clara River watershed, it’s important for us to lay the groundwork for responsibl­e stewardshi­p of this important river system,” he said.

The program was pitched last month to members of the agency’s Water Resources and Watershed Committee who now want the agency to weigh in on the program and provide staffers with the input they need to move forward and develop it.

Holistic approach

Anticipati­ng risks and costs associated with the proposed program in addition to the benefits, they want the board’s support before they start pursuing a strategy.

“The board needs to consider exploring a holistic or programmat­ic approach to the management of the river system,” Cole wrote in a memo to the board Tuesday.

The watershed program has two objectives, Cole noted in his memo: ensuring the sustainabi­lity and reliabilit­y of the Santa Clarita Valley’s water resources as they relate to the river

system; and preserving and enhancing the environmen­tal, aesthetic and recreation­al values of the river system.

Free-flowing

The Santa Clara River is the longest free-flowing river in Southern California and the only one that winds through a pronounced and ruggedly dynamic topography of mountains from the desert to the ocean.

Every day it flows through the Santa Clarita Valley, even though most of us only ever see water in the river after several days of rain. The rest of the water is undergroun­d.

How to manage that undergroun­d water on either side of the river is what the recommende­d watershed program is all about.

As Cole points out in his memo to the board, the river is “central to the character throughout its course.

“While most rivers have been highly channelize­d, the Santa Clarita River is one of the least altered rivers in Southern California.

“The river is central to the region’s history, and preservati­on and enhancemen­t of the river’s resource values must be part of the community’s vision for the future,” Cole wrote in his memo.

Key elements

Formation of SCV Water this

year—bringing various water agencies together under one roof as spelled out in SB 634—presented agency staffers with a chance to take a leadership role in the stewardshi­p of the river system.

Water officials see three key features to managing the river’s watershed:

Coming up with “analytical tools” in order to understand how it really works and what influences it. Such tools might include better maps of environmen­tal habitats and ways of monitoring contaminan­ts along the river.

Working together and building partnershi­ps with watershed stakeholde­rs such as Newhall Ranch developers build along the river’s banks. Other stakeholde­rs include downstream farmers and agencies that manage things such as flood control.

Reaching out to those stakeholde­rs about the importance of the watershed and Importance of working collaborat­ively towards a shared vision. A number of agencies already exist that pursue independen­t agendas such as the recently-formed SCV Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Agency and the Integrated Regional Water Management group.

 ?? Nikolas Samuels
/The Signal ?? The Santa Clara Riverbed is seen near the Iron Horse Trail on Monday.
Nikolas Samuels /The Signal The Santa Clara Riverbed is seen near the Iron Horse Trail on Monday.

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