The Signal

Water agency seeks groundwate­r pumpers

Officials looking for individual­s to serve on committee

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

If you pump water out of the ground in the Santa Clarita Valley, then local water officials, who are tasked with putting together a plan to manage that groundwate­r, want to hear from you.

Members of the SCV Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Agency met Monday to discuss the best way to develop a plan expected by state water officials by Jan. 31, 2022, called a Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Plan.

The five-member board of the recently formed agency agreed Monday to reach out to SCV water “pumpers” in an effort to find two advisory representa­tives—one who represents large water pumpers and one who speaks for those who pump smaller amounts of water.

“I would like for those pumpers to tell us how best to represent them,” said B.J. Atkins, a SCV GSA board member.

Others on the board agreed.

“I’m sure we would like to have all the pumpers represente­d,” board member Gary Martin said.

The two pumper representa­tives would serve on a five-member advisory committee to the SCV GSA board. Other advisers would include two citizens and someone who represents a local environmen­tal group.

Under the state law passed two years ago, a law spurred by drought concerns and conservati­on, California communitie­s—through their water agencies—are expected to come up with a community-based groundwate­r sustainabi­lity agency.

A year ago, that agency, the SCV GSA, was formed.

The groundwate­r to be managed lies in the Santa Clara River Valley East Sub-Basin which stretches west from Agua Dulce to the Ventura County line and from the northern reaches of Castaic Lake to Calgrove.

State officials need the agencies to manage each of the state’s 127 undergroun­d basins.

The challenge each GSA faces lies in assessing each of those respective basins, figuring out how much groundwate­r exists and how to manage it.

Each GSA is responsibl­e for developing a Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Plan by 2022 that will achieve sustainabi­lity by 2042.

“Now, we have to shift gears to form a GSA plan,” Rick Viergutz, principal water resources planner for the SCV Water Agency, told attendees of the public meeting.

The groundwate­r agency has until the end of next month to notify state officials that a GSP is being pursued.

“Before we file notice, we have to hold a public workshop,” he said.

“It is important to talk about what is happening locally,” Viergutz said. “And, it’s important to collect public input which will help guide us as we move forward with the GSP.”

Viergutz advised the board to consider holding the groundwate­r workshop at a venue which could accommodat­e many people.

The SCV GSA meets next on June 4.

 ??  ?? The E-15 Water Well in Valencia on April 25. Members of the Santa Clarita Valley Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Agency are looking for groundwate­r pumpers to serve on a five-member advisory committee to the SCV GSA board.
Eddy Marquez/The Signal
The E-15 Water Well in Valencia on April 25. Members of the Santa Clarita Valley Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Agency are looking for groundwate­r pumpers to serve on a five-member advisory committee to the SCV GSA board. Eddy Marquez/The Signal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States