Malta Independent

Crop-rich California region will fall under state monitoring to preserve groundwate­r flow

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California officials voted Tuesday to step in to monitor groundwate­r use in part of the crop-rich San Joaquin Valley in a first-of-itskind move that comes a decade after local communitie­s were tasked with managing the precious but strained resource.

The State Water Resources Control Board voted unanimousl­y to start overseeing groundwate­r pumping in the Tulare Lake Subbasin meaning state, not local officials, will temporaril­y watch how much water can be pumped from the ground.

It's the first area in California to go through this process under the state's landmark groundwate­r law that aims to keep water flowing sustainabl­y after years of drought and overpumpin­g has led to problems with groundwate­r quality and the sinking of land. California's law tasked local communitie­s with forming agencies and drafting groundwate­r management plans to reach a sustainabl­e use of the resource for years to come.

Groundwate­r accounts for nearly 40% of California's water supply in an average year and even more in dry years, according to the state board.

The move, which came after an all-day hearing in Sacramento, was met with criticism from Kings County farmers and support from water rights advocates who said they want to protect the future of drinking water for poor, rural communitie­s. Many farmers said the state should do more to channel rivers into water storage facilities to replenish groundwate­r basins rather than cutting back.

"Farmers understand if these plans move forward it will force them many of them out of business," Lynne McBride, executive director of the California Dairy Campaign, told the state board. "The ripple effects of these potential fees, fines and regulation­s will be vast and potentiall­y irreversib­le."

Farmers are by far the largest pumpers of groundwate­r in the region, but small towns and rural residents also rely on the subbasin for drinking water in their homes. Mac Glackin of the environmen­tal group Clean Water Action said the move to put the subbasin on so-called probationa­ry status is warranted.

"Taking this step holds us accountabl­e to the human right to

water, climate justice and racial equity," Glackin said.

Within 90 days, anyone who pumps groundwate­r in the region must record the amount they remove, report it to the state board and pay fees. If a more sustainabl­e plan isn't developed within a year, the board could hold another public hearing and impose restrictio­ns on pumping and fine those who take more than they are allocated, the board said in a statement after the vote.

"Groundwate­r supplies in the Tulare Lake basin are clearly at risk, and we are acting today to

protect this resource because communitie­s rely on it for basic needs, in particular drinking water," Joaquin Esquivel, chair of the State Water Board, said in a statement.

Five local agencies in the region worked on a single groundwate­r management proposal, only to see it rejected last year by the state Department of Water Resources over concerns about lowering groundwate­r levels, sinking land and degrading groundwate­r quality.

The Tulare Lake Subbasin covers a stretch of Kings County,

which is home to about 150,000 people halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco. The county is a major producer of milk, pistachios, cotton and processed tomatoes, according to a county agricultur­al report.

It's also home to Tulare Lake, a large, dry basin that fills with water in rainy years. The lake most recently reappeared in 2023 after intense winter downpours that flooded farms and roads.

Doug Freitas, an almond grower who owns property in areas governed by three different groundwate­r agencies, said each agency has been talking about what to do next. He said he knew about the state's groundwate­r law, but like most small farmers, he was so busy trying to make ends meet that he couldn't foresee the impact.

"As a farmer, my opinion is we need more time," Freitas said before the hearing.

Joaquin Contente, a longtime dairy farmer in Kings County, said pumping fees and caps will spell trouble for him, whether they are imposed by local or state officials. He relies on groundwate­r to grow the alfalfa he feeds his 800 cattle.

"I know there's a lot of people losing sleep over it, because I am one of them," Contente said.

 ?? ?? Sandbags are stacked around a well in anticipati­on of flooding of the Kings River in the Island District of Lemoore, Calif., April 19, 2023. California officials are considerin­g whether to take over monitoring groundwate­r use in the fertile San Joaquin Valley under a landmark law aimed at protecting water flow to homes and farms. The Tuesday, April 16, 2024, hearing before the State Water Resources Control Board is the first of its kind since California passed a groundwate­r management law a decade ago. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
Sandbags are stacked around a well in anticipati­on of flooding of the Kings River in the Island District of Lemoore, Calif., April 19, 2023. California officials are considerin­g whether to take over monitoring groundwate­r use in the fertile San Joaquin Valley under a landmark law aimed at protecting water flow to homes and farms. The Tuesday, April 16, 2024, hearing before the State Water Resources Control Board is the first of its kind since California passed a groundwate­r management law a decade ago. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
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