Daily Democrat (Woodland)

California proposes delaying rules aimed at reducing water on lawns

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California regulators this week proposed delaying new rules aimed at reducing how much water people use on their lawns, drawing praise from agencies that said they needed more time to comply but criticism from environmen­talists who warn that the delay would damage the state's already scarce supply.

Last year, California proposed new rules that would, cumulative­ly, reduce statewide water use by about 14%. Those rules included lowering outdoor water use standards below the current statewide average by 2035. On Tuesday, regulators proposed delaying that timeline by five years, until 2040. The State Water Resources Control Board is scheduled to vote on the rules later this year.

The state would not punish people for using too much water on their lawns. Instead, it could punish the water agency that supplied those homes. There are about 405 of these agencies throughout the state that provide water to nearly 95% of California­ns.

To comply with the rules, these agencies must convince their customers to use less water.

Their options include public education campaigns and incentives, such as paying to install more efficient fixtures and replacing grass lawns with more sustainabl­e plants. They could also raise rates.

State officials estimated it would cost water agencies about $13.5 billion to comply with these rules — an estimate Chelsea Haines, regulatory relations manager for the Associatio­n of California Water Agencies, says is likely too low. Water agencies had asked regulators for more time.

“The challenge is that water suppliers are regulated but compliance will come from California­ns making changes to how they use water,” Haines said. “I think there will be a learning curve for residents, and that just takes time.”

The delay means there wouldn't be an incentive for most water agencies to increase conservati­on until at least 2035, according to Tracy Quinn, president and CEO of Heal the Bay, an organizati­on dedicated to protecting and restoring the coastal waterways of greater Los Angeles.

Quinn fears the delay would push agencies to make much more expensive investment­s in new water sources, including desalinati­on plants to make ocean water drinkable and recycling wastewater to use again for drinking.

“The smartest thing to do first is the one that is fastest and cheapest. That's conservati­on,” Quinn said. “It is true that conservati­on is not free, but the cost of conservati­on needs to be compared to the cost of other new water.”

The goal of the outdoor water standards for 2040 is to have the majority of a person's yard made up of low-water plants irrigated by a drip system instead of sprinklers, which regulators argue are inefficien­t in part because they often spray water on sidewalks and asphalt.

But water agencies wouldn't have to always meet these new outdoor standards. Each agency would have a “water use objective” it must meet that also considers indoor use and how much water is lost from leaky pipes. Agencies could also ask to have even more time to reach these standards, such as if a community uses more water than it should because it has a lot of livestock.

An agency could meet its water use objective through a combinatio­n of these factors.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Water flies from a sprinkler on a lawn in Sacramento on July 8, 2021.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Water flies from a sprinkler on a lawn in Sacramento on July 8, 2021.

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