Lodi News-Sentinel

New bill aims to limit well drilling frenzy

- Ian James

LOS ANGELES — In farming areas across Calfornia’s Central Valley, a well-drilling frenzy has accelerate­d over the last year as growers turn to pumping more groundwate­r during the drought, even as falling water levels leave hundreds of nearby homes with dry wells.

Counties have continued freely issuing well-drilling permits in the years since California passed a landmark law, the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act of 2014, which is intended to address the problem of excessive pumping over the next two decades to preserve groundwate­r.

Some state legislator­s are now supporting a bill that they say would strengthen oversight and limit the well-drilling frenzy by requiring a review of permits for new wells by the same local agencies that are charged with managing groundwate­r.

“It just makes common sense that the agency in charge of trying to get groundwate­r pumping into a sustainabl­e yield should be able to weigh in on new wells going into that very same aquifer that they’re trying to monitor,” said Democratic Assembly member Steve Bennett of Ventura, who introduced the bill.

The way the system stands, Bennett said, counties have been signing off on permits and agricultur­al landowners have been “rushing to get their wells in” before limits on pumping take effect.

“I think the rush to sink more wells will continue, if not accelerate, if we don’t have this,” Bennett said.

The bill, AB 2201, was approved April 26 by the Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee, and next goes before the Appropriat­ions Committee.

The bill would require so-called groundwate­r sustainabi­lity agencies, which were establishe­d under the 2014 law, to weigh in on well permit applicatio­ns.

Gov. Gavin Newsom in March issued a drought order that similarly prohibits local government­s from granting a welldrilli­ng permit if it would be “inconsiste­nt” with the area’s groundwate­r management plan. Newsom’s order has slowed the drilling of new wells in parts of the San Joaquin Valley.

But the order brings only temporary measures during the drought, and the bill’s proponents argue a similar permanent change is necessary to protect vulnerable communitie­s before more wells run dry.

The legislatio­n would prohibit a local government from approving a well permit unless it obtains written verificati­on from the groundwate­r sustainabi­lity agency that the proposed well is “consistent” with the area’s management plan. Groundwate­r basins that the state deems high or medium priority would be subject to the requiremen­t.

The bill would require agencies to post a notice of each well permit applicatio­n online and allow 30 days for the public to comment. There would be an exemption for household wells or wells that supply drinking water.

Bennett said the fundamenta­l problem is that new wells have been approved without an analysis of how the pumping will affect other wells in nearby communitie­s.

“Disadvanta­ged communitie­s need elected officials to stand up for them,” Bennett said.

Those who spoke in favor during the committee meeting included Ruth Martinez, from the community of Ducor in Tulare County.

Martinez said her community of about 600 people, mostly Latino farmworker­s, long suffered with nitrate contaminat­ion in their drinking water, which meant they couldn’t safely use the tap water. In 2016, the community received a $1.8 million state grant and drilled a deeper well, nearly 2,000 feet deep, which has provided clean water.

But last year, a new agricultur­al well was drilled across the street from their well, which she said threatens the community’s water supply.

“The county approved this new well without thinking about the impact on our community,” Martinez told the legislator­s.

If the legislatio­n had been in place, Martinez said, the local groundwate­r agency would have notified the community, and could have rejected the permit applicatio­n.

Martinez, a board member of the Ducor Community Services District, said residents are concerned about the pumping.

“I am getting many calls and concerns from families about the decreased pressure and the lack of water coming from our taps,” Martinez said. “Our brandnew water is failing because the county did not protect us.”

The bill’s supporters include the group Community Water Center.

“It’s absolutely imperative that we connect and close the gap between landuse permitting decisions and sustainabl­e groundwate­r management,” said Kyle Jones, the group’s policy director.

For groundwate­r management to succeed, he said, the state should stop the proliferat­ion of new agricultur­al wells next to drinking-water wells.

The legislatio­n is opposed by groups representi­ng the agricultur­e industry.

A large portion of California’s water, roughly 80% of the supply that is diverted and pumped, goes to agricultur­e in a typical year, according to state data. The Central Valley’s farmlands produce almonds, pistachios, fruits and vegetables, and also supply large dairies.

Danny Merkley, director of water resources for the California Farm Bureau, said he thinks the bill conflicts with the “locally driven” approach that defined the 2014 groundwate­r law and is “premature.”

The new requiremen­ts under Newsom’s executive order should be given some time to play out “so we can identify the issues and fine-tune it,” Merkley said, before considerin­g permanent legislatio­n.

The water supplies that farms have long relied on, delivered by canals from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, have been cut back during the drought. Growers have traditiona­lly turned to more groundwate­r pumping during dry times, and aquifer levels in the Central Valley have been declining for decades.

With climate change bringing hotter temperatur­es and intensifyi­ng droughts, the pressures on the limited supply of groundwate­r continue to mount.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? An irrigation system is fed by groundwate­r at a citrus orchard in Visalia on Oct. 12, 2021.
IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES An irrigation system is fed by groundwate­r at a citrus orchard in Visalia on Oct. 12, 2021.

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