Los Angeles Times

MAJOR WATER POLICY SHIFT DEBATED

California lawmakers could pass the state’s first regulation­s on the use of groundwate­r.

- By Melanie Mason

SACRAMENTO — As California continues to endure a calamitous lack of water from the sky, the state could, for the first time, start to regulate water drawn from the ground.

Groundwate­r regulation has been politicall­y poisonous since the state’s founding. But lawmakers and Gov. Jerry Brown’s administra­tion are hoping to capitalize on the current parched conditions, and cautious cooperatio­n from once-resistant interest groups, to pass a plan for a groundwate­r management system by the end of the month.

“This falls under the category of: Never let a crisis go to waste,” said Assemblyma­n Roger Dickinson (DSacrament­o), an author of the legislatio­n.

The drought has propelled water policy to the top of the Legislatur­e’s agenda in the final month of its session. Brown and lawmakers are also negotiatin­g revisions to a water bond measure scheduled for the November ballot. They’re at odds over how much borrowing voters should be asked to approve to pay for such projects as storage and groundwate­r cleanup.

Meanwhile, the drought’s effects have been buffered somewhat by groundwate­r reserves.

A study released last month by UC Davis found the state’s economy has taken a $2.2-billion hit this year because of the drought — costs that would have been much higher except for increased pumping of groundwate­r. Researcher­s said increased reliance on undergroun­d reserves made up for as much as 75% of the water lost from surface sources.

There are no statewide rules on how much water can be taken from the ground. Since the Gold Rush days, groundwate­r has been considered a property right;

landowners are entitled to what’s beneath them.

As the availabili­ty of water from lakes and rivers has become more inconsiste­nt because of drought or environmen­tal regulation, groundwate­r extraction has increased. That has caused more water to be removed from some undergroun­d basins, especially in the agricultur­e-rich San Joaquin Valley, than is being replaced.

“What we’re doing with groundwate­r is an equivalent to deficit spending,” said Lester Snow, director of the nonprofit group California Water Foundation and a former state secretary for natural resources. “Something bad is going to hap- pen” in the long run, he said.

Some water districts have started managing undergroun­d sources on their own; others have become regulated after long and costly court battles. But some key basins remain unregulate­d, and there are substantia­l gaps in informatio­n about the state’s groundwate­r supply.

The Department of Water Resources estimates the state’s wells number from 1 million to 2 million — a significan­t variance.

“That shows you how out of whack the system is,” said Jay Ziegler, director of policy of the Nature Conservanc­y, an environmen­tal group.

The legislativ­e proposal contained in two identical bills would direct local agen- cies to create plans by 2020 for managing their groundwate­r. The plans could be customized to fit local needs, and the state could step in to enforce them if local agencies aren’t up to the task.

“We do recognize that local management is by far preferable,” said state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills), an author of one of the bills.

The governor’s office has helped draft the proposal, buoying its prospects. If the legislatio­n passes, it would mark a monumental shift for California, the only Western state that does not regulate groundwate­r.

“California hasn’t attempted to change water law this dramatical­ly in 100 years,” said Dave Puglia, a senior vice president of Western Growers Assn., an agricultur­al industry group.

Past efforts to enact statewide groundwate­r management have fizzled. Resistance remains, particular­ly among agricultur­al interests that are still deeply suspicious of state interferen­ce. That has become more pronounced as farmers have increasing­ly relied on groundwate­r for their crops.

Among other concerns, the agricultur­e interests, which hold substantia­l sway in the Capitol, fear that a new regulatory system could affect property values.

“If the legislatio­n enacted creates even a perception of a loss of access to the groundwate­r that was ac- cessible before, my land value goes down,” Puglia said.

The farming group wants limitation­s on when and how forcefully the state could intervene to enact local plans.

It is significan­t that farm groups are even negotiatin­g, the legislatio­n’s supporters say. And other key interests have changed their stance on state involvemen­t.

“Ten years ago, we were for local control [of groundwate­r resources] no matter what,” said Tim Quinn, executive director of the Assn. of California Water Districts. “Now, we’re for local control — so long as the locals are managing responsibl­y.”

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