Tehachapi News

Change in land use patterns over 50 years reflected in water rights ownership

- BY CLAUDIA ELLIOTT

Changes in land use in the Tehachapi Valley are reflected in water rights ownership as the city of Tehachapi increased its share of rights as agricultur­e diminished in importance to the local economy.

Over the course of nearly 50 years, the city increased its share of Base Water Rights ownership in the Tehachapi Basin from only 9 percent to about 36 percent.

That’s just one of the stories told by data from the 49th Annual Watermaste­r Report. The report — required by the court adjudicati­on of the Tehachapi Basin in the early 1970s — was presented to members of the Board of Directors of Tehachapi-Cummings County Water District at their meeting on April 19. The board accepted the report with no discussion.

Like clockwork for 49 years, the district has prepared the watermaste­r’s report and filed it with Kern County Superior Court. The report is tied to a mammoth lawsuit the fledgling district filed in 1966, just a year after it was formed. There were three lawsuits, actually, one for each of the water basins in the district — Tehachapi, Brite and Cummings.

Each of the lawsuits — resulting in adjudicati­on of the groundwate­r basins — has a story of its own, and the outcome of litigation of the Brite and Cummings basins must be left for another day.

In the Tehachapi Basin, most — but not all — of the parties to the lawsuit actually supported the district’s efforts because it was widely known that the basin was in trouble.

After 80 or more years of developmen­t of agricultur­e in the Tehachapi Valley, by the early 1960s, farmers knew the water level was precarious­ly low. In those days, farming was a much larger part of the economy. There was wide support for the formation of the district and a decision to seek an eventual connection with the State Water Project that had been approved by California voters in 1960. Adjudicati­on of the district — literally divvying up the water rights — was a necessary step.

The Tehachapi Basin adjudicati­on was completed in 1971— and amended in 1973.

Roughly speaking, property owners who were engaged in agricultur­e ended up with about 60 percent of Base Water Rights. The next highest amount of water rights — about 18 percent or 1,487 acre-feet — went to Monolith Portland Cement Company, owner of the cement plant east of the city and other large tracts of land in the area. Another 11 percent or so was allocated to about 37 property owners who received individual allocation­s of less than 100 acre-feet and another 59 property owners with domestic wells who received allocation­s of three acre-feet per year each. Some of these property owners were also farmers.

WATER RIGHTS — THEN AND NOW

The city of Tehachapi received about 9 percent of the total water rights in the adjudicati­on — 753 acrefeet per year. And Golden Hills Community Services District — which was largely undevelope­d at the time — received about 2 percent (159 acre-feet per year).

The latest watermaste­r report is for calendar year 2022, but the water rights ownership is as of March 1, 2022 — more than a year before the report was released. That tally shows that the city owned the

largest share of Tehachapi Basin water rights — 2,864 acre-feet or 36 percent. Lehigh Southwest Cement Company (a successor to Monolith Portland after other ownership changes) owned 1,744 acre-feet or 22 percent. And Golden Hills CSD owned 1,353.5 acrefeet or 17 percent.

About 12 percent — totaling 962.5 acre-feet — of water rights are owned by people with fewer than 100 acre-feet of rights, including property owners with domestic wells who received allocation­s of three acre-feet per year each.

Other water rights owners listed in the report with more than 100 acre-feet, as of March 1, 2022, were Al Lester Safier, 427 acre-feet or 5 percent; Kubicek Trust (successor to Tehachappl­es), 305 acre-feet or 4 percent; David KunSik Ha and Kyung Ran Ha, 135 acre-feet or 2 percent; H-Star Investment­s, 115 acre-feet or 1 percent; and Jeffrey Ciachurski, 114 acre-feet or 1 percent.

A few notes are appropriat­e:

■ Lehigh Southwest sold its Tehachapi cement plant to Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. in 2021. The fact

that Lehigh Southwest was still listed as owner of water rights in Tehachapi Basin as of March 1, 2022 — and Martin Marietta was not — may mean that Martin Marietta did not acquire the water rights. Or it may mean that the transactio­n was not reported to the water district by that time. Martin Marietta has not responded to a request for comment and efforts to reach someone at Lehigh Southwest familiar with the situation have been unsuccessf­ul.

■ Ciachurski is the chief executive officer of Greenbriar Capital Corp., developer of the proposed Sage Ranch residentia­l project within the city of Tehachapi. He personally owns other land in Tehachapi Basin — both inside and outside the city. He has owned water rights in the basin since 2007 when he acquired them from Robert and Dorothy Scott who had owned them since 2000. Those water rights were originally owned by members of the Iriart family — owners of 335 acre-feet of water when the basin was adjudicate­d.

The water district’s latest report does not reflect a permanent transfer of water rights that Ciachurski

executed on Sept. 23, 2022. That transfer of 76 acre-feet of Base Water Right from Ciachurski to Greenbriar Capital (U.S.), LLC, was recorded with Kern County and receipt of the recorded document was acknowledg­ed by the water district on Dec. 1, 2022. According to Tom Neisler, general manager, that transactio­n will be included in next year’s report.

■ Safier died in November 2020. In documents related to lease of those water rights earlier this year the district referred to the rights owner as the Lester A. Safier Trust.

INCREASED WATER RIGHTS

The city’s additional 2,111 acre-feet of water rights (as of March 1, 2022) were acquired over many years through various means, including in connection with annexation­s and by negotiatin­g purchases with owners.

The largest gain for the city came in 2000 from water rights — 1,561 acre-feet — formerly owned by John Nunes, who farmed in areas roughly stretching from Curry Street to Dennison Road, on both sides of Valley Boulevard.

Nunes’ water rights originated in part from the original allocation to J.G. Bisbee, who owned a large pear orchard bordered on the west by Curry Street, on the north by C Street and Central Park and stretching south and east from there. Nunes removed the pear orchard — originally planted by Burt Dennison in 1910 — in 1982, and adjacent apple orchards were removed later. This made room for more residentia­l developmen­t and constructi­on of a new Tehachapi High School in 2003. Part of the property remains vacant, including 138 acres west of the high school proposed for developmen­t as Sage Ranch.

The city also acquired 42 acre-feet of water rights from the Ashtown Mutual Water Company when it annexed the area north of the railroad tracks and east of Dennison Road known as Ash Village.

The latest water rights acquisitio­ns by the city included in the 49th annual watermaste­r report were 1.5 acre-feet each from Mary Jane May and the King Family Trust, 21 acre-feet from Tehachapi Valley Healthcare

 ?? CHART BY CLAUDIA ELLIOTT / FOR TEHACHAPI FROM TCCWD DATA ?? The chart on the left shows ownership of Base Water Rights by acre-feet and percentage of the whole in 1971, when the Tehachapi Basin was adjudicate­d. The chart on the right shows ownership of water rights, also by acre-feet and percentage of the whole, as reported by the Tehachapi-Cummings County Water District (as of March 1, 2022).
CHART BY CLAUDIA ELLIOTT / FOR TEHACHAPI FROM TCCWD DATA The chart on the left shows ownership of Base Water Rights by acre-feet and percentage of the whole in 1971, when the Tehachapi Basin was adjudicate­d. The chart on the right shows ownership of water rights, also by acre-feet and percentage of the whole, as reported by the Tehachapi-Cummings County Water District (as of March 1, 2022).

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