Loading...
CC - Item 3A - Presentation by the Upper San Gabriel Valley MWDUPPER SAN GABRIEL VALLEY MWD WATER SUPPLY AND CONSERVATION UPDATE CITY OF ROSEMEAD 1/11/21 2 UPPER DISTRICT BACKGROUND ▪Special district formed in 1960 to provide supplemental water to San Gabriel Valley communities ▪Metropolitan Water District member agency ▪Service Area:144 square miles & 18 cities ▪Population Served: 950,000 ▪Water Retailers:26 ▪Imported Water Delivery: 30,000 acre feet/yr. 3 WHERE DOES YOUR WATER SUPPLY COME FROM? START OF THE RAIN SEASON Imported Water –State Water Project •Snowpack Peak: 138% of normal •Runoff Forecast:162% of normal Local Water –SGV Watershed •Rainfall: 7.83 inches, 43% of normal “This snowfall is good news but doesn’t change our need to prepare and continue to be vigilant about our water use and investments for the future,” Metropolitan Water District General Manager Adel Hagekhalil said. Peak Snowpack WY Runoff DROUGHT REMAINS A MAJOR ISSUE FOR CALIFORNIA •Extreme cycles of wet and dry conditions due to climate change. Although December was extremely wet, most of the state remains in “severe drought.” •Newsom declared entire state in drought and called for voluntary 15% water use reduction. •Upper District Board activated Level 2 of the Water Shortage Contingency Plan (August 2021). •MWD Board declared a Drought Emergency (November 2021). REGULATIONS ADOPTED TO PREVENT WATER WASTING •State Water Resources Control Board adopted regulations prohibiting water wasting on January 4th. Rules take effect for one year once the Administrative Review is complete. •Prohibited: •Watering lawn during the 48 hours after rainstorm •Watering sidewalk and excessive runoff •Washing cars with hoses that lack shut off nozzles •Using potable water to wash driveways, sidewalks etc •Exception: •Trees in street medians can be watered but not turf •Violations: •Potential fines up to $500/daily •Violators will be directed to local water agency Photo credit: AP 7 BALDWIN PARK KEY WELL Historic High: 295.3 ft. (July 20, 1983) Historic Low: 169.4 ft. (Nov. 21,2018) Current Elevation: 182.0 ft (as of December 24, 2021) 8 BUILDING SUSTAINABLE WATER SUPPLIES Storage Reserves •Local groundwater storage –100,000 AF •MWD storage –2.5 M AF MWD’s Regional Recycled Water Project •Up to 150 million gallons per day •Enough water for over 500,000 homes Delta Conveyance Project •Modernize, repair, and protect California’s aging water delivery system 9 Conservation in Action! Investing in conservation along with other measures allows us to preserve our local supplies for future dry years. WATER USAGE IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY 10 SGV Water Smart Home Program •Direct install program for a variety of water efficient devices for the home, targeting DACs Drought Webpage •Drought Fact Sheets & Conservation Collateral •www.upperdistrict.org/drought/ Additional Water Saving Resources •www.bewaterwise.com •www.saveourwater.com •Water Smart Videos –available online (in Mandarin/Spanish) HOW TO CONSERVE? 11 QUESTIONS Upper San Gabriel Valley MWD Director Anthony Fellow and Director Charles Trevino Tom Love General Manager tom@usgvmwd.org www.upperdistrict.org BACK UP SLIDES CURRENT WATER SUPPLY CONDITIONS Imported Water Colorado River •Snowpack Peak:127% of normal •Runoff Forecast:130% of normal •Shortage Allocation:2022 State Water Project -Imported Water •Snowpack Peak: 138% of normal •Runoff Forecast:30.9 inches, 162% of normal •SWP Allocation:0% Local Water -SGV Watershed •Rainfall: 7.83 inches, 43% of normal (Normal = 18.09 inches) •Over 95% of stormwater captured in the SGV every year •As of 12/31/21 Peak Snowpack WY Runoff Data as of 1/3/22 Period of “normal” is changing to 1991-2020. STORAGE RESERVES As of 12/27/21 MWD Storage Reserves Local Reserves