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State rejects local plans for protecting San Joaquin Valley groundwater

Groundwater plans, largely serving low-income Latino communities, were deemed inadequate for preventing dry wells and sinking land.

CALIFORNIA, USA — This story was orignally published by CalMatters.

State water officials on Thursday rejected six local groundwater plans for the San Joaquin Valley, where basins providing drinking and irrigation water are severely depleted from decades of intensive pumping by farms.

The plans — submitted by local agencies tasked with the job of protecting underground supplies — outline strategies for complying with a state law requiring sustainable groundwater management. 

The Department of Water Resources deemed the plans inadequate because they “did not appropriately address deficiencies” in how water suppliers aimed to limit overdraft, land subsidence and impacts to drinking water wells.

Groundwater depletion has hurt the San Joaquin Valley’s small, rural communities, home to many low-income Latino residents who have been forced to live on bottled water and drill deeper wells, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars.

East Porterville and Tooleville are among the towns with many dried up wells served by the groundwater plans that the state rejected.

Another six local plans were approved, covering two groundwater basins in the Central Coast region and four in the San Joaquin Valley. Environmentalists and community activists say those plans are still likely to lead to more dried up wells.

The long-awaited decisions by the Department of Water Resources mark a major step forward in implementing the state’s landmark 2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. That law — considered a game changer in a state that had lacked statewide protection of groundwater — gives local agencies until 2040 to achieve groundwater sustainability

California’s groundwater is in crisis. Tens of millions of acre-feet of water have been pumped out of the ground by farmers, whose reliance on groundwater increases in drought years. This has drained groundwater basins, causing the Earth’s surface to subside, roads and canals to buckle and thousands of domestic wells to dry up. 

And recent storms have done little to replenish them.

Even in February, after record rain and flooding, state water officials received reports of 19 wells running dry in the San Joaquin Valley, ground zero of California’s groundwater crisis. In the past year, about 400 wells were reported dry in the region. 

Thursday’s decisions came a year after the 12 plans were rejected as incomplete, largely for failing to adequately assess community impacts of groundwater pumping, mainly by farmers. 

Most, if not all, of the approved and rejected plans allow groundwater levels to drop significantly before leveling off, according to Nataly Escobedo-Garcia, policy coordinator for the nonprofit group Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability.

Environmental and community justice groups in the San Joaquin Valley said some of the approved plans aren’t much better than their rejected prior renditions.

In the Kings Sub-Basin, for example, modeling by the Water Foundation, a community advocacy group, shows that several thousand domestic wells could dry up under the approved plans. This could affect as many as 42,000 people. 

“We are disheartened by DWR’s approval of some plans that allow domestic and public supply wells to fail as groundwater over-pumping continues,” said Ngodoo Atume, water policy analyst for Clean Water Action, in a statement. 

State law assigns local agencies the task of achieving sustainability, defined by several criteria, including chronic declines in groundwater levels, significant land subsidence, degraded water quality and saltwater intrusion.

For accepted plans, state officials will oversee implementation and evaluate their progress every five years. 

“If we do determine that compliance is not being met or we’re questioning whether they’re on track for sustainability, we can deem a basin inadequate at any time,” said Paul Gosselin, deputy director of the Department of Water Resources’ Sustainable Groundwater Management Office. 

Community water activist Tien Tran said she hopes the Department of Water Resources will steer the approved plans toward less impacts on communities.

“There still needs to be a lot more guidance from DWR on how to correct these problems even though the plans are already approved,” said Tran, a policy advocate with the group Community Water Center, which advocates for water equity.

The plans that were approved were for the Cuyama Basin in Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Ventura and Kern counties; the Paso Robles Subbasin in San Luis Obispo County; the Eastern San Joaquin Subbasin in San Joaquin County; the Merced Subbasin in Merced County; the Westside Subbasin in Fresno and Kings counties; and the Kings Subbasin in Fresno County.

Escobedo-Garcia called on state water officials to stay vigilant as it oversees adoption and implementation of the approved plans. 

The rejected plans will be handed over to the State Water Resources Control Board for further oversight: the Chowchilla Subbasin in Madera and Merced counties, the Delta-Mendota Subbasin in San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Fresno, Madera, and San Benito counties, the Kaweah Subbasin in Tulare and Kings counties, the Tule Subbasin in Tulare County, the Tulare Lake Subbasin in Kings County and the Kern Subbasin in Kern County. 

These water managers have a minimum of a year to fix the inadequacies, according to Natalie Stork, a geologist with the State Water Resources Control Board’s Groundwater Management Program.

“If plans aren’t fixed, then the board will consider whether to develop and adopt an interim plan,” she said. An interim plan, she added, is a public process that will engage stakeholders.

The state is still reviewing another 61 plans for 59 of the state’s high- and medium-priority groundwater basins.

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