California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB869 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Senate August 24, 2017 Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 869Introduced by Assembly Member RubioFebruary 16, 2017 An act to add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 869, as amended, Rubio. Sustainable water use and demand reduction: recycled water.(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.This bill would require long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use to include a credit for recycled water, as specified.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.Existing law, the California Emergency Services Act, sets forth the emergency powers of the Governor under its provisions and empowers the Governor to proclaim a state of emergency for certain conditions, including drought. Existing law authorizes the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply to declare a water shortage emergency condition to prevail within the area served by the distributor whenever it finds and determines that the ordinary demands and requirements of water consumers cannot be satisfied without depleting the water supply of the distributor to the extent that there would be insufficient water for human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection. Existing law provides for certain water conservation measures to be taken during prescribed periods, including when the Governor has proclaimed a state of emergency based on drought or when the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply has declared a water shortage emergency condition.This bill would state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water. The bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses during a period when water conservation measures are in effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1.(a)The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1)Indoor residential water use.(2)Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b)By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c)Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1)Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2)Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d)(1)The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2)In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e)(1)Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A)Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B)Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C)Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2)In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A)Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B)Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C)Academic experts.(D)Economic development interests.(E)Business community representatives.(F)Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G)Commercial water users.(H)Industrial water users.(I)Institutional water users.(3)Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f)Standards10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
1+Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 869Introduced by Assembly Member RubioFebruary 16, 2017 An act to amend Sections 10608.8 and 10608.12 of, and to add Section add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to, to the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 869, as amended, Rubio. Sustainable water use and demand reduction: recycled water.(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier be excluded from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use. The bill would state that for these purposes recycled water use is an efficient use of water and would require recycled water use to be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.This bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time. state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.(3)Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan. Existing law requires the department, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and with public input, no later than January 1, 2011, and updated as part of The California Water Plan, to propose new statewide targets, or review and update existing targets, for regional water resource management practices, including recycled water.Existing law requires each agricultural water supplier to implement certain efficient water management practices if the measure is locally cost effective and technically feasible, including to facilitate the use of available recycled water that would otherwise not be used beneficially, that meets all health and safety criteria, and that does not harm crops or soils.Existing law defines recycled water, for the above-described purposes and purposes under (1), as recycled water that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for direct use and indirect potable reuse, that meets certain requirements.This bill would redefine recycled water to also include recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses. The bill would define potable reuse for these purposes.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1.Section 10608.8 of the Water Code is amended to read:10608.8.(a)(1)Water use efficiency measures adopted and implemented pursuant to this part or Part 2.8 (commencing with Section 10800) are water conservation measures subject to the protections provided under Section 1011.(2)Because an urban agency is not required to meet its urban water use target until 2020 pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 10608.24, an urban retail water suppliers failure to meet those targets shall not establish a violation of law for purposes of any state administrative or judicial proceeding prior to January 1, 2021. Nothing in this paragraph limits the use of data reported to the department or the board in litigation or an administrative proceeding. This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2021.(3)To the extent feasible, the department and the board shall provide for the use of water conservation reports required under this part to meet the requirements of Section 1011 for water conservation reporting.(b)This part does not limit or otherwise affect the application of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340), Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 11370), Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400), and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(c)This part does not require a reduction in the total water used in the agricultural or urban sectors, because other factors, including, but not limited to, changes in agricultural economics or population growth may have greater effects on water use. This part does not limit the economic productivity of Californias agricultural, commercial, or industrial sectors.(d)The requirements of this part do not apply to an agricultural water supplier that is a party to the Quantification Settlement Agreement, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1 of Chapter 617 of the Statutes of 2002, during the period within which the Quantification Settlement Agreement remains in effect. After the expiration of the Quantification Settlement Agreement, to the extent conservation water projects implemented as part of the Quantification Settlement Agreement remain in effect, the conserved water created as part of those projects shall be credited against the obligations of the agricultural water supplier pursuant to this part.(e)For this part, recycled water use is an efficient use of water and shall be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.(f)This part shall exclude recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use.SEC. 2.Section 10608.12 of the Water Code is amended to read:10608.12.Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a)Agricultural water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, providing water to 10,000 or more irrigated acres, excluding recycled water. Agricultural water supplier includes a supplier or contractor for water, regardless of the basis of right, that distributes or sells water for ultimate resale to customers. Agricultural water supplier does not include the department.(b)Base daily per capita water use means at least one of the following:(1)The urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous 10-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.(2)For an urban retail water supplier that meets at least 10 percent of its 2008 measured retail water demand through recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier, the urban retail water supplier may extend the calculation described in paragraph (1) up to an additional five years to a maximum of a continuous 15-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.(3)For the purposes of Section 10608.22, the urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous five-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2007, and no later than December 31, 2010.(c)Baseline commercial, industrial, and institutional water use means an urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use for commercial, industrial, and institutional users.(d)Commercial water user means a water user that provides or distributes a product or service.(e)Compliance daily per capita water use means the gross water use during the final year of the reporting period, reported in gallons per capita per day.(f)Disadvantaged community means a community with an annual median household income that is less than 80 percent of the statewide annual median household income.(g)Gross water use means the total volume of water, whether treated or untreated, entering the distribution system of an urban retail water supplier, excluding all of the following:(1)Recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier.(2)The net volume of water that the urban retail water supplier places into long-term storage.(3)The volume of water the urban retail water supplier conveys for use by another urban water supplier.(4)The volume of water delivered for agricultural use, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (f) of Section 10608.24.(h)Industrial water user means a water user that is primarily a manufacturer or processor of materials as defined by the North American Industry Classification System code sectors 31 to 33, inclusive, or an entity that is a water user primarily engaged in research and development.(i)Institutional water user means a water user dedicated to public service. This type of user includes, among other users, higher education institutions, schools, courts, churches, hospitals, government facilities, and nonprofit research institutions.(j)Interim urban water use target means the midpoint between the urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use and the urban retail water suppliers urban water use target for 2020.(k)Locally cost effective means that the present value of the local benefits of implementing an agricultural efficiency water management practice is greater than or equal to the present value of the local cost of implementing that measure.(l)Process water means water used for producing a product or product content or water used for research and development, including, but not limited to, continuous manufacturing processes, water used for testing and maintaining equipment used in producing a product or product content, and water used in combined heat and power facilities used in producing a product or product content. Process water does not mean incidental water uses not related to the production of a product or product content, including, but not limited to, water used for restrooms, landscaping, air-conditioning, heating, kitchens, and laundry.(m)Recycled water means recycled water, as defined in subdivision (n) of Section 13050, that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses and recycled water supplied for potable reuse. Potable reuse means the planned use of municipal wastewater that has gone through multiple barrier treatment processes to produce or supplement a drinking water supply that has at least an equivalent level of public health protection as other sources of water supply permitted under the California Safe Drinking Water Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 116270) of Part 12 of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code). (n)Regional water resources management means sources of supply resulting from watershed-based planning for sustainable local water reliability or any of the following alternative sources of water:(1)The capture and reuse of stormwater or rainwater.(2)The use of recycled water.(3)The desalination of brackish groundwater.(4)The conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater in a manner that is consistent with the safe yield of the groundwater basin.(o)Reporting period means the years for which an urban retail water supplier reports compliance with the urban water use targets.(p)Urban retail water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that directly provides potable municipal water to more than 3,000 end users or that supplies more than 3,000 acre-feet of potable water annually at retail for municipal purposes.(q)Urban water use target means the urban retail water suppliers targeted future daily per capita water use.(r)Urban wholesale water supplier, means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that provides more than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually at wholesale for potable municipal purposes.SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
22
3- Amended IN Senate August 24, 2017 Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 869Introduced by Assembly Member RubioFebruary 16, 2017 An act to add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 869, as amended, Rubio. Sustainable water use and demand reduction: recycled water.(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.This bill would require long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use to include a credit for recycled water, as specified.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.Existing law, the California Emergency Services Act, sets forth the emergency powers of the Governor under its provisions and empowers the Governor to proclaim a state of emergency for certain conditions, including drought. Existing law authorizes the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply to declare a water shortage emergency condition to prevail within the area served by the distributor whenever it finds and determines that the ordinary demands and requirements of water consumers cannot be satisfied without depleting the water supply of the distributor to the extent that there would be insufficient water for human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection. Existing law provides for certain water conservation measures to be taken during prescribed periods, including when the Governor has proclaimed a state of emergency based on drought or when the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply has declared a water shortage emergency condition.This bill would state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water. The bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses during a period when water conservation measures are in effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 869Introduced by Assembly Member RubioFebruary 16, 2017 An act to amend Sections 10608.8 and 10608.12 of, and to add Section add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to, to the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 869, as amended, Rubio. Sustainable water use and demand reduction: recycled water.(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier be excluded from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use. The bill would state that for these purposes recycled water use is an efficient use of water and would require recycled water use to be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.This bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time. state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.(3)Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan. Existing law requires the department, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and with public input, no later than January 1, 2011, and updated as part of The California Water Plan, to propose new statewide targets, or review and update existing targets, for regional water resource management practices, including recycled water.Existing law requires each agricultural water supplier to implement certain efficient water management practices if the measure is locally cost effective and technically feasible, including to facilitate the use of available recycled water that would otherwise not be used beneficially, that meets all health and safety criteria, and that does not harm crops or soils.Existing law defines recycled water, for the above-described purposes and purposes under (1), as recycled water that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for direct use and indirect potable reuse, that meets certain requirements.This bill would redefine recycled water to also include recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses. The bill would define potable reuse for these purposes.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Senate August 24, 2017 Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017
5+ Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017
66
7-Amended IN Senate August 24, 2017
87 Amended IN Senate July 03, 2017
98 Amended IN Assembly May 15, 2017
109 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2017
1110 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2017
1211
1312 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1413
1514 Assembly Bill No. 869
1615
1716 Introduced by Assembly Member RubioFebruary 16, 2017
1817
1918 Introduced by Assembly Member Rubio
2019 February 16, 2017
2120
22- An act to add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to the Water Code, relating to water.
21+ An act to amend Sections 10608.8 and 10608.12 of, and to add Section add Sections 1058.6, 10609.1, and 13551.5 to, to the Water Code, relating to water.
2322
2423 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2524
2625 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2726
2827 AB 869, as amended, Rubio. Sustainable water use and demand reduction: recycled water.
2928
30-(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.This bill would require long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use to include a credit for recycled water, as specified.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.Existing law, the California Emergency Services Act, sets forth the emergency powers of the Governor under its provisions and empowers the Governor to proclaim a state of emergency for certain conditions, including drought. Existing law authorizes the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply to declare a water shortage emergency condition to prevail within the area served by the distributor whenever it finds and determines that the ordinary demands and requirements of water consumers cannot be satisfied without depleting the water supply of the distributor to the extent that there would be insufficient water for human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection. Existing law provides for certain water conservation measures to be taken during prescribed periods, including when the Governor has proclaimed a state of emergency based on drought or when the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply has declared a water shortage emergency condition.This bill would state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water. The bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses during a period when water conservation measures are in effect.
29+(1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.This bill would require recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier be excluded from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use. The bill would state that for these purposes recycled water use is an efficient use of water and would require recycled water use to be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.(2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.This bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time. state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.(3)Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan. Existing law requires the department, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and with public input, no later than January 1, 2011, and updated as part of The California Water Plan, to propose new statewide targets, or review and update existing targets, for regional water resource management practices, including recycled water.Existing law requires each agricultural water supplier to implement certain efficient water management practices if the measure is locally cost effective and technically feasible, including to facilitate the use of available recycled water that would otherwise not be used beneficially, that meets all health and safety criteria, and that does not harm crops or soils.Existing law defines recycled water, for the above-described purposes and purposes under (1), as recycled water that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for direct use and indirect potable reuse, that meets certain requirements.This bill would redefine recycled water to also include recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses. The bill would define potable reuse for these purposes.
3130
3231 (1) Existing law imposes various water use reduction requirements that apply to urban retail water suppliers, including a requirement that the state achieve a 20% reduction in urban per capita water use by December 31, 2020.
3332
34-This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.
33+This bill would require recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier be excluded from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use. The bill would state that for these purposes recycled water use is an efficient use of water and would require recycled water use to be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.
3534
3635
3736
38-This bill would require long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use to include a credit for recycled water, as specified.
37+This bill would require the State Water Resources Control Board, in consultation with the Department of Water Resources, to adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The bill would require the department, in coordination with the board, no later than October 1, 2020, to conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation use for adoption by the board and would require the department to update these recommendations after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7. The bill would require the board, in consultation with the department, to adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements, as specified, by May 20, 2021. The bill, after 2026 in years ending in 2 and 7, would require the board and the department to consider updating the long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and the commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures.
3938
4039 (2) Existing provisions of the California Constitution declare the policy that the water resources of the state be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of these waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use of the waters in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. Existing law declares that the use of potable domestic water for certain nonpotable uses is a waste or an unreasonable use of water if recycled water is available, as determined by the State Water Resources Control Board, and other requirements are met.
4140
42-Existing law, the California Emergency Services Act, sets forth the emergency powers of the Governor under its provisions and empowers the Governor to proclaim a state of emergency for certain conditions, including drought. Existing law authorizes the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply to declare a water shortage emergency condition to prevail within the area served by the distributor whenever it finds and determines that the ordinary demands and requirements of water consumers cannot be satisfied without depleting the water supply of the distributor to the extent that there would be insufficient water for human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection. Existing law provides for certain water conservation measures to be taken during prescribed periods, including when the Governor has proclaimed a state of emergency based on drought or when the governing body of a distributor of a public water supply has declared a water shortage emergency condition.
41+This bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time. state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
4342
44-This bill would state the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to, among other things, encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state. The bill would state that water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water. The bill would prohibit an urban retail water supplier from being required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses during a period when water conservation measures are in effect.
43+(3)Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan. Existing law requires the department, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and with public input, no later than January 1, 2011, and updated as part of The California Water Plan, to propose new statewide targets, or review and update existing targets, for regional water resource management practices, including recycled water.
44+
45+
46+
47+Existing law requires each agricultural water supplier to implement certain efficient water management practices if the measure is locally cost effective and technically feasible, including to facilitate the use of available recycled water that would otherwise not be used beneficially, that meets all health and safety criteria, and that does not harm crops or soils.
48+
49+
50+
51+Existing law defines recycled water, for the above-described purposes and purposes under (1), as recycled water that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for direct use and indirect potable reuse, that meets certain requirements.
52+
53+
54+
55+This bill would redefine recycled water to also include recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses. The bill would define potable reuse for these purposes.
56+
57+
4558
4659 ## Digest Key
4760
4861 ## Bill Text
4962
50-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1.(a)The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1)Indoor residential water use.(2)Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b)By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c)Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1)Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2)Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d)(1)The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2)In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e)(1)Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A)Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B)Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C)Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2)In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A)Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B)Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C)Academic experts.(D)Economic development interests.(E)Business community representatives.(F)Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G)Commercial water users.(H)Industrial water users.(I)Institutional water users.(3)Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f)Standards10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
63+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1.Section 10608.8 of the Water Code is amended to read:10608.8.(a)(1)Water use efficiency measures adopted and implemented pursuant to this part or Part 2.8 (commencing with Section 10800) are water conservation measures subject to the protections provided under Section 1011.(2)Because an urban agency is not required to meet its urban water use target until 2020 pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 10608.24, an urban retail water suppliers failure to meet those targets shall not establish a violation of law for purposes of any state administrative or judicial proceeding prior to January 1, 2021. Nothing in this paragraph limits the use of data reported to the department or the board in litigation or an administrative proceeding. This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2021.(3)To the extent feasible, the department and the board shall provide for the use of water conservation reports required under this part to meet the requirements of Section 1011 for water conservation reporting.(b)This part does not limit or otherwise affect the application of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340), Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 11370), Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400), and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(c)This part does not require a reduction in the total water used in the agricultural or urban sectors, because other factors, including, but not limited to, changes in agricultural economics or population growth may have greater effects on water use. This part does not limit the economic productivity of Californias agricultural, commercial, or industrial sectors.(d)The requirements of this part do not apply to an agricultural water supplier that is a party to the Quantification Settlement Agreement, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1 of Chapter 617 of the Statutes of 2002, during the period within which the Quantification Settlement Agreement remains in effect. After the expiration of the Quantification Settlement Agreement, to the extent conservation water projects implemented as part of the Quantification Settlement Agreement remain in effect, the conserved water created as part of those projects shall be credited against the obligations of the agricultural water supplier pursuant to this part.(e)For this part, recycled water use is an efficient use of water and shall be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.(f)This part shall exclude recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use.SEC. 2.Section 10608.12 of the Water Code is amended to read:10608.12.Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a)Agricultural water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, providing water to 10,000 or more irrigated acres, excluding recycled water. Agricultural water supplier includes a supplier or contractor for water, regardless of the basis of right, that distributes or sells water for ultimate resale to customers. Agricultural water supplier does not include the department.(b)Base daily per capita water use means at least one of the following:(1)The urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous 10-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.(2)For an urban retail water supplier that meets at least 10 percent of its 2008 measured retail water demand through recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier, the urban retail water supplier may extend the calculation described in paragraph (1) up to an additional five years to a maximum of a continuous 15-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.(3)For the purposes of Section 10608.22, the urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous five-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2007, and no later than December 31, 2010.(c)Baseline commercial, industrial, and institutional water use means an urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use for commercial, industrial, and institutional users.(d)Commercial water user means a water user that provides or distributes a product or service.(e)Compliance daily per capita water use means the gross water use during the final year of the reporting period, reported in gallons per capita per day.(f)Disadvantaged community means a community with an annual median household income that is less than 80 percent of the statewide annual median household income.(g)Gross water use means the total volume of water, whether treated or untreated, entering the distribution system of an urban retail water supplier, excluding all of the following:(1)Recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier.(2)The net volume of water that the urban retail water supplier places into long-term storage.(3)The volume of water the urban retail water supplier conveys for use by another urban water supplier.(4)The volume of water delivered for agricultural use, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (f) of Section 10608.24.(h)Industrial water user means a water user that is primarily a manufacturer or processor of materials as defined by the North American Industry Classification System code sectors 31 to 33, inclusive, or an entity that is a water user primarily engaged in research and development.(i)Institutional water user means a water user dedicated to public service. This type of user includes, among other users, higher education institutions, schools, courts, churches, hospitals, government facilities, and nonprofit research institutions.(j)Interim urban water use target means the midpoint between the urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use and the urban retail water suppliers urban water use target for 2020.(k)Locally cost effective means that the present value of the local benefits of implementing an agricultural efficiency water management practice is greater than or equal to the present value of the local cost of implementing that measure.(l)Process water means water used for producing a product or product content or water used for research and development, including, but not limited to, continuous manufacturing processes, water used for testing and maintaining equipment used in producing a product or product content, and water used in combined heat and power facilities used in producing a product or product content. Process water does not mean incidental water uses not related to the production of a product or product content, including, but not limited to, water used for restrooms, landscaping, air-conditioning, heating, kitchens, and laundry.(m)Recycled water means recycled water, as defined in subdivision (n) of Section 13050, that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses and recycled water supplied for potable reuse. Potable reuse means the planned use of municipal wastewater that has gone through multiple barrier treatment processes to produce or supplement a drinking water supply that has at least an equivalent level of public health protection as other sources of water supply permitted under the California Safe Drinking Water Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 116270) of Part 12 of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code). (n)Regional water resources management means sources of supply resulting from watershed-based planning for sustainable local water reliability or any of the following alternative sources of water:(1)The capture and reuse of stormwater or rainwater.(2)The use of recycled water.(3)The desalination of brackish groundwater.(4)The conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater in a manner that is consistent with the safe yield of the groundwater basin.(o)Reporting period means the years for which an urban retail water supplier reports compliance with the urban water use targets.(p)Urban retail water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that directly provides potable municipal water to more than 3,000 end users or that supplies more than 3,000 acre-feet of potable water annually at retail for municipal purposes.(q)Urban water use target means the urban retail water suppliers targeted future daily per capita water use.(r)Urban wholesale water supplier, means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that provides more than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually at wholesale for potable municipal purposes.SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
5164
5265 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5366
5467 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
68+
69+
70+
71+
72+
73+(a)(1)Water use efficiency measures adopted and implemented pursuant to this part or Part 2.8 (commencing with Section 10800) are water conservation measures subject to the protections provided under Section 1011.
74+
75+
76+
77+(2)Because an urban agency is not required to meet its urban water use target until 2020 pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 10608.24, an urban retail water suppliers failure to meet those targets shall not establish a violation of law for purposes of any state administrative or judicial proceeding prior to January 1, 2021. Nothing in this paragraph limits the use of data reported to the department or the board in litigation or an administrative proceeding. This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2021.
78+
79+
80+
81+(3)To the extent feasible, the department and the board shall provide for the use of water conservation reports required under this part to meet the requirements of Section 1011 for water conservation reporting.
82+
83+
84+
85+(b)This part does not limit or otherwise affect the application of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340), Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 11370), Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400), and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
86+
87+
88+
89+(c)This part does not require a reduction in the total water used in the agricultural or urban sectors, because other factors, including, but not limited to, changes in agricultural economics or population growth may have greater effects on water use. This part does not limit the economic productivity of Californias agricultural, commercial, or industrial sectors.
90+
91+
92+
93+(d)The requirements of this part do not apply to an agricultural water supplier that is a party to the Quantification Settlement Agreement, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1 of Chapter 617 of the Statutes of 2002, during the period within which the Quantification Settlement Agreement remains in effect. After the expiration of the Quantification Settlement Agreement, to the extent conservation water projects implemented as part of the Quantification Settlement Agreement remain in effect, the conserved water created as part of those projects shall be credited against the obligations of the agricultural water supplier pursuant to this part.
94+
95+
96+
97+(e)For this part, recycled water use is an efficient use of water and shall be considered equivalent to other water use efficiency measures.
98+
99+
100+
101+(f)This part shall exclude recycled water delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier for either nonpotable or potable use or that replenishes a groundwater basin and supplements the groundwater supply available to an urban retail water supplier from the calculation of any urban water use target or reduction in urban per capita water use.
102+
103+
104+
105+
106+
107+
108+
109+Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:
110+
111+
112+
113+(a)Agricultural water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, providing water to 10,000 or more irrigated acres, excluding recycled water. Agricultural water supplier includes a supplier or contractor for water, regardless of the basis of right, that distributes or sells water for ultimate resale to customers. Agricultural water supplier does not include the department.
114+
115+
116+
117+(b)Base daily per capita water use means at least one of the following:
118+
119+
120+
121+(1)The urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous 10-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.
122+
123+
124+
125+(2)For an urban retail water supplier that meets at least 10 percent of its 2008 measured retail water demand through recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier, the urban retail water supplier may extend the calculation described in paragraph (1) up to an additional five years to a maximum of a continuous 15-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2004, and no later than December 31, 2010.
126+
127+
128+
129+(3)For the purposes of Section 10608.22, the urban retail water suppliers estimate of its average gross water use, reported in gallons per capita per day and calculated over a continuous five-year period ending no earlier than December 31, 2007, and no later than December 31, 2010.
130+
131+
132+
133+(c)Baseline commercial, industrial, and institutional water use means an urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use for commercial, industrial, and institutional users.
134+
135+
136+
137+(d)Commercial water user means a water user that provides or distributes a product or service.
138+
139+
140+
141+(e)Compliance daily per capita water use means the gross water use during the final year of the reporting period, reported in gallons per capita per day.
142+
143+
144+
145+(f)Disadvantaged community means a community with an annual median household income that is less than 80 percent of the statewide annual median household income.
146+
147+
148+
149+(g)Gross water use means the total volume of water, whether treated or untreated, entering the distribution system of an urban retail water supplier, excluding all of the following:
150+
151+
152+
153+(1)Recycled water that is delivered within the service area of an urban retail water supplier or its urban wholesale water supplier.
154+
155+
156+
157+(2)The net volume of water that the urban retail water supplier places into long-term storage.
158+
159+
160+
161+(3)The volume of water the urban retail water supplier conveys for use by another urban water supplier.
162+
163+
164+
165+(4)The volume of water delivered for agricultural use, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (f) of Section 10608.24.
166+
167+
168+
169+(h)Industrial water user means a water user that is primarily a manufacturer or processor of materials as defined by the North American Industry Classification System code sectors 31 to 33, inclusive, or an entity that is a water user primarily engaged in research and development.
170+
171+
172+
173+(i)Institutional water user means a water user dedicated to public service. This type of user includes, among other users, higher education institutions, schools, courts, churches, hospitals, government facilities, and nonprofit research institutions.
174+
175+
176+
177+(j)Interim urban water use target means the midpoint between the urban retail water suppliers base daily per capita water use and the urban retail water suppliers urban water use target for 2020.
178+
179+
180+
181+(k)Locally cost effective means that the present value of the local benefits of implementing an agricultural efficiency water management practice is greater than or equal to the present value of the local cost of implementing that measure.
182+
183+
184+
185+(l)Process water means water used for producing a product or product content or water used for research and development, including, but not limited to, continuous manufacturing processes, water used for testing and maintaining equipment used in producing a product or product content, and water used in combined heat and power facilities used in producing a product or product content. Process water does not mean incidental water uses not related to the production of a product or product content, including, but not limited to, water used for restrooms, landscaping, air-conditioning, heating, kitchens, and laundry.
186+
187+
188+
189+(m)Recycled water means recycled water, as defined in subdivision (n) of Section 13050, that is used to offset potable demand, including recycled water supplied for nonpotable uses and recycled water supplied for potable reuse. Potable reuse means the planned use of municipal wastewater that has gone through multiple barrier treatment processes to produce or supplement a drinking water supply that has at least an equivalent level of public health protection as other sources of water supply permitted under the California Safe Drinking Water Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 116270) of Part 12 of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code).
190+
191+
192+
193+(n)Regional water resources management means sources of supply resulting from watershed-based planning for sustainable local water reliability or any of the following alternative sources of water:
194+
195+
196+
197+(1)The capture and reuse of stormwater or rainwater.
198+
199+
200+
201+(2)The use of recycled water.
202+
203+
204+
205+(3)The desalination of brackish groundwater.
206+
207+
208+
209+(4)The conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater in a manner that is consistent with the safe yield of the groundwater basin.
210+
211+
212+
213+(o)Reporting period means the years for which an urban retail water supplier reports compliance with the urban water use targets.
214+
215+
216+
217+(p)Urban retail water supplier means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that directly provides potable municipal water to more than 3,000 end users or that supplies more than 3,000 acre-feet of potable water annually at retail for municipal purposes.
218+
219+
220+
221+(q)Urban water use target means the urban retail water suppliers targeted future daily per capita water use.
222+
223+
224+
225+(r)Urban wholesale water supplier, means a water supplier, either publicly or privately owned, that provides more than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually at wholesale for potable municipal purposes.
226+
227+
55228
56229 SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
57230
58231 SECTION 1. Section 1058.6 is added to the Water Code, to read:
59232
60233 ### SECTION 1.
61234
62235 1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
63236
64237 1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
65238
66239 1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
67240
68241
69242
70243 1058.6. Water conservation does not include curtailment of use of recycled water.
71244
72-SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1.(a)The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1)Indoor residential water use.(2)Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b)By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c)Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1)Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2)Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d)(1)The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2)In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e)(1)Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A)Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B)Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C)Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2)In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A)Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B)Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C)Academic experts.(D)Economic development interests.(E)Business community representatives.(F)Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G)Commercial water users.(H)Industrial water users.(I)Institutional water users.(3)Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f)Standards10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
245+SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
73246
74247 SEC. 2. Section 10609.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:
75248
76249 ### SEC. 2.
77250
78-10609.1.(a)The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1)Indoor residential water use.(2)Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b)By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c)Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1)Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2)Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d)(1)The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2)In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e)(1)Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A)Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B)Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C)Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2)In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A)Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B)Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C)Academic experts.(D)Economic development interests.(E)Business community representatives.(F)Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G)Commercial water users.(H)Industrial water users.(I)Institutional water users.(3)Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f)Standards10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
251+10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
252+
253+10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
254+
255+10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:(1) Indoor residential water use.(2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.(b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.(c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:(1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.(2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.(d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).(2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.(e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:(A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.(B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.(C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.(2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:(A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.(C) Academic experts.(D) Economic development interests.(E) Business community representatives.(F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.(G) Commercial water users.(H) Industrial water users.(I) Institutional water users.(3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.(g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
79256
80257
81258
82-(a)The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:
83-
84-
259+10609.1. (a) The board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use by May 20, 2021. The standards shall include, but are not limited to, standards for both of the following:
85260
86261 (1) Indoor residential water use.
87262
88-
89-
90263 (2) Outdoor irrigation in connection with domestic, commercial, industrial, or institutional water use.
91-
92-
93264
94265 (b) By May 20, 2021, the board, in consultation with the department, shall adopt performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use designed to produce measurable water use efficiency improvements and that build upon industry best practices, use of innovative technologies, and existing data on cost-effectiveness. Performance measures shall include, but are not limited to, water audits, converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional water irrigation accounts to dedicated irrigation meters, and water management planning.
95266
96-
97-
98267 (c) Urban water suppliers shall do both of the following:
99-
100-
101268
102269 (1) Calculate a water use target, in accordance with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (a), no later than July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts the standards. Each urban water suppliers water use target shall be comprised of an indoor residential volume, an outdoor irrigation volume, and a volume for water loss as specified in Section 10608.34. The outdoor irrigation volume shall exclude potable water for agricultural use as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 51201 of the Government Code.
103270
104-
105-
106271 (2) Annually submit a report to the department by July 1, beginning the calendar year after the board adopts standards pursuant to subdivision (a). The report shall describe the suppliers calculated water use target, actual water use consistent with criteria described in paragraph (1), documentation of commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measure implementation, and a narrative describing progress made towards meeting the target. The department shall post the reports and information on its Internet Web site.
107-
108-
109272
110273 (d) (1) The department, in coordination with the board, shall conduct necessary studies and investigations and recommend, no later than October 1, 2020, standards for indoor residential use and outdoor irrigation for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter. After 2026, the department shall recommend updates to its initial recommendation to the board in years ending in 2 and 7 to allow for consideration by the board in accordance with subdivision (h).
111274
112-
113-
114275 (2) In recommending standards pursuant to this subdivision, the department, in coordination with the board, shall develop guidelines and methodologies as necessary for calculating irrigable landscape area, irrigated landscape area, and indoor water use for the board to consider in adoption of the standards.
115-
116-
117276
118277 (e) (1) Before setting performance measures for commercial, industrial, and institutional water use, the department, in coordination with the board, shall solicit broad public participation relating to all of the following:
119278
120-
121-
122279 (A) Recommendations for a commercial, industrial, and institutional classification system for California.
123-
124-
125280
126281 (B) Recommendations for setting minimum size thresholds for converting mixed commercial, industrial, and institutional meters to dedicated irrigation meters, and evaluating and recommending technologies that could be used in lieu of requiring dedicated irrigation meters.
127282
128-
129-
130283 (C) Recommendations for commercial, industrial, and institutional best management practices, including, but not limited to, water audits and water management plans for commercial, industrial, and institutional customers over a recommended size, volume, or other threshold.
131-
132-
133284
134285 (2) In their solicitation for public participation pursuant to paragraph (1), the department and the board shall invite representatives from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, representing the following categories:
135286
136-
137-
138287 (A) Urban retail water suppliers, including combined retail water and wastewater agencies.
139-
140-
141288
142289 (B) Urban wholesale water suppliers.
143290
144-
145-
146291 (C) Academic experts.
147-
148-
149292
150293 (D) Economic development interests.
151294
152-
153-
154295 (E) Business community representatives.
155-
156-
157296
158297 (F) Environmental and environmental justice organizations.
159298
160-
161-
162299 (G) Commercial water users.
163-
164-
165300
166301 (H) Industrial water users.
167302
168-
169-
170303 (I) Institutional water users.
171-
172-
173304
174305 (3) Recommendations of appropriate performance measures for commercial, industrial, or institutional water use shall consider the 2013 report to the Legislature by the commercial, industrial, and institutional task force entitled, Water Use Best Management Practices, and shall support the economic productivity of Californias commercial, industrial, and institutional sectors.
175306
307+(f) Standards adopted by the board shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:
176308
309+(1) For the outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.
177310
178-(f)Standards
179-
180-
181-
182-10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
183-
184-10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:(1)(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.(2)A(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.(g)The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.(h)(1)After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).(2)The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.(i)Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
185-
186-
187-
188-10609.1. Long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use adopted by the board direction of statute after January 1, 2018, shall include a credit for recycled water as set forth below:
189-
190-(1)
191-
192-
193-
194-(a) For the an outdoor irrigation standard, nonpotable recycled water shall be given a special landscape allowance as set forth in the departments Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance, except that the allowance shall include a variance to the standard that allows recycled water to be applied at an agronomic rate that is a rate of application of recycled water that is necessary to satisfy the watering and nutritional requirements of the plants and is in compliance with any applicable salt and nutrient management plan.
195-
196-(2)A
197-
198-
199-
200-(b) An urban water supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target. water use target.
311+(2) A supplier shall receive a credit for the volume of its potable water reuse, on an acre-foot basis, to meet its target.
201312
202313 (g) The department and the board shall solicit broad public participation relating to the development of the long-term standards for urban water conservation and use. In the solicitation for public participation for the purposes of this section, the department and the board shall invite representatives of small, medium, and large urban retail water suppliers from throughout the state, including at least one representative from each hydrologic region, academic experts, urban water wholesalers, urban water suppliers, business organizations, environmental and environmental justice organizations, and combined retail water and wastewater agencies.
203314
204-
205-
206315 (h) (1) After 2026, the board and the department shall consider, in years ending in two and seven, whether the board should update long-term standards for urban water conservation and water use and commercial, industrial, and institutional performance measures. Before proposing new standards for board adoption, the department and the board shall solicit broad public participation as described in subdivision (g).
207-
208-
209316
210317 (2) The department and the board may conduct additional studies, pilot projects, and other necessary actions in order to determine whether to update standards and commercial, industrial, or institutional performance measures.
211318
212-
213-
214319 (i) Notwithstanding Section 15300.2 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, an action of the board taken under this chapter shall be deemed to be a Class 8 action, within the meaning of Section 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations, if the action does not involve relaxation of existing water conservation or water use standards.
215320
216-
217-
218-SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
321+SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
219322
220323 SEC. 3. Section 13551.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:
221324
222325 ### SEC. 3.
223326
224-13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
327+13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
225328
226-13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
329+13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
227330
228-13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c) For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(b)(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
331+13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:(1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.(3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.(4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.(5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.(c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.(d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
229332
230333
231334
232-13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:
335+13551.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section Assembly Bill 869 of the 201617 Regular Session to do all of the following:
233336
234337 (1) Encourage continued investment in water reuse as a means to increase water supply reliability and diversification within the state.
235338
236-(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including investment in recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.
339+(2) Encourage new investment and protect existing local investments made by urban water suppliers in drought resiliency and drought resilient supplies, including recycled water and potable reuse, in order to better prepare local communities and the state for periods of drought and shortage.
237340
238341 (3) Expand the volume of water recycled to put to beneficial use in the state through new investments in water recycling.
239342
240343 (4) Recognize that federal and state regulation of recycled water requires efficient use of recycled water and prohibits overuse.
241344
242345 (5) Encourage local agencies to take steps to prepare for the effects of climate change.
243346
244-(b) An urban retail water supplier shall not be required to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses (1) during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions, (2) pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1, or (3) during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.
347+(b)An urban retail water supplier shall not be required by a regulation to reduce the amount of recycled water it produces, sells, or distributes for beneficial potable or nonpotable uses at any time, including, but not limited to, during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on statewide or local drought conditions pursuant to Chapter 3.3 (commencing with Section 365) of Division 1 and during a water shortage emergency condition pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 350) of Division 1.
348+
349+
245350
246351 (c)For purposes of this section, urban retail water supplier and recycled water have the same meanings as provided in Section 10608.12.
247352
248-(b)
353+
354+
355+(d)
249356
250357
251358
252-(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.
359+(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to supersede, diminish, alter, impair, or otherwise affect any existing rights, including, but not limited to, existing legal protections, both procedural and substantive, under water rights law.