California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB552 Compare Versions

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1-Senate Bill No. 552 CHAPTER 245 An act to add Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) to Division 6 of the Water Code, relating to water. [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 552, Hertzberg. Drought planning: small water suppliers: nontransient noncommunity water systems. Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) is added to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 09, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 08, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2021 Amended IN Assembly August 30, 2021 Amended IN Assembly July 05, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 21, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 27, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 552Introduced by Senator Hertzberg(Coauthors: Senators Archuleta, Caballero, Dodd, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Luz Rivas and Robert Rivas)February 18, 2021 An act to add Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) to Division 6 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 552, Hertzberg. Drought planning: small water suppliers: nontransient noncommunity water systems. Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) is added to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
22
3- Senate Bill No. 552 CHAPTER 245 An act to add Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) to Division 6 of the Water Code, relating to water. [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 552, Hertzberg. Drought planning: small water suppliers: nontransient noncommunity water systems. Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 09, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 08, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2021 Amended IN Assembly August 30, 2021 Amended IN Assembly July 05, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 21, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 27, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 552Introduced by Senator Hertzberg(Coauthors: Senators Archuleta, Caballero, Dodd, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Luz Rivas and Robert Rivas)February 18, 2021 An act to add Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) to Division 6 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 552, Hertzberg. Drought planning: small water suppliers: nontransient noncommunity water systems. Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Senate Bill No. 552 CHAPTER 245
5+ Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 09, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 08, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2021 Amended IN Assembly August 30, 2021 Amended IN Assembly July 05, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 21, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 27, 2021
66
7- Senate Bill No. 552
7+Enrolled September 13, 2021
8+Passed IN Senate September 09, 2021
9+Passed IN Assembly September 08, 2021
10+Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2021
11+Amended IN Assembly August 30, 2021
12+Amended IN Assembly July 05, 2021
13+Amended IN Assembly June 21, 2021
14+Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021
15+Amended IN Senate May 20, 2021
16+Amended IN Senate April 27, 2021
817
9- CHAPTER 245
18+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
19+
20+ Senate Bill
21+
22+No. 552
23+
24+Introduced by Senator Hertzberg(Coauthors: Senators Archuleta, Caballero, Dodd, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Luz Rivas and Robert Rivas)February 18, 2021
25+
26+Introduced by Senator Hertzberg(Coauthors: Senators Archuleta, Caballero, Dodd, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Luz Rivas and Robert Rivas)
27+February 18, 2021
1028
1129 An act to add Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) to Division 6 of the Water Code, relating to water.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ]
1430
1531 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1632
1733 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1834
1935 SB 552, Hertzberg. Drought planning: small water suppliers: nontransient noncommunity water systems.
2036
2137 Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
2238
2339 Existing law declares that small water suppliers and rural communities are often not covered by established water shortage requirements, and that the state should provide guidance to improve drought planning for small water suppliers and rural communities. Existing law required the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board and other relevant state and local agencies and stakeholders, to use available data to identify, no later than January 1, 2020, small water suppliers and rural communities that may be at risk of drought and water shortage vulnerability. To implement this directive, the department formed a stakeholder advisory group, the County Drought Advisory Group. Existing law required the department, in consultation with the state board, to propose to the Governor and the Legislature, by January 1, 2020, recommendations and guidance relating to the development and implementation of countywide drought and water shortage contingency plans to address the planning needs of small water suppliers and rural communities, as provided.
2440
2541 This bill would require small water suppliers, as defined, serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools, no later than July 1, 2023, to develop and maintain an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan that includes specified drought-planning elements. The bill would require a small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections to add drought planning elements to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The bill would require these water systems to report annually specified water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. The bill would require small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to implement, subject to funding availability, specified drought resiliency measures, including, among others, having at least one backup source of water supply and metering each service connection. The bill would exempt from these provisions small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with specified existing law relating to urban water management plans.
2642
2743 This bill would require a county to establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would authorize a county, in lieu of establishing a standing task force, to establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, as provided. The bill would provide that a county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with these requirements as long as the task force continues to exist. The bill would require a county to develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions, as provided. Because the bill would impose additional duties on counties, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
2844
2945 This bill would require the department to take specified actions to support implementation of the recommendations from the County Drought Advisory Group. The bill would require the department to establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to, among other things, facilitate proactive planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, which shall consist of various representatives, including representatives from local governments. Because the bill would impose additional duties on local governments, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
3046
3147 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
3248
3349 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
3450
3551 ## Digest Key
3652
3753 ## Bill Text
3854
3955 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) is added to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
4056
4157 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4258
4359 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4460
4561 SECTION 1. Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) is added to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
4662
4763 SECTION 1. Part 2.56 (commencing with Section 10609.50) is added to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:
4864
4965 ### SECTION 1.
5066
5167 PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
5268
5369 PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6. CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices. CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
5470
5571 PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities
5672
5773 PART 2.56. Drought Planning for Small Water Suppliers, State Small Water Systems, and Domestic Well Communities
5874
5975 CHAPTER 1. General Provisions10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
6076
6177 CHAPTER 1. General Provisions
6278
6379 CHAPTER 1. General Provisions
6480
6581 10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.(b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:(1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.(B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.(2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.(B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.(c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.(d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).(e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
6682
6783
6884
6985 10609.50. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
7086
7187 (a) Droughts are predicted to become more frequent, longer, and more severe as climate change progresses, putting drinking water supplies at risk of running dry or becoming contaminated.
7288
7389 (b) As demonstrated by the most recent drought from 2012 to 2016, inclusive, (201216 drought) drought conditions disproportionally impact low-income, small, and rural communities, as demonstrated by all of the following:
7490
7591 (1) (A) Rural communities are more likely to rely solely on groundwater from small water suppliers or domestic wells.
7692
7793 (B) Domestic wells tend to be shallower and are susceptible to running dry when groundwater is overpumped.
7894
7995 (2) (A) The 201216 drought negatively impacted over 480,000 people relying on drought-impacted public water systems.
8096
8197 (B) Seventy-six percent of impacted public water systems were small, serving 1,000 service connections or fewer and concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Valley.
8298
8399 (c) There are currently varying levels of water contingency planning and coverage across counties for small water suppliers and self-supplied communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of people at risk of going without water to meet their basic household and drinking water needs during the next drought.
84100
85101 (d) If another drought occurs that is as severe as the 201216 drought, more than 4,500 domestic wells in the San Joaquin Valley may be impacted. The cost to mitigate this damage could be more than one hundred fifteen million dollars ($115,000,000).
86102
87103 (e) No one should go without running water during a drought. California can take basic steps to implement more proactive drought planning that would benefit the communities most at risk, and by doing so help prevent catastrophic impacts on drinking water for the communities most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
88104
89105 10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.(d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.(e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code. (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.(g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code. (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.(j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.(k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.(l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.(m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
90106
91107
92108
93109 10609.51. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
94110
95111 (a) Community water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
96112
97113 (b) County Drought Advisory Group means the group created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.
98114
99115 (c) Department means the Department of Water Resources.
100116
101117 (d) Domestic well has the same meaning as defined in Section 116681 of the Health and Safety Code.
102118
103119 (e) Fund expenditure plan means the fund expenditure plan established in Section 116768 of the Health and Safety Code.
104120
105121 (f) Groundwater sustainability agency has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.
106122
107123 (g) Nontransient noncommunity water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
108124
109125 (h) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
110126
111127 (i) Risk vulnerability tool means the tool created by the department to implement Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10609.40) of Part 2.55.
112128
113129 (j) Rural community means a community with fewer than 15 service connections, or regularly serving less than 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.
114130
115131 (k) Small water supplier means a community water system serving 15 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and that provides less than 3,000 acre-feet of water annually.
116132
117133 (l) State board means the State Water Resources Control Board.
118134
119135 (m) State small water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
120136
121137 CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6.
122138
123139 CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems
124140
125141 CHAPTER 2. Small Water Suppliers and Nontransient Noncommunity Water Systems
126142
127143 10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:(1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:(A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.(B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.(C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.(D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist. (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:(A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.(B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).(b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.(c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.(d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.(e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.
128144
129145
130146
131147 10609.60. (a) No later than July 1, 2023, and updated every five years thereafter, a small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each develop and maintain, onsite, an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) that includes, at a minimum, all of the following drought-planning elements:
132148
133149 (1) Drought-planning contacts, including all of the following:
134150
135151 (A) At least one contact at the water system for water shortage planning and response and the development of the plan.
136152
137153 (B) Contacts for local public safety partners and potential vendors that can provide repairs or alternative water sources, including, but not limited to, local community-based organizations that work with the population in and around areas served by the water system, contractors for drilling wells, vended water suppliers, and emergency shower vendors.
138154
139155 (C) State and local agency contacts who should be informed when a drought or water shortage emergency is emerging or has occurred.
140156
141157 (D) Regional water planning groups or mutual aid networks, to the extent they exist.
142158
143159 (2) Triggering mechanisms and levels for action, including both of the following:
144160
145161 (A) Standard water shortage levels corresponding to progressive ranges based on the water supply conditions. Water shortage levels shall also apply to catastrophic interruption of water supplies, including, but not limited to, a regional power outage, an earthquake, a fire, and other potential emergency events.
146162
147163 (B) Water shortage mitigation, response, customer communications, enforcement, and relief actions that align with the water shortage levels required by subparagraph (A).
148164
149165 (b) A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available on their individual internet websites, if any. A small water supplier serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, or a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school that does not have an internet website shall make the abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan available to persons upon request. The abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan shall be provided to the state boards Division of Drinking Water for inspection upon demand.
150166
151167 (c) A small water supplier serving fewer than 1,000 service connections shall add drought planning elements, including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), to its emergency notification or response plan and submit the plan to the state board. The plan shall be updated every five years, or when significant changes occur.
152168
153169 (d) No later than December 31, 2022, the department and the state board shall create an abridged Water Shortage Contingency Plan template for small water suppliers serving 1,000 to 2,999 service connections, inclusive, and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to facilitate implementation of this section.
154170
155171 (e) To the extent that funding is made available, the state board shall offer technical assistance to small water suppliers serving fewer than 1,000 service connections and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools to improve drought and water shortage resiliency, including requirements related to the emergency notification or response plan.
156172
157173 10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:(a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.(b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.
158174
159175
160176
161177 10609.61. A small water supplier and a nontransient noncommunity water system that is a school shall each report annually water supply condition information to the state board through the state boards Electronic Annual Reporting (eAR) System or other reporting tool, as directed by the state board. Water supply condition information includes, but is not limited to, both of the following:
162178
163179 (a) An inventory and assessment of each water supply source, including its available status and if any further investments or treatment are required for its utilization, any lead time required for its utilization, and its delivery parameters such as flow rate and total volume available.
164180
165181 (b) The reporting years total water demand volume for each month, and average and peak flowrate demand for each month and annually.
166182
167183 10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:(a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.(b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.(c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.(d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.(e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.(f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.
168184
169185
170186
171187 10609.62. Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems that are schools shall implement, subject to funding availability, all of the following drought resiliency measures:
172188
173189 (a) No later than January 1, 2023, implement monitoring systems sufficient to detect production well groundwater levels.
174190
175191 (b) Beginning no later than January 1, 2023, maintain membership in the California Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (CalWARN) or similar mutual aid organization.
176192
177193 (c) No later than January 1, 2024, to ensure continuous operations during power failures, provide adequate backup electrical supply.
178194
179195 (d) No later than January 1, 2027, have at least one backup source of water supply, or a water system intertie, that meets current water quality requirements and is sufficient to meet average daily demand.
180196
181197 (e) No later than January 1, 2032, meter each service connection and monitor for water loss due to leakages.
182198
183199 (f) No later than January 1, 2032, have source system capacity, treatment system capacity if necessary, and distribution system capacity to meet fire flow requirements.
184200
185201 10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6.
186202
187203
188204
189205 10609.63. This chapter does not apply to small water suppliers, or small water suppliers integrated into larger water systems, that voluntarily choose to instead comply with Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10620) of Part 2.6.
190206
191207 CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices.
192208
193209 CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells
194210
195211 CHAPTER 3. State Small Water Systems Serving 5 to 14 Service Connections, Inclusive, and Domestic Wells
196212
197213 10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.(2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.(3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.(b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:(1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.(2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.(3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.(4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.(5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.(c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:(1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.(2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices.
198214
199215
200216
201217 10609.70. (a) (1) A county shall establish a standing county drought and water shortage task force to facilitate drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction, and shall invite representatives from the state and other local governments, including groundwater sustainability agencies, and community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents, to participate in the task force.
202218
203219 (2) In lieu of the task force required by paragraph (1), a county may establish an alternative process that facilitates drought and water shortage preparedness for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The alternative process shall provide opportunities for coordinating and communicating with the state and other local governments, community-based organizations, local water suppliers, and local residents on a regular basis and during drought or water shortage emergencies.
204220
205221 (3) A county that establishes a drought task force on or before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed in compliance with this subdivision as long as the task force continues to exist.
206222
207223 (b) A county shall develop a plan that includes potential drought and water shortage risk and proposed interim and long-term solutions for state small water systems and domestic wells within the countys jurisdiction. The plan may be a stand-alone document or may be included as an element in an existing county plan, such as a local hazard mitigation plan, emergency operations plan, climate action plan, or general plan. A county shall consult with its drought task force or alternative coordinating process as established by this section in developing its plan. A county shall consider, at a minimum, all of the following in its plan:
208224
209225 (1) Consolidations for existing water systems and domestic wells.
210226
211227 (2) Domestic well drinking water mitigation programs.
212228
213229 (3) Provision of emergency and interim drinking water solutions.
214230
215231 (4) An analysis of the steps necessary to implement the plan.
216232
217233 (5) An analysis of local, state, and federal funding sources available to implement the plan.
218234
219235 (c) The state board shall work with counties, groundwater sustainability agencies, technical assistance providers, nonprofit organizations, community-based organizations, and the public to address state small water system and domestic well community drought and emergency water shortage resiliency needs, including both of the following:
220236
221237 (1) Proactive communication to domestic well communities before a drought occurs, such as information on local bottled water and water tank providers.
222238
223239 (2) Funding for installation of basic drought and emergency water shortage resiliency infrastructure, such as well monitoring devices.
224240
225241 CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
226242
227243 CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation
228244
229245 CHAPTER 4. State Agency Implementation
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231247 10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:(1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:(A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.(B) State small water systems and rural communities.(C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.(2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:(A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.(B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.(C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.(b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.(2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
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235251 10609.80. (a) The department shall take both of the following actions to support implementation of the recommendations of its County Drought Advisory Group:
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237253 (1) Maintain, in partnership with the state board and other relevant state agencies, the risk vulnerability tool developed as part of the County Drought Advisory Group process and continue to refine existing data and gather new data for the tool, including, but not limited to, data on all of the following:
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239255 (A) Small water suppliers and nontransient noncommunity water systems serving a school.
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241257 (B) State small water systems and rural communities.
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243259 (C) Domestic wells and other self-supplied residents.
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245261 (2) Update the risk vulnerability tool for small water suppliers and rural communities periodically, by doing all of the following:
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247263 (A) Revise the indicators and construction of the scoring as more data becomes readily available.
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249265 (B) Make existing and new data publicly available on the California Open Data internet web portal.
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251267 (C) In consultation with other relevant state agencies, identify deficits in data quality and availability and develop recommendations to address these gaps.
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253269 (b) (1) The department, in collaboration with the state board and relevant state agencies, shall establish a standing interagency drought and water shortage task force to facilitate proactive state planning and coordination, both for predrought planning and postdrought emergency response, to develop strategies to enhance collaboration between various fields, and to consider all types of water users.
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255271 (2) The interagency drought and water shortage task force shall include representatives from local governments, community-based organizations, nonprofit technical assistance providers, the public, and experts in land use planning, water resiliency, and water infrastructure.
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257273 SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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259275 SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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261277 SEC. 2. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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263279 ### SEC. 2.