California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB890 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate February 23, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 890Introduced by Senators Nielsen and Borgeas(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Gallagher)(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Dahle, Grove, Jones, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, and Wilk)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora, Fong, Gray, Lackey, Mathis, Nguyen, Patterson, Seyarto, and Smith)January 31, 2022 An act to add and repeal Section 140.5 of the Water Code, relating to water, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 890, as amended, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal. This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The human right to water is an important state policy that was enacted in 2013 by Assembly Bill 685 (Chapter 524 of the Statutes of 2012).(b) Government inaction has impacted the ability of existing water infrastructure to continue to provide a safe, affordable, and reliable supply of water. (a)(c) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b)(d) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c)(e) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d)(f) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e)(g) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f)(h) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g)(i) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h)(j) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i)(k) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j)(l) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k)(m) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l)(n) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
1+CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 890Introduced by Senators Nielsen and BorgeasJanuary 31, 2022 An act to add and repeal Section 140.5 of the Water Code, relating to water, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 890, as introduced, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal. This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
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3- Amended IN Senate February 23, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 890Introduced by Senators Nielsen and Borgeas(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Gallagher)(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Dahle, Grove, Jones, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, and Wilk)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora, Fong, Gray, Lackey, Mathis, Nguyen, Patterson, Seyarto, and Smith)January 31, 2022 An act to add and repeal Section 140.5 of the Water Code, relating to water, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 890, as amended, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal. This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 890Introduced by Senators Nielsen and BorgeasJanuary 31, 2022 An act to add and repeal Section 140.5 of the Water Code, relating to water, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 890, as introduced, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal. This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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5- Amended IN Senate February 23, 2022
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7-Amended IN Senate February 23, 2022
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99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
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1111 Senate Bill
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1313 No. 890
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15-Introduced by Senators Nielsen and Borgeas(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Gallagher)(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Dahle, Grove, Jones, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, and Wilk)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora, Fong, Gray, Lackey, Mathis, Nguyen, Patterson, Seyarto, and Smith)January 31, 2022
15+Introduced by Senators Nielsen and BorgeasJanuary 31, 2022
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17-Introduced by Senators Nielsen and Borgeas(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Gallagher)(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Dahle, Grove, Jones, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, and Wilk)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora, Fong, Gray, Lackey, Mathis, Nguyen, Patterson, Seyarto, and Smith)
17+Introduced by Senators Nielsen and Borgeas
1818 January 31, 2022
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2020 An act to add and repeal Section 140.5 of the Water Code, relating to water, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.
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2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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26-SB 890, as amended, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.
26+SB 890, as introduced, Nielsen. Department of Water Resources: Water Storage and Conveyance Fund: water storage and conveyance.
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2828 Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal. This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
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3030 Under existing law, the United States Bureau of Reclamation operates the federal Central Valley Project and the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project to supply water to persons and entities in the state. Existing law requires the Friant-Kern Canal to be of such capacity as the department determines necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water for beneficial purposes in the area to be served by the canal.
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3232 This bill would establish the Water Storage and Conveyance Fund in the State Treasury to be administered by the department. The bill would require all moneys deposited in the fund to be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, in support of subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and all necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements. The bill would require the department to expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, specified monetary amounts to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir, and to restore the capacity of 4 specified water conveyance systems, as prescribed, with 2 of those 4 expenditures being in the form of a grant to the Friant Water Authority and to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on July 1, 2030, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2031.
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3434 This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
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3636 ## Digest Key
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40-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The human right to water is an important state policy that was enacted in 2013 by Assembly Bill 685 (Chapter 524 of the Statutes of 2012).(b) Government inaction has impacted the ability of existing water infrastructure to continue to provide a safe, affordable, and reliable supply of water. (a)(c) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b)(d) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c)(e) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d)(f) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e)(g) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f)(h) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g)(i) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h)(j) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i)(k) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j)(l) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k)(m) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l)(n) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
40+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
4141
4242 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4343
4444 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4545
46-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The human right to water is an important state policy that was enacted in 2013 by Assembly Bill 685 (Chapter 524 of the Statutes of 2012).(b) Government inaction has impacted the ability of existing water infrastructure to continue to provide a safe, affordable, and reliable supply of water. (a)(c) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b)(d) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c)(e) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d)(f) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e)(g) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f)(h) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g)(i) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h)(j) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i)(k) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j)(l) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k)(m) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l)(n) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
46+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
4747
48-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The human right to water is an important state policy that was enacted in 2013 by Assembly Bill 685 (Chapter 524 of the Statutes of 2012).(b) Government inaction has impacted the ability of existing water infrastructure to continue to provide a safe, affordable, and reliable supply of water. (a)(c) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b)(d) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c)(e) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d)(f) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e)(g) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f)(h) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g)(i) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h)(j) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i)(k) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j)(l) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k)(m) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l)(n) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
48+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.(b) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.(c) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(d) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.(e) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.(f) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.(g) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.(h) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.(i) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.(j) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.(k) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.(l) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
4949
5050 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5151
5252 ### SECTION 1.
5353
54-(a) The human right to water is an important state policy that was enacted in 2013 by Assembly Bill 685 (Chapter 524 of the Statutes of 2012).
54+(a) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.
5555
56-(b) Government inaction has impacted the ability of existing water infrastructure to continue to provide a safe, affordable, and reliable supply of water.
56+(b) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.
5757
58-(a)
58+(c) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.
5959
60+(d) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.
6061
62+(e) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.
6163
62-(c) The Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, the San Luis Canal, and the California Aqueduct are the states main state and regional water conveyance infrastructure that delivers water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use, refuge water supplies, and groundwater recharge in the San Joaquin Valley and in southern California.
64+(f) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.
6365
64-(b)
66+(g) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.
6567
68+(h) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.
6669
70+(i) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.
6771
68-(d) This water is delivered through a series of regional canals and aqueducts that traverse through the San Joaquin Valley and continue to southern California for delivery.
72+(j) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.
6973
70-(c)
74+(k) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.
7175
72-
73-
74-(e) At least 5,000,000 people in the state, including approximately 1,250,000 people living in disadvantaged communities, receive water from the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.
75-
76-(d)
77-
78-
79-
80-(f) The State Water Project provides approximately three-fourths of Californias disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies.
81-
82-(e)
83-
84-
85-
86-(g) Over 750,000 acres of farmland receive water from the State Water Project and nearly 2,500,000 acres of productive cropland are served water through the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal.
87-
88-(f)
89-
90-
91-
92-(h) An increase in groundwater pumping caused by a failure of the state and federal governments to provide a reliable supply of surface water has caused significant land subsidence that has affected the ability of regional water conveyance infrastructure to convey water. In some areas, the water conveyance has infrastructure dropped in elevation an average of one inch per month since 2014.
93-
94-(g)
95-
96-
97-
98-(i) It is of paramount importance that the primary state and regional water conveyance infrastructure in the state be protected from subsidence, and that conveyance be restored whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.
99-
100-(h)
101-
102-
103-
104-(j) The total cost to repair the Friant-Kern Canal, the Delta-Mendota Canal, and the San Luis Canal regional water conveyance structures is approximately $2,300,000,000 over 10 years.
105-
106-(i)
107-
108-
109-
110-(k) In addition, with the potential for a changing climate that could significantly reduce snowpack and produce flashier storms that feature more atmospheric rivers of precipitation in the form of rainfall, California must prioritize storing water in the wet years for use in the drier years.
111-
112-(j)
113-
114-
115-
116-(l) In 2014, the voters approved Proposition 1, a state bond act that provided the sum of $2,700,000,000 for water storage. The California Water Commission has allocated the entire sum of $2,700,000,000. To date, not one of the projects specified in this bill are complete.
117-
118-(k)
119-
120-
121-
122-(m) Sites Reservoir is an off-stream storage facility envisioned for nearly 40 years. It can store over 1,000,000 acre-feet of water north of the Bay Delta. As a result, Sites Reservoir is the only proposed storage facility in California that would help with the statewide operational effectiveness of the State Water Project and the Central Valley Project. If fully funded and constructed, it will play a significant role in the amount of water available statewide for farms, cities, and the environment throughout the state.
123-
124-(l)
125-
126-
127-
128-(n) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
76+(l) Restoring water conveyance and increasing storage capacity is a necessary step to improving water resilience and to protect critical regional water infrastructure from the impacts of drought and climate change, which will improve the accessibility of safe and reliable drinking water and other beneficial uses of water.
12977
13078 SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.
13179
13280 SEC. 2. Section 140.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:
13381
13482 ### SEC. 2.
13583
13684 140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.
13785
13886 140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.
13987
14088 140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.(b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.(c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).(d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):(1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.(2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.(3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.(4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.(5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.
14189
14290
14391
14492 140.5. (a) The Water Storage and Conveyance Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury to help expand and restore water conveyance and storage capacity throughout California. The department shall administer the fund.
14593
14694 (b) Until July 1, 2030, all moneys deposited in the fund shall be expended, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for projects that support subsidence repair and reservoir storage costs, including environmental planning, permitting, design, and construction and necessary road and bridge upgrades required to accommodate capacity improvements.
14795
14896 (c) Moneys expended from the fund for each individual project specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed one-third of the total cost of each individual project. The total amount expended from the fund for all of the projects specified in subdivision (d) shall not exceed three billion one hundred eighty-five million dollars ($3,185,000,000).
14997
15098 (d) The department shall expend from the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, all of the following, consistent with subdivision (b):
15199
152100 (1) Up to the sum of two hundred thirty million dollars ($230,000,000) for a grant to the Friant Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Friant-Kern Canal.
153101
154102 (2) Up to the sum of one hundred forty million dollars ($140,000,000) for a grant to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority to restore the capacity of the Delta-Mendota Canal.
155103
156104 (3) Up to the sum of one hundred forty-five million dollars ($145,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Luis Field Division of the California Aqueduct.
157105
158106 (4) Up to the sum of seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) to restore the capacity of the San Joaquin Division of the California Aqueduct.
159107
160108 (5) Up to the sum of two billion six hundred million dollars ($2,600,000,000) to complete funding for the construction of the Sites Reservoir.
161109
162110 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2030, and, as of January 1, 2031, is repealed.
163111
164112 SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
165113
166114 SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
167115
168116 SEC. 3. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
169117
170118 ### SEC. 3.
171119
172120 Due to the impacts of increased groundwater pumping, drought, and climate change on the ability of primary state and regional water infrastructure to provide and convey water to the people of this state, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.