California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB828 Compare Versions

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1-Enrolled August 31, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 27, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 28, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 828Introduced by Assembly Member ConnollyFebruary 13, 2023An act to amend Sections 10721, 10726.4, 10727.4, and 10730.2 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 828, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.(1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.(2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.(3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
1+Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 828Introduced by Assembly Member ConnollyFebruary 13, 2023An act to amend Sections 10721, 10726.4, 10727.4, and 10730.2 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 828, as amended, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.(1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.(2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.(3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
22
3- Enrolled August 31, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 27, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 28, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 828Introduced by Assembly Member ConnollyFebruary 13, 2023An act to amend Sections 10721, 10726.4, 10727.4, and 10730.2 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 828, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.(1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.(2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.(3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 828Introduced by Assembly Member ConnollyFebruary 13, 2023An act to amend Sections 10721, 10726.4, 10727.4, and 10730.2 of the Water Code, relating to water. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 828, as amended, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.(1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.(2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.(3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Enrolled August 31, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 27, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 28, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023
5+ Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023
66
7-Enrolled August 31, 2024
8-Passed IN Senate August 27, 2024
9-Passed IN Assembly August 28, 2024
107 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2024
118 Amended IN Senate July 01, 2024
129 Amended IN Assembly January 11, 2024
1310 Amended IN Assembly January 03, 2024
1411 Amended IN Assembly April 17, 2023
1512 Amended IN Assembly March 02, 2023
1613
1714 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1815
1916 Assembly Bill
2017
2118 No. 828
2219
2320 Introduced by Assembly Member ConnollyFebruary 13, 2023
2421
2522 Introduced by Assembly Member Connolly
2623 February 13, 2023
2724
2825 An act to amend Sections 10721, 10726.4, 10727.4, and 10730.2 of the Water Code, relating to water.
2926
3027 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3128
3229 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3330
34-AB 828, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.
31+AB 828, as amended, Connolly. Sustainable groundwater management: managed wetlands.
3532
3633 (1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.(2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.(3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.
3734
3835 (1) Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act.
3936
4037 This bill would add various defined terms for purposes of the act, including the terms managed wetland and small community water system.
4138
4239 (2) Existing law authorizes any local agency or combination of local agencies overlying a groundwater basin to decide to become a groundwater sustainability agency for that basin and imposes specified duties upon that agency or combination of agencies, as provided. Existing law grants a groundwater sustainability agency specified authority and authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency to regulate groundwater extraction using that authority.
4340
4441 This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from using that authority regarding the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and to managed wetland extractors, except as specified. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.
4542
4643 (3) Existing law requires a groundwater sustainability plan, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, to contain certain information, including control of saline water intrusion, wellhead protection areas and recharge areas, a well abandonment and well destruction program, well construction policies, and impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.
4744
4845 This bill would additionally require the information regarding a groundwater sustainability plan to include, among other things, the plans water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands, managed wetland extractors, and small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.
4946
5047 (4) Existing law authorizes a groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan to impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, as specified.
5148
5249 This bill would prohibit a groundwater sustainability agency from imposing a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or imposing a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use. The bill would prohibit these provisions from applying to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025.
5350
5451 ## Digest Key
5552
5653 ## Bill Text
5754
58-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
55+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
5956
6057 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6158
6259 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6360
6461 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.
6562
6663 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.(b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.(c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.(d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.(e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.(f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.(g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.
6764
6865 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
6966
7067 ### SECTION 1.
7168
7269 (a) The Legislature recognized the human right to water in 2012 with the passage of AB 685. A decade later, communities still struggle to access safe and affordable drinking water.
7370
7471 (b) More than 85 percent of Californias community water systems are dependent upon groundwater for drinking water and sanitation. For hundreds of small water systems, groundwater is their only water source.
7572
7673 (c) Disadvantaged communities served by domestic wells and small community water systems are negatively and disproportionately impacted by unsustainable groundwater use and resulting dry wells and worsening water quality.
7774
7875 (d) Many groundwater sustainability plans fail to adequately consider or address the impacts of their plans on domestic well users and households served by small community water systems.
7976
8077 (e) Managed wetlands are an important public trust resource and beneficial user of groundwater because they provide significant habitat for migratory waterfowl of the Pacific flyway, for endangered species, and for many other resident wildlife and fish populations. Wetlands provide additional public benefits, including water quality improvement, groundwater recharge, flood protection, stream bank stabilization, wildlife-dependent recreation, and opportunities for scientific research.
8178
8279 (f) Approximately 5 percent of historic wetlands remain in California. Consistent with Executive Order No. W-59-93, it is the policy of the state to ensure that no net loss of managed wetland acreage or habitat values results from implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.
8380
8481 (g) Protecting managed wetlands that are subject to the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act will avoid a net loss of wetlands and allow groundwater sustainability agencies to prioritize groundwater sustainability for agricultural, municipal, and industrial water users.
8582
86-SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
83+SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
8784
8885 SEC. 2. Section 10721 of the Water Code is amended to read:
8986
9087 ### SEC. 2.
9188
92-10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
89+10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
9390
94-10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
91+10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
9592
96-10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
93+10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:(a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.(b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).(c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.(d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.(e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.(f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.(g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.(h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.(i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.(j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.(k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.(l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.(m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.(n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.(o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.(p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:(A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.(B) National wildlife refuge.(C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.(D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.(E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.(q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.(r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.(s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.(t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.(u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.(w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.(x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.(y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.(z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.(aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.(ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.(3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.(5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.(6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.(ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.(ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.(ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.(af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
9794
9895
9996
10097 10721. Unless the context otherwise requires, the following definitions govern the construction of this part:
10198
10299 (a) Adjudication action means an action filed in the superior or federal district court to determine the rights to extract groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including, but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical solution on a basin.
103100
104101 (b) Basin means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 10722).
105102
106103 (c) Bulletin 118 means the departments report entitled Californias Groundwater: Bulletin 118 updated in 2003, as it may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section 12924.
107104
108105 (d) Coordination agreement means a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this part.
109106
110107 (e) De minimis extractor means a person who extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.
111108
112109 (f) Disadvantaged community has the same meaning as defined in Section 79505.5.
113110
114111 (g) Governing body means the legislative body of a groundwater sustainability agency.
115112
116113 (h) Groundwater means water beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not include water that flows in known and definite channels unless included pursuant to Section 10722.5.
117114
118115 (i) Groundwater extraction facility means a device or method for extracting groundwater from within a basin.
119116
120117 (j) Groundwater recharge or recharge means the augmentation of groundwater, by natural or artificial means.
121118
122119 (k) Groundwater sustainability agency means one or more local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability agency also means each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.
123120
124121 (l) Groundwater sustainability plan or plan means a plan of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted pursuant to this part.
125122
126123 (m) Groundwater sustainability program means a coordinated and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a groundwater sustainability plan.
127124
128125 (n) In-lieu use means the use of surface water by persons that could otherwise extract groundwater in order to leave groundwater in the basin.
129126
130127 (o) Local agency means a local public agency that has water supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a groundwater basin.
131128
132129 (p) (1) Managed wetland means the portion of a publicly or privately owned property that receives seasonal, semipermanent, or permanent flooding that is supplemental to natural rainfall or runoff to simulate natural processes that promote food production, habitat for the benefit of wetland-dependent species, and is designated as, or administered as, any of the following:
133130
134131 (A) State wildlife area or ecological reserve.
135132
136133 (B) National wildlife refuge.
137134
138135 (C) Central Valley Project Improvement Act wetland habitat area.
139136
140137 (D) Conservation easement held by a federal or state resource agency, a local agency whose primary function is managing land or water for wetland habitat purposes, or a nongovernmental conservation organization.
141138
142139 (E) Wildlife habitat contract or other conservation agreement of no less than 10 years in duration administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation Board, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, or Natural Resources Conservation Service.
143140
144-(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement, or any federally reserved water rights.
141+(2) The term managed wetland does not include land managed for commercial crop production, or an artificial wetland constructed primarily as a groundwater bank or recharge basin, tailwater recirculation or sedimentation pond, evaporation pond, irrigation or stock watering pond, area that filters urban or industrial stormwater runoff, or wastewater treatment pond, even if the land is part of a conservation easement. easement, or any federally reserved water rights.
145142
146143 (q) Managed wetland extractor means a person who extracts groundwater for managed wetland purposes.
147144
148145 (r) Operator means a person operating a groundwater extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction facility actually is operated by some other person.
149146
150147 (s) Owner means a person owning a groundwater extraction facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.
151148
152149 (t) Personal information has the same meaning as defined in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.
153150
154151 (u) Planning and implementation horizon means a 50-year time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.
155152
156153 (v) Public water system has the same meaning as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.
157154
158155 (w) Recharge area means the area that supplies water to an aquifer in a groundwater basin.
159156
160157 (x) Small community water system means a community water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code, that serves no more than 3,300 connections or a yearlong population of no more than 10,000 persons.
161158
162159 (y) Sustainability goal means the existence and implementation of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.
163160
164161 (z) Sustainable groundwater management means the management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results.
165162
166163 (aa) Sustainable yield means the maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result.
167164
168165 (ab) Undesirable result means one or more of the following effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin:
169166
170167 (1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over the planning and implementation horizon. Overdraft during a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering of groundwater levels if extractions and groundwater recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage during other periods.
171168
172169 (2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage.
173170
174171 (3) Significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion.
175172
176173 (4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water supplies.
177174
178175 (5) Significant and unreasonable land subsidence that substantially interferes with surface land uses.
179176
180177 (6) Depletions of interconnected surface water that have significant and unreasonable adverse impacts on beneficial uses of the surface water.
181178
182179 (ac) Water budget means an accounting of the total groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin including the changes in the amount of water stored.
183180
184181 (ad) Watermaster means a watermaster appointed by a court or pursuant to other law.
185182
186183 (ae) Water year means the period from October 1 through the following September 30, inclusive.
187184
188185 (af) Wellhead protection area means the surface and subsurface area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely to migrate toward the water well or well field.
189186
190187 SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
191188
192189 SEC. 3. Section 10726.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:
193190
194191 ### SEC. 3.
195192
196193 10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
197194
198195 10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
199196
200197 10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.(b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.(c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.(d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.(e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.(f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
201198
202199
203200
204201 10726.4. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater extraction using that authority:
205202
206203 (1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize well interference, including requiring extractors to operate on a rotation basis.
207204
208205 (2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting, or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate, construction of new groundwater wells, enlargement of existing groundwater wells, or reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater extraction allocations. Those actions shall be consistent with the applicable elements of the city or county general plan, unless there is insufficient sustainable yield in the basin to serve a land use designated in the city or county general plan. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or any portion of the basin.
209206
210207 (3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of groundwater extraction allocations within the agencys boundaries, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan. The transfer is subject to applicable city and county ordinances.
211208
212209 (4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.
213210
214211 (b) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall not apply to the establishment of groundwater extraction allocations for small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities from permitted public water supply wells and shall not apply to managed wetland extractors. If a small community water system or a managed wetland extractor increases its extraction of groundwater over the average amount extracted annually between the years 2015 through 2020 as established by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods, a groundwater sustainability agency shall have the authority to regulate usage above that amount. This subdivision does not prevent a small community water system or managed wetland extractor from receiving a groundwater recharge credit, as may be determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.
215212
216213 (c) If a groundwater sustainability agency reasonably determines that groundwater extractions for managed wetlands are directly causing undesirable results, including land subsidence or degradation of groundwater quality, a groundwater sustainability agency may use the authority described in subdivision (a) to develop and implement corrective actions, in cooperation with the affected managed wetland extractor.
217214
218215 (d) If a person is both a managed wetland extractor and a groundwater extractor for other purposes, any exemptions that apply to a managed wetland extractor shall apply only for groundwater extracted solely for managed wetland purposes.
219216
220217 (e) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a county with authority to issue those permits. A groundwater sustainability agency may request of the county, and the county shall consider, that the county forward permit requests for the construction of new groundwater wells, the enlarging of existing groundwater wells, and the reactivation of abandoned groundwater wells to the groundwater sustainability agency before permit approval.
221218
222219 (f) Subdivisions (b) to (d), inclusive, shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
223220
224221 SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.
225222
226223 SEC. 4. Section 10727.4 of the Water Code is amended to read:
227224
228225 ### SEC. 4.
229226
230227 10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.
231228
232229 10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.
233230
234231 10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:(a) Control of saline water intrusion.(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.(g) Well construction policies.(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.(l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.(m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:(1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.(2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.(n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.(o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.
235232
236233
237234
238235 10727.4. In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2, a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the following:
239236
240237 (a) Control of saline water intrusion.
241238
242239 (b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.
243240
244241 (c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.
245242
246243 (d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.
247244
248245 (e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.
249246
250247 (f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and removing impediments to, conjunctive use or underground storage.
251248
252249 (g) Well construction policies.
253250
254251 (h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup, groundwater recharge, in-lieu use, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling, conveyance, and extraction projects.
255252
256253 (i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section 10902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods to improve the efficiency of water use.
257254
258255 (j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal regulatory agencies.
259256
260257 (k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.
261258
262259 (l) Impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems.
263260
264261 (m) The plans impacts on, but not limited to, both of the following:
265262
266263 (1) Water supply and economic impacts on managed wetlands and managed wetland extractors.
267264
268265 (2) Water supply and economic impacts on small community water systems serving disadvantaged communities.
269266
270267 (n) A list of small community water systems that serve disadvantaged communities and extract water from the basin, the estimated population served by each of those systems, and the water consumption of each of those systems.
271268
272269 (o) A list of managed wetlands subject to the plan, the acreage of each of the wetlands, and water consumption of each wetland area.
273270
274271 SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
275272
276273 SEC. 5. Section 10730.2 of the Water Code is amended to read:
277274
278275 ### SEC. 5.
279276
280277 10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
281278
282279 10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
283280
284281 10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:(1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.(3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.(4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.(b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.(e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.(f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.(g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).
285282
286283
287284
288285 10730.2. (a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the costs of the following:
289286
290287 (1) Administration, operation, and maintenance, including a prudent reserve.
291288
292289 (2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and services.
293290
294291 (3) Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.
295292
296293 (4) Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the plan.
297294
298295 (b) Until a groundwater sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency may impose fees in accordance with the procedures provided in this section for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before January 1, 2015, is in effect.
299296
300297 (c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article XIII D of the California Constitution.
301298
302299 (d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced annually, the year in which the production of groundwater commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts to the basin.
303300
304301 (e) A groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee upon a small community water system serving a disadvantaged community or impose a fee for managed wetland purposes, provided the water use for each user does not increase above the extractors average annual extraction from 2015 to 2020, inclusive, as determined by a groundwater sustainability agency using recognized methods to establish average groundwater use.
305302
306303 (f) The power granted by this section is in addition to any powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other law.
307304
308305 (g) Subdivision (e) shall not apply to a groundwater basin with a groundwater sustainability plan that has been approved by the department after January 1, 2025, pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733) or, if applicable, with an interim plan pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735).