California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB1330 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Assembly June 26, 2024 Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1330Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)February 16, 2024An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of, and to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1330, as amended, Archuleta. Urban retail water supplier: water use.Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which until the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.SEC. 2.Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.SEC. 3.Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.SEC. 4.SEC. 2. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.SEC. 5.SEC. 3. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.SEC. 6.SEC. 4. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.SEC. 7.SEC. 5. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.SEC. 8.SEC. 6. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.SEC. 9.SEC. 7. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 10.SEC. 8. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.SEC. 11.SEC. 9. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 12.SEC. 10. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
1+Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1330Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)February 16, 2024An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of 10609.33 of, to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1330, as amended, Archuleta. Urban retail water supplier: water use.Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would authorize an urban retail water supplier to submit reports by January 1 or July 1 whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the State Water Resources Control Board, board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.SEC. 2. Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.36.Urban wholesale water suppliers shall include in the urban water management plans required pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610) an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve the water use reductions required by this part.SEC. 3. Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.40.Urban water retail suppliers shall report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans submitted pursuant to Section 10631. The data shall be reported using a standardized form developed pursuant to Section 10608.52.SEC. 4. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.SEC. 2.SEC. 5. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.SEC. 6. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.SEC. 3.SEC. 7. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.SEC. 4.SEC. 8. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.SEC. 9. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 10. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.SEC. 5.SEC. 11. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 12. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly June 26, 2024 Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1330Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)February 16, 2024An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of, and to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1330, as amended, Archuleta. Urban retail water supplier: water use.Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which until the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1330Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)February 16, 2024An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of 10609.33 of, to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1330, as amended, Archuleta. Urban retail water supplier: water use.Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would authorize an urban retail water supplier to submit reports by January 1 or July 1 whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the State Water Resources Control Board, board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly June 26, 2024 Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024
5+ Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024
66
7-Amended IN Assembly June 26, 2024
87 Amended IN Assembly June 13, 2024
98 Amended IN Senate April 24, 2024
109 Amended IN Senate March 19, 2024
1110
1211 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1312
1413 Senate Bill
1514
1615 No. 1330
1716
1817 Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)February 16, 2024
1918
2019 Introduced by Senator Archuleta(Coauthors: Senators Alvarado-Gil and Newman)
2120 February 16, 2024
2221
23-An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of, and to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.
22+An act to amend Sections 1846.5, 10609.20, 10609.22, 10609.24, 10609.26, 10609.30, 10609.32, and 10609.33 of 10609.33 of, to add Section 10609.7 to, and to repeal Sections 10608.36 and 10608.40 of, the Water Code, relating to water.
2423
2524 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
2726 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2827
2928 SB 1330, as amended, Archuleta. Urban retail water supplier: water use.
3029
31-Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which until the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.
30+Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.This bill would require the department to collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would authorize an urban retail water supplier to submit reports by January 1 or July 1 whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.Existing law authorizes the State Water Resources Control Board, board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.This bill would instead extend the time by which the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.
3231
3332 Existing law, the Urban Water Management Planning Act, requires every urban water supplier to prepare and adopt an urban water management plan, as specified. Existing law requires an urban wholesale water supplier to include in the urban water management plans an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve water use reductions. Existing law requires urban water retail suppliers to report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans.
3433
35-
36-
3734 This bill would repeal the above-described requirements relating to urban wholesale water suppliers and urban water retail suppliers under an urban water management plan.
3835
39-
40-
41-Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.
36+Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. year thereafter, and to be composed of the sum of specified data, including aggregate residential water use. Existing law requires each urban retail water suppliers water use objective to be composed of the sum of specified aggregate estimates, including efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with water used by commercial water users, industrial water users, institutional water users, and large landscape water users (CII). Existing law requires an urban retail water supplier to submit reports to the Department of Water Resources, as provided, by the same dates.
4237
4338 This bill would require the department to, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, as specified. The bill would require the department, if appropriate, to recommend to the State Water Resources Control Board for adoption a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use regarding an ongoing performance standard for those water uses.
4439
45-This bill would require the department to update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
40+This bill would require the department to collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas and to determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area by January 1, 2028, and once every 5 years thereafter, as specified, and post the data on its internet website. The bill would authorize an urban retail water supplier to submit reports by January 1 or July 1 whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. The bill would specify that an urban retail water supplier, in its calculations of its urban water use objectives, shall include aggregate indoor and outdoor residential water use. The bill would require, as part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier to provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
4641
47-Existing law authorizes the board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.
42+Existing law authorizes the State Water Resources Control Board, board, on or after January 1, 2024, to issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2025, to issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. Existing law authorizes the board, on and after January 1, 2026, to issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective.
4843
49-This bill would instead extend the time by which until the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.
44+This bill would instead extend the time by which the board is authorized to issue informational orders to on or after January 1, 2026, issue a written notice to on or after January 1, 2027, and issue a conservation order to on or after January 1, 2028.
5045
5146 Existing law requires the department, in coordination with the board, to submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective on or before January 1, 2028.
5247
5348 The bill would instead require the report to be submitted to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2030.
5449
5550 Existing law provides that it is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting.
5651
5752 This bill would extend this date to not later than July 1, 2031.
5853
5954 Existing law provides that an urban retail water supplier who violates certain regulations after November 1, 2027, may be liable for specified penalties, as provided.
6055
6156 This bill would instead provide that urban retail water suppliers may be liable for specified penalties for violating those regulations after November 1, 2029.
6257
6358 Existing law, the Administrative Procedure Act, sets forth the requirements for the adoption, publication, review, and implementation of regulations by state agencies.
6459
6560 This bill would require the board to enact emergency regulation, as specified, in accordance with the provisions of the act.
6661
6762 ## Digest Key
6863
6964 ## Bill Text
7065
71-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.SEC. 2.Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.SEC. 3.Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.SEC. 4.SEC. 2. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.SEC. 5.SEC. 3. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.SEC. 6.SEC. 4. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.SEC. 7.SEC. 5. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.SEC. 8.SEC. 6. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.SEC. 9.SEC. 7. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 10.SEC. 8. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.SEC. 11.SEC. 9. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 12.SEC. 10. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
66+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.SEC. 2. Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.36.Urban wholesale water suppliers shall include in the urban water management plans required pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610) an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve the water use reductions required by this part.SEC. 3. Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.40.Urban water retail suppliers shall report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans submitted pursuant to Section 10631. The data shall be reported using a standardized form developed pursuant to Section 10608.52.SEC. 4. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.SEC. 2.SEC. 5. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.SEC. 6. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.SEC. 3.SEC. 7. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.SEC. 4.SEC. 8. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.SEC. 9. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 10. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.SEC. 5.SEC. 11. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 12. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
7267
7368 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
7469
7570 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
7671
7772 SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.
7873
7974 SECTION 1. Section 1846.5 of the Water Code is amended to read:
8075
8176 ### SECTION 1.
8277
8378 1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.
8479
8580 1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.
8681
8782 1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:(1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.(b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:(1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.(2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.(c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.(d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.
8883
8984
9085
9186 1846.5. (a) An urban retail water supplier who commits any of the violations identified in subdivision (b) may be liable in an amount not to exceed the following, as applicable:
9287
9388 (1) If the violation occurs in a critically dry year immediately preceded by two or more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years or during a period for which the Governor has issued a proclamation of a state of emergency under the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1 of Title 2 of the Government Code) based on drought conditions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.
9489
9590 (2) For all violations other than those described in paragraph (1), one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each day in which the violation occurs.
9691
9792 (b) Liability pursuant to this section may be imposed for any of the following violations:
9893
9994 (1) Violation of an order issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6.
10095
10196 (2) Violation of a regulation issued under Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10609) of Part 2.55 of Division 6, if the violation occurs after November 1, 2029.
10297
10398 (c) Civil liability may be imposed by the superior court. The Attorney General, upon the request of the board, shall petition the superior court to impose, assess, and recover those sums.
10499
105100 (d) Civil liability may be imposed administratively by the board pursuant to Section 1055.
106101
102+SEC. 2. Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.36.Urban wholesale water suppliers shall include in the urban water management plans required pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610) an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve the water use reductions required by this part.
103+
104+SEC. 2. Section 10608.36 of the Water Code is repealed.
105+
106+### SEC. 2.
107+
108+10608.36.Urban wholesale water suppliers shall include in the urban water management plans required pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610) an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve the water use reductions required by this part.
107109
108110
109111
112+Urban wholesale water suppliers shall include in the urban water management plans required pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610) an assessment of their present and proposed future measures, programs, and policies to help achieve the water use reductions required by this part.
110113
111-SEC. 4.SEC. 2. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
112114
113-SEC. 4.SEC. 2. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:
114115
115-### SEC. 4.SEC. 2.
116+SEC. 3. Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.10608.40.Urban water retail suppliers shall report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans submitted pursuant to Section 10631. The data shall be reported using a standardized form developed pursuant to Section 10608.52.
117+
118+SEC. 3. Section 10608.40 of the Water Code is repealed.
119+
120+### SEC. 3.
121+
122+10608.40.Urban water retail suppliers shall report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans submitted pursuant to Section 10631. The data shall be reported using a standardized form developed pursuant to Section 10608.52.
123+
124+
125+
126+Urban water retail suppliers shall report to the department on their progress in meeting their urban water use targets as part of their urban water management plans submitted pursuant to Section 10631. The data shall be reported using a standardized form developed pursuant to Section 10608.52.
127+
128+
129+
130+SEC. 4. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
131+
132+SEC. 4. Section 10609.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:
133+
134+### SEC. 4.
116135
117136 10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
118137
119138 10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
120139
121140 10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.(b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
122141
123142
124143
125144 10609.7. (a) The department shall, no later than January 1, 2035, conduct necessary studies and investigations regarding the efficiency performance of newly constructed residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use to determine whether these landscapes use the same amount of water for which they were designed, and if they use more water, an explanation for these divergences.
126145
127146 (b) The department shall recommend a revised standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, if appropriate, regarding an ongoing performance standard for existing residential landscapes and landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, for adoption by the board in accordance with this chapter.
128147
129-SEC. 5.SEC. 3. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
148+SEC. 2.SEC. 5. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
130149
131-SEC. 5.SEC. 3. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:
150+SEC. 2.SEC. 5. Section 10609.20 of the Water Code is amended to read:
132151
133-### SEC. 5.SEC. 3.
152+### SEC. 2.SEC. 5.
134153
135-10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
154+10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
136155
137-10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
156+10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
138157
139-10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
158+10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.(5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.(d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.(2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.(3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:(A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.(B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:(A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.(B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.(C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.(e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.(f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.(3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
140159
141160
142161
143162 10609.20. (a) Each urban retail water supplier shall calculate its urban water use objective no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.
144163
145164 (b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use conditions for the previous calendar or fiscal year.
146165
147166 (c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use objective shall be composed of the sum of the following:
148167
149168 (1) Aggregate estimated efficient indoor residential water use.
150169
151170 (2) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor residential water use.
152171
153172 (3) Aggregate estimated efficient outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters or equivalent technology in connection with CII water use.
154173
155174 (4) Aggregate estimated efficient water losses.
156175
157176 (5) Aggregate estimated water use in accordance with variances, as appropriate.
158177
159178 (d) (1) An urban retail water supplier that delivers water from a groundwater basin, reservoir, or other source that is augmented by potable reuse water may adjust its urban water use objective by a bonus incentive calculated pursuant to this subdivision.
160179
161180 (2) The water use objective bonus incentive shall be the volume of its potable reuse delivered to residential water users and to landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use, on an acre-foot basis.
162181
163182 (3) The bonus incentive pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be limited in accordance with one of the following:
164183
165184 (A) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 15 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at an existing facility.
166185
167186 (B) The bonus incentive shall not exceed 10 percent of the urban water suppliers water use objective for any potable reuse water produced at any facility that is not an existing facility.
168187
169188 (4) For purposes of this subdivision, existing facility means a facility that meets all of the following:
170189
171190 (A) The facility has a certified environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration, or negative declaration on or before January 1, 2019.
172191
173192 (B) The facility begins producing and delivering potable reuse water on or before January 1, 2022.
174193
175194 (C) The facility uses microfiltration and reverse osmosis technologies to produce the potable reuse water.
176195
177196 (e) (1) The calculation of the urban water use objective shall be made using landscape area and other data provided by the department and pursuant to the standards, guidelines, and methodologies adopted by the board. The department shall provide data to the urban water supplier at a level of detail sufficient to allow the urban water supplier to verify its accuracy at the parcel level.
178197
179198 (2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an urban retail water supplier may use alternative data in calculating the urban water use objective if the supplier demonstrates to the department that the alternative data are equivalent, or superior, in quality and accuracy to the data provided by the department. The department may provide technical assistance to an urban retail water supplier in evaluating whether the alternative data are appropriate for use in calculating the suppliers urban water use objective.
180199
200+(f)The department shall collect and update data for outdoor residential landscapes and CII landscapes at least once every 10 years. The department shall post the data on its internet website.
201+
202+
203+
181204 (f) (1) The department shall update methodologies and criteria for calculating residential and CII landscape areas, if necessary to accomplish the purposes of this chapter, and determine landscape area measurements within each urban retail water suppliers service area to be completed by January 1, 2028, and once every five years thereafter.
182205
183-(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy coverage data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating existing trees in existing residential landscapes and CII water use landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters.
206+(2) Landscape area measurements determined pursuant to paragraph (1) shall, no later than January 1, 2039, include tree canopy data for purposes of calculating a variance for water use associated with irrigating trees in existing residential and CII water use with dedicated irrigation meters.
184207
185208 (3) The department shall post landscape area measurement data on its internet website.
186209
187-SEC. 6.SEC. 4. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.
210+SEC. 6. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.
188211
189-SEC. 6.SEC. 4. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:
212+SEC. 6. Section 10609.22 of the Water Code is amended to read:
190213
191-### SEC. 6.SEC. 4.
214+### SEC. 6.
192215
193-10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.
216+10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.
194217
195-10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.
218+10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.
196219
197-10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(4) Aggregate water losses.
220+10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.(b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.(c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:(1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.(2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.(2)(3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.(3)(4) Aggregate water losses.
198221
199222
200223
201224 10609.22. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall calculate its actual urban water use no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter.
202225
203226 (b) The calculation shall be based on the urban retail water suppliers water use for the previous calendar or fiscal year.
204227
205228 (c) Each urban water suppliers urban water use shall be composed of the sum of the following:
206229
207230 (1) Aggregate indoor residential water use.
208231
209232 (2) Aggregate outdoor residential water use.
210233
234+(2)
235+
236+
237+
211238 (3) Aggregate outdoor irrigation of landscape areas with dedicated irrigation meters in connection with CII water use.
239+
240+(3)
241+
242+
212243
213244 (4) Aggregate water losses.
214245
215-SEC. 7.SEC. 5. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
246+SEC. 3.SEC. 7. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
216247
217-SEC. 7.SEC. 5. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:
248+SEC. 3.SEC. 7. Section 10609.24 of the Water Code is amended to read:
218249
219-### SEC. 7.SEC. 5.
250+### SEC. 3.SEC. 7.
220251
221-10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
252+10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
222253
223-10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
254+10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
224255
225-10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
256+10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:(1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.(2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.(3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.(4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.(5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.(b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.(c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.(d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
226257
227258
228259
229-10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:
260+10609.24. (a) An urban retail water supplier shall submit a report to the department no later than January 1, 2024, and by January 1 or July 1 every year thereafter, whether reporting is submitted on a calendar year or fiscal year basis. every year thereafter. The report shall include all of the following:
230261
231262 (1) The urban water use objective calculated pursuant to Section 10609.20 along with relevant supporting data.
232263
233264 (2) The actual urban water use calculated pursuant to Section 10609.22 along with relevant supporting data.
234265
235266 (3) Documentation of the implementation of the performance measures for CII water use.
236267
237268 (4) A description of the progress made towards meeting the urban water use objective.
238269
239270 (5) The validated water loss audit report conducted pursuant to Section 10608.34.
240271
241272 (b) The department shall post the reports and information on its internet website.
242273
243274 (c) The board may issue an information order or conservation order to, or impose civil liability on, an entity or individual for failure to submit a report required by this section.
244275
245276 (d) As part of the report to be submitted in 2026, each urban retail water supplier shall provide a narrative that describes the water demand management measures that the supplier plans to implement to achieve its urban water use objective by January 1, 2030.
246277
247-SEC. 8.SEC. 6. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
278+SEC. 4.SEC. 8. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
248279
249-SEC. 8.SEC. 6. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:
280+SEC. 4.SEC. 8. Section 10609.26 of the Water Code is amended to read:
250281
251-### SEC. 8.SEC. 6.
282+### SEC. 4.SEC. 8.
252283
253284 10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
254285
255286 10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
256287
257288 10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.(2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.(3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.(4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.(b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.(2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.(3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.(d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
258289
259290
260291
261292 10609.26. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2026, the board may issue informational orders pertaining to water production, water use, and water conservation to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. Informational orders are intended to obtain information on supplier activities, water production, and conservation efforts in order to identify technical assistance needs and assist urban water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objectives.
262293
263294 (2) In determining whether to issue an informational order, the board shall consider the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet the urban water use objective.
264295
265296 (3) The board shall share information received pursuant to this subdivision with the department.
266297
267298 (4) An urban water supplier may request technical assistance from the department. The technical assistance may, to the extent available, include guidance documents, tools, and data.
268299
269300 (b) On and after January 1, 2027, the board may issue a written notice to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective required by this chapter. The written notice may warn the urban retail water supplier that it is not meeting its urban water use objective described in Section 10609.20 and is not making adequate progress in meeting the urban water use objective, and may request that the urban retail water supplier address areas of concern in its next annual report required by Section 10609.24. In deciding whether to issue a written notice, the board may consider whether the urban retail water supplier has received an informational order, the degree to which the urban retail water supplier is not meeting its urban water use objective, information provided in the report required by Section 10609.24, and actions the urban retail water supplier has implemented or will implement in order to help meet its urban water use objective.
270301
271302 (c) (1) On and after January 1, 2028, the board may issue a conservation order to an urban retail water supplier that does not meet its urban water use objective. A conservation order may consist of, but is not limited to, referral to the department for technical assistance, requirements for education and outreach, requirements for local enforcement, and other efforts to assist urban retail water suppliers in meeting their urban water use objective.
272303
273304 (2) In issuing a conservation order, the board shall identify specific deficiencies in an urban retail water suppliers progress towards meeting its urban water use objective, and identify specific actions to address the deficiencies.
274305
275306 (3) The board may request that the department provide an urban retail water supplier with technical assistance to support the urban retail water suppliers actions to remedy the deficiencies.
276307
277308 (d) A conservation order issued in accordance with this chapter may include requiring actions intended to increase water-use efficiency, but shall not curtail or otherwise limit the exercise of a water right, nor shall it require the imposition of civil liability pursuant to Section 377.
278309
279-SEC. 9.SEC. 7. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
310+SEC. 9. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
280311
281-SEC. 9.SEC. 7. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:
312+SEC. 9. Section 10609.30 of the Water Code is amended to read:
282313
283-### SEC. 9.SEC. 7.
314+### SEC. 9.
284315
285-10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
316+10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
286317
287-10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
318+10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
288319
289-10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3)(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4)(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5)(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6)(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7)(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
320+10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.(a) The report shall describe all of the following:(1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
290321
291322
292323
293-10609.30. On or before January 10, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.
324+10609.30. On or before January 10, 2024, 2029, the Legislative Analyst shall provide to the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and the public a report evaluating the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. The board and the department shall provide the Legislative Analyst with the available data to complete this report.
294325
295326 (a) The report shall describe all of the following:
296327
297328 (1) The rate at which urban retail water users are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.
298329
299-(2)Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.
330+(2) The Issues identified regarding the accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.
331+
332+(3) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.
333+
334+(4) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.
335+
336+(5) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
337+
338+(6) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.
339+
340+(7) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.
341+
342+(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
343+
344+SEC. 10. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
345+
346+SEC. 10. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:
347+
348+### SEC. 10.
349+
350+10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
351+
352+10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
353+
354+10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
300355
301356
302357
303-(3)
304-
305-
306-
307-(2) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.
308-
309-(4)
310-
311-
312-
313-(3) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.
314-
315-(5)
316-
317-
318-
319-(4) The early indications of how implementing this chapter might impact the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
320-
321-(6)
322-
323-
324-
325-(5) Recommendations, if any, for improving statewide urban water use efficiency and the standards and practices described in this chapter.
326-
327-(7)
328-
329-
330-
331-(6) Any other issues the Legislative Analyst deems appropriate.
332-
333-(b) A report to be submitted pursuant to this section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
334-
335-SEC. 10.SEC. 8. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
336-
337-SEC. 10.SEC. 8. Section 10609.32 of the Water Code is amended to read:
338-
339-### SEC. 10.SEC. 8.
340-
341-10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
342-
343-10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
344-
345-10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:(a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.(b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.(c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.(d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.(e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.(f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
346-
347-
348-
349-10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:
358+10609.32. It is the intent of the Legislature that the chairperson of the board and the director of the department appear before the appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature on or around January 1, 2026, not later than July 1, 2031, and report on the implementation of the water use efficiency standards and water use reporting pursuant to this chapter. It is the intent of the Legislature that the topics to be covered include all of the following:
350359
351360 (a) The rate at which urban retail water suppliers are complying with the standards, and factors that might facilitate or impede their compliance.
352361
353362 (b) What enforcement actions have been taken, if any.
354363
355364 (c) The accuracy of the data and estimates being used to calculate urban water use objectives.
356365
357366 (d) Indications of the economic impacts, if any, of the implementation of this chapter on urban water suppliers and urban water users, including CII water users.
358367
359368 (e) The frequency of use of the bonus incentive, the volume of water associated with the bonus incentive, value to urban water suppliers of the bonus incentive, and any implications of the use of the bonus incentive on water use efficiency.
360369
361370 (f) An assessment of how implementing this chapter is affecting the efficiency of statewide urban water use.
362371
363-SEC. 11.SEC. 9. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
372+SEC. 5.SEC. 11. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
364373
365-SEC. 11.SEC. 9. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:
374+SEC. 5.SEC. 11. Section 10609.33 of the Water Code is amended to read:
366375
367-### SEC. 11.SEC. 9.
376+### SEC. 5.SEC. 11.
368377
369378 10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
370379
371380 10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
372381
373382 10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.(b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
374383
375384
376385
377386 10609.33. (a) On or before January 1, 2030, the department, in coordination with the board, shall submit a report to the Legislature on the progress of urban retail water suppliers towards achieving their urban water use objective pursuant to Section 10609.20.
378387
379388 (b) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed under subdivision (a) is inoperative on January 1, 2034, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
380389
381390 (2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
382391
383-SEC. 12.SEC. 10. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
392+SEC. 12. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
384393
385-SEC. 12.SEC. 10. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
394+SEC. 12. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.(b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.
386395
387-SEC. 12.SEC. 10. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.
396+SEC. 12. (a) The State Water Resources Control Board shall adopt, by emergency regulation, amendments to Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, as may be required pursuant to Senate Bill 1330 of the 202324 Regular Session.
388397
389-### SEC. 12.SEC. 10.
398+### SEC. 12.
390399
391400 (b) The emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, any emergency regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board pursuant to this section shall be filed with, but not be repealed by, the Office of Administrative Law and shall remain in effect until revised by the State Water Resources Control Board.