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California State Water Resources Control Board adopts emergency water regulations

mark handler

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California State Water Resources Control Board adopts emergency water regulations

http://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=d712c68d-a131-4b60-a036-2951e117bba1

May 11 2015

On May 5, 2015, the California State Water Resources Control Board adopted emergency regulations to implement Governor Jerry Brown’s April 1, 2015, executive order. That order required a 25 percent reduction in the use of potable water statewide through February 28, 2016. The regulations become effective on June 1, 2015, and last until February 28, 2016.

In an attempt to achieve the required reductions, the regulations include end-user requirements that apply to residential water users and businesses with separate requirements for public water suppliers. On May 7, 2015, the State Water Board’s regulations were also adopted by the California Public Utilities Commission for application to investor-owned water utilities and their customers. The California Building Standards Commission and Department of Housing and Community Development are expected to adopt emergency regulations by June 1, 2015, concerning irrigation systems for new housing developments.

End-User Requirements

The adopted regulations include prohibitions on various activities except where necessary to address an immediate health and safety need or to comply with the terms or conditions of state and federal permits.

The regulations prohibit residential end users from doing the following:

Allowing runoff into streets and sidewalks.

Using a hose to wash cars and other vehicles unless the hose has a shut-off valve.

Using potable water to wash down sidewalks and driveways.

Using potable water in decorative fountains that do not recirculate the water.

Irrigating within 48 hours of measurable rainfall.

Irrigating ornamental turf on street medians with potable water.

The regulations require the following for businesses:

Developers: Outdoor irrigation systems for new residential and commercial developments that use potable water must comply with requirements established by the California Building Standards Commission and Department of Housing and Community Development.

Restaurants: May not provide water to customers unless they request it.

Hotels and motels: Must provide guests the option of not having towels and linens laundered daily.

Commercial and industrial properties not served by a water supplier (e.g., those that pump their own water): Must either limit outdoor irrigation of ornamental landscapes or turf with potable water to no more than two days per week or reduce water usage by 25 percent between June 2015 and February 2016.

A violation of any of these measures can result in fines by the State Water Board of up to $500 per day, in addition to any other applicable fines.

Requirements for Water Suppliers

The regulations require water suppliers to:

Prepare and submit written reports to the State Water Board by the fifteenth of each month. The reports must include information about customer and water usage and require a comparison of the public water supplier’s total use for the month compared with the same month in 2013.

Promptly notify customers of leaks in portions of the water system under the customer’s control.

Water suppliers serving more than 3,000 service connections must reduce monthly potable water usage by an amount assigned within a system of eight tiers, which includes reduction requirements that range from 4 percent to 36 percent per month. Water suppliers serving fewer than 3,000 service connections must either reduce water usage by 25 percent or restrict outdoor irrigation to no more than two days per week. These reductions are based on water usage as of 2013 (which may complicate new developments that increase water usage).

Failure to reach set reduction targets or other violations can result in a variety of enforcement actions by the State Water Board against water suppliers from informational orders to cease and desist orders. Violations of cease and desist orders are subject to civil liability of up to $10,000 per day of violation.

Next Steps

The regulations leave a great deal of discretion to water suppliers to figure out how to achieve the required reductions. Given the deadlines in the State Water Board’s regulations, water suppliers are expected to take action in short order. In addition, the State Water Board will be working with water suppliers on how to implement Provision 8 of the governor’s executive order, which encourages water suppliers to implement water rate structures that promote conservation. That task became more complex, however, with the recent appellate court decision striking down a tiered rate system.
 
Note that these restrictions are only being applied to the common people, they use 20% of the water, the other 80% goes to agriculture and is flushed into the ocean to protect a 3" fish smelt. As I read about the crisis I continually read that water districts are voting to "buy" more water, the question comes as if we can buy it it must be there, who are we buying it from?

The answer is complex, California has water rights granting ownership of water through three mechanisms, riparian rights, senior water rights grandfathered in, and junior water rights, the major owner of senior water rights is Stewart Resnick, quite a guy, he entered UCLA broke as his father's business had failed, by the time he had his law degree he was already a millionaire through a janitorial business he started and he bought Franklin Mint with the profits from the janitorial business. He hedged his business ventures by buying land from oil companies and saw the future of the environmental business so started planting pomegranate trees claiming to save the earth from the oil industry, he then discovered senior water rights and started buying them up, he now owns California and all the politicians in it, as any smart businessman knows you have to created a need to sell a product, so to create the need you create a shortage, so the environmentalists' agenda of blocking dams and demanding water to save the fish fit right into his agenda of owning water and charging water districts ever greater amounts for it, as well as providing all the water he needs for his ever expanding orchards for export to mostly China where there is a huge population of consumers. Some call them the "Vulgarians".

The Resnicks own all Calfiornia politicians, from Jerry Brown to Diane Feinstein, in 2014 we voted yes for Prop 1 which guarantees the Resnicks many billions more that we will be paying for in increased water bills, Here is a good left wing take on them calling them the Koch Bros of water.. Remember how the oil industry ran their prices sky high with the peak oil lie propagated throughout the environmental community? We had the cartel release oil to get back at Putin and prices came tumbling down, the Resnicks are doing the same with water. Meanwhile while the Resnicks have all the water they want the common people are being harassed by the gestapo when they water their lawns, flush their toilets, and take their showers.
 
It's the difference between running out of water on November 31st or December 1st.

It makes no difference.

Brent.
 
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