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SR0087014_SSNL
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2600 - Land Use Program
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SR0087014_SSNL
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Last modified
4/23/2024 9:12:12 AM
Creation date
8/17/2023 1:11:21 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2600 - Land Use Program
FileName_PostFix
SSNL
RECORD_ID
SR0087014
PE
2602
STREET_NUMBER
18163
Direction
S
STREET_NAME
CARROLTON
STREET_TYPE
RD
City
RIPON
Zip
95366
APN
24538026
ENTERED_DATE
8/1/2023 12:00:00 AM
SITE_LOCATION
18163 S CARROLTON RD
P_LOCATION
99
P_DISTRICT
005
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Basin Groundwater Management Plan <br /> near the community of Peters. The Lower Farmington Canal is connected to Mormon Slough by <br /> a 78-inch pipeline where water can be re-diverted for irrigation. The 78-inch pipeline also <br /> interconnects with the Bellota Pipeline enabling high-quality New Melones water to be conveyed <br /> to the SEWD Water Treatment Plant for delivery to customers in the City of Stockton. Figure 8- <br /> 12 illustrates the New Melones Conveyance System. <br /> The Goodwin Tunnel, completed in 1992, is approximately 3.3 miles long and 14 feet in <br /> diameter, with a design flow capacity of 850 cfs. It originates on the north bank of the <br /> Stanislaus River, just upstream from Goodwin Diversion Dam in Calaveras County. The <br /> Goodwin Tunnel connects with the Upper Farmington Canal, an open trapezoidal channel that <br /> extends approximately 7.9 miles to its current terminus near Shirley Creek. Water then flows <br /> through the natural creek system of Shirley, Hoods, and Rock Creeks where it finally enters the <br /> Farmington Flood Control Reservoir. The maximum capacity of the Natural Canal system is <br /> approximately 550 cfs. The Upper Farmington Canal was envisioned to extend northward to the <br /> proposed South Gulch Reservoir where excess water from the Stanislaus River could be stored <br /> and conveyed through the Calaveras River System (Farmington , 2000). <br /> The Peters Pipeline is a proposed addition to the New Melones Conveyance System. The <br /> Peters Pipeline is a 6-mile, 60-inch diameter pipeline that will be located parallel to the existing <br /> 54-inch diameter Bellota Pipeline from the 78-in pipeline at Mormon Slough to the Water <br /> Treatment Plant. Figure 8-13 illustrates the proposed Peters Pipeline route. Water conveyed in <br /> Peters Pipeline will be used to increase the delivery capacity at the SEWD Water Treatment <br /> Plant. A series of turnouts and laterals from the Peters Pipeline will enable SEWD to serve <br /> surface water to areas traditionally reliant on groundwater through integration with the <br /> Farmington Program. The average annual increase in water delivery by the New Melones <br /> Conveyance System is approximately 7,500 of/yr. The total cost of the Peters Pipeline Project <br /> is $7,401,260. SEWD has been selected to receive a Proposition 13 grant for 50% of the <br /> project cost. Local cost share for the Peters Pipeline Project will come from available funds of <br /> the New Melones Conveyance Project. <br /> 8.2.4 South County Water Supply Program <br /> The South County Water Supply Program (South County Program) is a cooperative effort <br /> between SSJID and the cities of Escalon, Manteca, Lathrop, and Tracy. The goals of the South <br /> County Water Supply Program are to: <br /> 1. Provide a safe and reliable supplemental water supply for South San Joaquin County; <br /> 2. Put to beneficial use conserved water from SSJID entitlements; <br /> 3. Keep conserved water within SSJID and San Joaquin County; and <br /> 4. Reduce the heavy reliance on groundwater for the urban areas of South San Joaquin <br /> County. <br /> As previously noted, SSJID has pre-1914 rights to Stanislaus River water. Water served to the <br /> participating cities is made available from the implementation of conservation practices, more <br /> efficient means of irrigation by SSJID, and through the loss of irrigated agriculture to planned <br /> urban growth. The South County Program consists of an intake facility at Woodward Reservoir, <br /> a 44 MGD state-of-the-art membrane filtration water treatment plant just west Woodward <br /> Reservoir near Dodds Road, and over 40 miles of pipe ending in the City of Tracy. A map of the <br /> project can be seen in Figure 8-14. Phase I of the South County Program will serve up to <br /> Northeastern San Joaquin County Section 8 <br /> Groundwater Banking Authority 123 Integrated Conjunctive Use Program <br />
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