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Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Basin Groundwater Management Plan <br /> The Farmington Program Base Project (Farmington Program) objective is to recharge an <br /> average of 35,000 of of water annually by directly recharging surface water on 800 to 1,200 <br /> acres of land in the area described above. The Farmington Program is a flexible program by <br /> which willing landowners with 20 to 100 acre parcels may enter into short-term and long-term <br /> agreements and receive market-based compensation for the use of their land for groundwater <br /> recharge. In addition all improvements are paid for through the Farmington Program. The <br /> arrangement allows the rotation of groundwater recharge practices with traditional land use <br /> making water a cash crop for farmers in the program. The Farmington Groundwater Recharge <br /> Program is currently seeking out landowners who are willing to participate in the program by <br /> providing fields that can be flooded. <br /> The planned capacity of the Farmington Program is approximately 35,000 of/yr. The following <br /> water sources are assumed available for the Farmington Program: <br /> • 10,000 of/year from Stanislaus River <br /> • 10,000 of/year from Littlejohns Creek <br /> • 5,000 of/year from Calaveras River <br /> • 10,000 of/year from Mokelumne River <br /> 8.3.2 City of Stockton Delta Water Supply Project <br /> In 1996, the City of Stockton filed a water right application with the SWRCB seeking to <br /> appropriate initially 20,000 are-ft per year of water from the Delta, increasing to 125,900 of per <br /> year in 2050. The application specifies a place of use that coincides with the adopted 1990 City <br /> of Stockton General Plan boundary as shown in Figure 8-22. The city filed the water right <br /> application under two legal authorities: California Water Code Section 1485, the recapturing of <br /> treated wastewater discharge in the Delta, and California Water Code Sections 11460 and <br /> 12200 et seq., area of origin provisions and the Delta Protection Act, respectively. The city <br /> currently discharges approximately 35,000 of per year of treated wastewater into the San <br /> Joaquin River. Diversions from the Delta are extremely contentious and therefore somewhat <br /> restrictive due to constraints under the State and the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA). <br /> The City of Stockton also expects to be limited by SWRCB Term 91 conditions, which limits <br /> diversion to when Delta outflow is higher than regulatory minimum requirements. (City of <br /> Stockton, 2003) In 2003 the City of Stockton completed the Delta Water Supply Project <br /> (DWSP) Feasibility Report. <br /> The DWSP consists of a new diversion structure in the delta at the southwestern tip of Empire <br /> Tract on the San Joaquin River, a raw water conveyance pipeline, a new water treatment plant <br /> along Eight Mile Road, treated water transmission facilities, and groundwater injection and <br /> extraction wells, as shown in Figures 8-23 and 8-24. The estimated capital costs of the facilities <br /> are: <br /> • River Intake and Pumps: $18 million <br /> • Raw Water Conveyance: $35 million <br /> • Water Treatment Plant (30 MGD): $59 million <br /> • Treated Water Pipelines: $9 million <br /> Northeastern San Joaquin County Section 8 <br /> Groundwater Banking Authority 137 Integrated Conjunctive Use Program <br />