Laserfiche WebLink
Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Basin Groundwater Management Plan <br /> Northeastern San Joaquin County Groundwater Banking Authority— Organized in 2001, <br /> the Authority has provided a consensus-based forum to local, State, and federal water interests <br /> to work cooperatively with one voice to study, investigate, plan, and develop locally supported <br /> groundwater banking and conjunctive use projects in Northeastern San Joaquin County. <br /> The System Plan, completed in 2002, outlined specific groundwater recharge options into a <br /> conjunctive water management system with the capability of recharging up to 300,000 of/yr. <br /> Projects in the System Plan included the Freeport Interconnect Project, the Farmington <br /> Groundwater Recharge and Seasonal Habitat Project, the City of Stockton Delta Diversion <br /> Project and direct groundwater recharge through well injection and seasonal field flooding. <br /> Potentially new water supplies may come from surplus flows on the American River, Mokelumne <br /> River, Calaveras River, Littlejohns Creek, Stanislaus River, and the Delta. <br /> Also in 2002, the Authority continued the work of the ESJPWA and completed the Beckman <br /> Test Final Report. The Report concluded water injected at the site remained in the general <br /> vicinity and that the test area exhibited a high degree of injected water recoverability. Further <br /> studies are needed to evaluate long-term storage and the overall recoverability of injected water <br /> from the underlying aquifer. <br /> For over 30 years, the EBMUD and Sacramento County Water interests have fought over the <br /> future of the American River. In 2000, the parties agreed to a joint project whereby Sacramento <br /> interests and EBMUD would receive American River water on the Sacramento River near the <br /> town of Freeport. The project, coined the Freeport Regional Water Project, is expected to <br /> deliver water to the Mokelumne Aqueducts in Northeast San Joaquin County by 2008. The <br /> EBMUD is only allowed to receive American River water in the driest 35 percent of all years. In <br /> the remaining years, San Joaquin County could divert a significant amount of water through the <br /> Freeport Project. The Authority is currently in discussions with EBMUD on the development of <br /> the San Joaquin County Freeport Interconnect, a proposed interconnecting pipeline project, <br /> which would take advantage of this opportunity. Thus far, the Authority has commissioned a <br /> water availability analysis to determine the feasibility of amending a County water right <br /> application on the American River to coincide with the Freeport Project. <br /> County Groundwater Export Ordinance— In 2000, the Board of Supervisors adopted the <br /> Groundwater Export Ordinance to prevent the deliberate export of groundwater for use outside <br /> of the County and condition the extraction of banked groundwater by out-of-County partners <br /> without a permit. The Export Ordinance requires stringent monitoring and extraction protocols <br /> deemed necessary to protect adjacent landowners and underlying basin from adverse impacts. <br /> Ordinance Authority does not extend into the incorporated city limits of the County's <br /> municipalities. The Board of Supervisors has in the past indicated that a more workable form of <br /> the Groundwater Export Ordinance is possible should stakeholders propose changes in the <br /> context of a workable project. <br /> San Joaquin County Water Management Plan —Adopted in 2002, the San Joaquin County <br /> Flood Control and Water Conservation District facilitated the development of the San Joaquin <br /> County Water Management Plan. Over the course of almost two-years, stakeholders <br /> representing over 30 water interests, have met to synthesize a plan that addresses overdraft <br /> conditions in the Basin, prevent further degradation of groundwater quality due to saline water <br /> intrusion, increases water supply reliability, meets the projected year 2030 County water <br /> demand, identifies viable water supply and recharge options, identifies the institutional structure <br /> to implement the options. Since the Water Management Plan's adoption, the County has <br /> Northeastern San Joaquin County Section 1 <br /> Groundwater Banking Authority 35 Introduction <br />