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A letter of
information to my constituents:
Under the Brown Act, only two Supervisors
can meet with any group at one time. I was not permitted to attend the
meeting with Supervisors Kobseff and Cook with the POW group without
violating that act. I regularly attended POW meetings and made myself
accessible for dialogue until Mr. Chenoweth made it quite clear that I
was not wanted at their meetings. I have regularly corresponded and
conferred with POW research members on many occasions.
It appears that people may have been
misinformed about the proposed groundwater ordinance and follow up
resolution. The ordinance lets a local group petition the Board for it
to establish a local advisory committee to the Board of Supervisors.
That committee looks closely at data and makes recommendations to the
Board of Supervisors on possible policy or action. Any recommendations
by the committee would be considered in a full public session (open to
public comment) by the Board. The Resolution that will follow
establishes such a committee for Scott Valley. It has been requested by
the Scott River Watershed Council. (Here is the proposed ordinance
http://www.co.siskiyou.ca.us/BOS/DOCS/agenda/2010/Questys/MG4013/AS4022/AI9417/DO9418/DO_9418.pdf)
It is a way for Scott Valley water users to
take control of what is currently happening on the regional and state
level with their groundwater. Studies have already been done and a model
created by Dr. Harter's student on the relationship between ground and
surface water flows and temperature. It was scheduled to be presented to
the North Coast Water Quality Control Board (who paid for the study) in
October. Have you seen it? I haven't. I would like us to have local
control over that data, how it is presented and what is to be done with
it. In addition, the Dept. of Water Resources is just completing a study
of groundwater use in Scott and Shasta Valley. Have you been involved in
the process? I haven't. It is being done at the direction of the State
without input or control from local County government.
The existing Scott River TMDL (Total
Maximum Daily Load limits for water temperature and sediment) draws a
link between groundwater use, cold water instream flows for fish and
riparian vegetation. The tribes and environmentalists have been
clammoring for a moratorium on groundwater use in the Valley. The PCFFA
and ELF have already sued the County demanding that we regulate and
limit groundwater use under the Public Trust Doctrine because it
allegedly affects instream flows for fish. The state has passed a law
requiring that if some local entity does not step forward and volunteer,
then January 1, the DWR will monitor and report groundwater levels in
each hydrologic zone. Each year, several bills are introduced in the
legislature to require well metering and reporting to the state by all
groundwater users. They have been vetoed in the past several years by
the Governor. If we get Mr. Brown as Governor, it is likely that they
will no longer be vetoed. I feel that local control of data and what is
done with it is part of the answer. I do not feel that we will be served
by doing nothing and having these processes go on uncontrolled and
picked up at the regional and state levels.
Contrary to what has been circulated by POW,
the Board of Supervisors has no intention of metering wells or charging
for water use. An ordinance to establish an advisory committee does not
lead to those things. In fact, we have had an existing groundwater
ordinance in place for more than a decade and no one has seen any
regulation on their use in Scott Valley come from it.
Article 1. - Declaration of Findings and Purpose
Sec. 3-13.101.
- Regulation of the extraction of groundwater for use outside the
basin from which it was extracted.
Sec. 3-13.101. - Regulation
of the extraction of groundwater for use outside the basin from
which it was extracted.
The Board finds and
declares:
(a) The groundwater basins
underlying Siskiyou County—including the Klamath River Valley Basin,
the Butte Valley Basin, the Shasta Valley Basin, and the Scott River
Valley Basin—have historically provided the people and lands of
Siskiyou County with water for agricultural, domestic, municipal and
other purposes that are likely to increase in importance in the
future.
(b) The Board recognizes the
principle of correlative rights developed in the case law of
California, providing that water may be appropriated from a
groundwater basin only if the groundwater supply is surplus and
exceeds the reasonable and beneficial needs of overlying users.
(c) Siskiyou County has a paramount
right and duty to govern the management and extraction of
groundwater resources within its jurisdiction in order to protect
the health, welfare, and safety of the residents of the County. It
is essential for these purposes, and for the public benefit of the
State, that groundwater resources of Siskiyou County be protected
from harm resulting from the excessive extraction of groundwater for
use outside the basin from which it was extracted, until such time
as needed additional surface water supplies are obtained for use on
lands of the County, or overdrafting is alleviated, to the
satisfaction of the Board. Conserving the water resources in the
groundwater basins underlying Siskiyou County, to avoid overdrafts
and maximize the long-term beneficial use of groundwater resources,
best serves the health, safety and welfare of residents of Siskiyou
County.
(d) Much of the economic production
of the County depends upon the use of groundwater.
(e) The groundwater of Siskiyou
County also provides a significant amount of water for domestic uses
throughout the County.
(f) The groundwater of Siskiyou
County has been and will continue to be a vital part of the economic
well-being and stability of the County.
(g) Because of the need for
increased water supply to meet future needs within the County, and
because surface water supplies obtained in the future may need to be
used conjunctively with available local groundwater for reasonable
and beneficial local uses, it is vital that the County's groundwater
supply and quantity be preserved.
(h) The County will undertake as
resources permit to develop a County water plan to more specifically
address water availability, needs and usages in an attempt to foster
prudent water management practices to avoid significant adverse
overdraft-related environmental, social, and economic impacts.
(i) It is essential for information
gathering and monitoring purposes, and for the protection of the
County's groundwater resources, that the County adopt a permit
process addressing the excessive extraction of groundwater for use
outside the basin from which it was extracted.
(j) In adopting and codifying this
groundwater management ordinance the County does not intend to limit
other authorized means of managing Siskiyou County groundwater, and
intends to work cooperatively with interested local agencies to
further develop and implement joint groundwater management
practices.
(k) The groundwater basins
underlying Siskiyou County form significant water resources that
must be managed in trust, and must be conserved so that they may be
placed to the reasonable and beneficial uses of all potential users,
while avoiding the waste and unreasonable use of these resources.
(l) Siskiyou County is the only
local agency overlying all of the groundwater basins within the
County.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
201. - Definitions.
Sec. 3-13.201. - Definitions.
"Aquifer" means a geologic
formation that stores, transmits and yields significant quantities of
water to wells and springs.
"Board" means the Board of
Supervisors of Siskiyou County.
"Commission" means the
Siskiyou County Planning Commission.
"County" means the County of
Siskiyou.
"Director" means the Planning
Director or his designee.
"District" means a District
wholly or in part located within the boundaries of the county, which is
a purveyor of waters for agricultural, domestic, or municipal use.
"Groundwater" means all water
beneath the surface of the earth within the zone below the water table
in which the soil is completely saturated with water, but does not
include water which flows in known and definite channels.
"Groundwater basin" means any
basin identified in the current edition of the California Department of
Water Resources' Bulletin No. 118, including any amendments, but does
not include a basin in which the average well yield, excluding any
domestic wells supplying water to a single unit dwelling, is less than
100 gallons per minute. Groundwater basins underlying Siskiyou County
include the following: the Klamath River Valley Basin, the Butte Valley
Basin, the Shasta Valley Basin, and the Scott River Valley Basin.
"Groundwater Management Act"
means Water Code Section 10750 et seq.
"Historical practice" means
the consistent or predominant practice of an applicant within seven (7)
years preceding the operative date of this chapter.
"Hydraulic gradient" means the
slope of the water table.
"Hydrology" means the origin,
distribution, and circulation of water through precipitation, stream
flow, infiltration, groundwater storage, and evaporation.
"Overdraft" means the
condition of a groundwater supply in which the amount of water withdrawn
by pumping exceeds the amount of water replenishing the supply over a
period of time and also the point at which extractions from the supply
exceed its safe yield plus any temporary surplus.
"Percolation" means the
movement of water through the soil to the groundwater table.
"Permeability" means the
capability of the soil or another geologic formation to transmit water.
"Piezometric surface" means
the surface to which the water in a confined aquifer will rise.
"Porosity" means voids or open
spaces in alluvium and rocks that can be filled with water.
"Recharge" means flow to
groundwater storage from precipitation, irrigation, infiltration from
streams, spreading basins and other sources of water.
"Safe yield" means the maximum
quantity of water which can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater
supply under a given set of conditions without causing overdraft or
adverse water quality conditions. Specifically safe yield is the amount
of water which can be withdrawn without:
(1) Exceeding in any calendar year the
long-term mean annual water supply of the basin (considering all sources
of recharge and withdrawal);
(2) Lowering water levels so as to make
further drilling of water wells uneconomical;
(3) Causing water pumped from the basin
to deteriorate below drinking water standards;
(4) Violating water rights or
restrictions in pumpage in the groundwater basin as established by court
adjudication or application of state or federal law;
(5) Producing other threats to health
and safety or producing other environmental damage.
"Specific capacity" means the
volume of water pumped from a well in gallons per minute per foot of
drawdown.
"Spreading water" means
discharging native or imported water to a permeable area for the purpose
of allowing it to percolate to the zone of saturation. Spreading,
artificial recharge and replenishment all refer to operations used to
place water in a groundwater table.
"Transmissivity" means the
rate of flow of water through an aquifer.
"Usable storage capacity"
means the quantity of groundwater of acceptable quality that can be
economically withdrawn from storage.
"Water table" means the
surface or level where groundwater is encountered in a well in an
unconfined aquifer.
"Water year" means the year
beginning March 1 and ending the last day of the following February.
"Zone of saturation" means the
area below the water table in which the soil is completely saturated
with groundwater.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.301. - Permit
required for groundwater extraction for use outside the basin from which
it was extracted.
It is unlawful for any person,
firm, corporation, or governmental agency (except an agency of the
United States, to the extent, if any, that federal law preempts this
chapter) to extract groundwater by any artificial means from any of the
groundwater basins underlying the County, directly or indirectly, for
use outside the basin from which it was extracted, without first
obtaining a written permit as provided in this chapter. This chapter
shall not apply to the extraction of groundwater (1) for use within the
District boundaries of a District which is in part located within County
and in part in another County (or Counties) where such extraction
quantities and use are consistent with historical practices of the
District, or (2) for extractions to boost heads for portions of District
facilities, consistent with historical practices of the District, or (3)
for bottling or transporting bottled water by a commercial bottling
water enterprise, or both. The applicant shall have the burden of
supporting an assertion of an historical practice with competent
evidence. This exemption for commercial bottled water does not create an
exemption for water that is extracted and exported for bottling at a
location other than in Siskiyou County.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.302. - Application
for a permit.
An application for a permit
shall be filed with the Director on forms provided by the Director and
shall contain all information required by the Director. Concurrently, a
request for environmental review shall be filed as required by
applicable County guidelines. The application for a permit and request
for environmental review shall be accompanied by the fees which shall be
established from time to time by the Board. The information the Director
requires of an applicant must include, but is not limited to, the
following:
(a) Location, maximum extraction rate,
depth and all other information required in the Water Well Drillers'
Report (California Water Code, section 13751) of each well, including
observation wells owned by the extractor;
(b) Location, planned monthly extraction
rate, and depth of each well proposed for operations;
(c) Delineation of the time periods
within the applicable groundwater basin in which each well is proposed
for operation;
(d) Description of the adverse
environmental effects of the extraction, by individual well, groups of
wells (if applicable), and by the extractor's entire operation's
cumulative effects;
(e) Description of any proposed or
feasible uses designed to mitigate any adverse environmental effects of
the extraction;
(f) Intended beneficial uses of the
extracted groundwater and related surface supplies, by individual well,
groups of wells (if applicable), and by the extractor's entire
operation;
(g) Description by quantification and
location of each end use of the needs of the extractor which the
extraction is designed to meet;
(h) Description of alternatives
available to the extractor to meet the needs for which the extraction is
proposed, including any available types and amounts of water
conservation.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.303. - Procedures for
processing.
(a) Within ten (10) calendar days of
filing of the permit application, or as soon thereafter as practicable,
the Director shall publish notice in a newspaper of general circulation
in Siskiyou County and post a notice on the departmental public bulletin
board that an application has been filed, shall send a copy of the
notice to the Board of Supervisors, the Districts and Cities within the
County and to any interested party who has made a written request to the
Director for such notice within the last twelve (12) calendar months.
The Director shall review the application to determine whether it is
complete for purposes of proceeding under the County guidelines adopted
pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act requirements.
(b) The Director may review the matter
of the application with the affected County departments, with the staff
of the State Department of Water Resources, with the staff of the
Regional Water Quality Board - Central Valley and North Coast Regions,
and with any interested local water agency within whose boundary the
proposed activity will occur. If the applicant is applying to pump
groundwater from a District, City, or the unincorporated territory in
which a groundwater management plan has been adopted pursuant to the
Groundwater Management Act, the Director shall consider a groundwater
management plan or any other relevant information provided by the
District, City, or other local agency. Any interested person or agency
may provide comments relevant to the matter of the extraction of
groundwater. Comments shall be submitted within forty-five (45) days of
the date of mailing the notice of filing the permit application.
(c) The environmental review shall be
undertaken in accordance with the California Environmental Quality Act
and County guidelines, to include cumulative and social or economic
effects resulting from a physical change in the environment. All costs
of the environmental review shall be the responsibility of the
applicant.
(d) Upon completion of the environmental
review, the Director shall forward the application together with any
written comments received, environmental documentations, and the
Director's recommendations, to the Commission. Upon receipt of the
Director's recommendations, the Commission shall immediately set a
public review on the issuance of the permit which shall be noticed
pursuant to Government Code Section 6061 and may not be held within
fifteen (15) days of the time that the Commission receives the
recommendation from the Director.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.304. - Public review
and Planning Commission recommendation to Board concerning issuance of
permit.
(a) Rules of evidence. Formal rules of
evidence shall not apply to the public review of the application, but
the Commission may establish such rules as will enable the expeditious
presentation of the matter and relevant information thereto. At the
Commission's public review, the applicant shall be entitled to present
any oral or documentary evidence relevant to the application, and the
applicant shall have the burden of proof of establishing the facts
necessary for the Commission to make the required findings. The
Commission may request any additional information it deems necessary for
its decision, the cost of which, if any, shall be borne by the
applicant. The Commission shall also hear relevant evidence presented by
other interested persons and entities, the Director, other County staff,
and the public.
(b) Elements of permit review.
(1) The Commission shall consider all
effects that the granting of the permit application would have on the
affected aquifer including, but not limited to, the hydraulic gradient,
hydrology, percolation, permeability, piezometric surface, porosity,
recharge, safe yield, specific capacity, spreading waters,
transmissivity, usable storage capacity, water table and zone of
saturation.
(2) The Commission shall make a
recommendation to the Board as to whether the extraction will not cause
or increase an overdraft of the groundwater underlying the County, will
not adversely affect the long-term ability for storage or transmission
of groundwater within the aquifer; will not exceed the safe yield of the
groundwater underlying the County; will not otherwise operate to the
injury of the reasonable and beneficial uses of overlying groundwater
users; is not otherwise in compliance with Water Code Section 1220; will
not result in an injury to a water replenishment, storage, or
restoration project operated in accordance with statutory authorization;
and will not produce other environmental damage.
(3) The Commission shall recommend to
the Board of Supervisors whether the permit should be granted and what
appropriate conditions should be imposed upon the permit so as to
prohibit overdraft or other adverse conditions, and may impose other
conditions that it deems necessary for the health, safety, and welfare
of the people of the County in accordance with the requirements of this
chapter.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.305. - Granting of
permit.
(a) Review by Board of Supervisors. Upon
receipt of the Planning Commission's recommendations, the Board of
Supervisors shall immediately set a public review on the issuance of the
permit, which shall be noticed pursuant to Government Code Section 6061,
and may not be held within fifteen (15) days of the time that the Board
receives the recommendation of the Commission.
(b) Rules of evidence before Board of
Supervisors. At the Board's consideration of the application, formal
rules of evidence shall not apply and the Board may establish such
additional rules as will enable the expeditious presentation of the
matter and relevant information thereto. At the Board's review, the
applicant shall be entitled to present any oral or documentary evidence
relevant to the application, shall also hear relevant evidence presented
by other interested persons and entities, the Director, other County
staff, and the public, and the applicant shall have the burden of proof
of establishing the facts necessary for the Board to make the required
findings.
(c) Elements of Board of Supervisors'
permit review. The permit may only be granted by the Board if a majority
of the total membership of the Board finds and determines that the
extraction will not cause or increase an overdraft of the groundwater
underlying the County; will not adversely affect the long-term ability
for storage or transmission of groundwater within the aquifer; will not
exceed the safe yield of the groundwater underlying the County and will
not otherwise operate to the injury of the reasonable and beneficial
uses of overlying groundwater users; is otherwise in compliance with
Water Code Section 1220; will not result in an injury to a water
replenishment, storage, or restoration project operating in accordance
with statutory authorization; and will not produce other environmental
damage. If the permit is to be granted, the Board shall impose
appropriate conditions upon the permit so as to prohibit overdraft or
other adverse conditions, and may impose other conditions that it deems
necessary for the health, safety, and welfare of the people of the
County.
(d) Limitation of groundwater
extraction. Permits for extraction of groundwater, other than where
extraction is a part of a groundwater replenishment program, shall limit
groundwater extraction to no more than the demonstrated reasonable
historical use or in an amount not to exceed what is required to
maintain the public health, safety, and welfare of the people of
Siskiyou County, whichever is less. Other conditions in the permit may
include, but are not limited to, requirements for observation,
monitoring wells, or both.
(e) Mitigation. Notwithstanding the
foregoing elements of permit review, the Board of Supervisors may issue
the permit if the Commission finds that the applicant has provided for
mitigation which will offset any adverse effect that would be produced.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.306. - Reapplication
after permit denial.
Reapplication for a permit
which has been denied may not be filed with the Director until the
following water year and must be accompanied with information that
demonstrates a significant change in conditions in the groundwater,
change in the proposed extraction, or both.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.307. - Challenge to
approved permit.
(a) Any interested party or public
entity may challenge the continuation of the Board approved permit
during the term of the permit when information exists that:
(1) There is a violation of the
conditions of the permit; or,
(2) The permit was not issued in
accordance with the procedure requirements of this chapter; or
(3) Extraction of groundwater pursuant
to this permit:
(i) Causes or increases an overdraft in
the basin, or
(ii) Brings about or increases salt
water intrusion, or
(iii) Adversely affects the long-term
ability for storage or transmission of groundwater, or
(iv) Exceeds the safe yield of the
groundwater, or
(v) Operates to the injury of the
reasonable and beneficial uses of overlying groundwater users, or,
(vi) Is in violation of Water Code
Section 1220, or
(vii) Results in an injury to a water
replenishment, storage, or restoration project operating in accordance
with statutory authorization, or
(viii) Produces other environmental
damage.
(b) A challenge pursuant to this section
is commenced by filing a written request with the Director which alleges
any of the above situations and generally describes the supporting facts
for such allegation. In such event, the Director shall within ten (10)
days of receipt of such challenge, give notice of the challenge to the
Commission, the permittee, appellant, to any interested party who filed
a written request for such notice within the past twelve (12) months,
and also the Districts and Cities, within the County, which have
boundaries overlying or immediately adjacent to the location of the
permitted extraction. The Commission's decision may be to deny the
challenge, grant the challenge and terminate the permit, or to establish
modified conditions to the permit.
(c) The standard for review shall be
substantial evidence. The burden of proof is upon the person or entity
extracting the groundwater.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.308. - Duration of
permit.
All permits shall be valid for
a term set by the Board of Supervisors, not to exceed three (3) water
years from the date of the issuance of the permit, or, if the permit is
for extraction as part of a conjunctive use program that has been
approved by the Board, the permit shall not exceed the length of the
term of the program. For purpose of calculation, the water year in which
the permit is granted shall not be counted in determining the three-year
time period if less than four months remain in the then water year.
Provided, however, nothing contained in this chapter nor in the
conditions of the permit shall be construed as to give exclusive right
to groundwater to permittee nor establish a compensable right in the
event that the permit is subsequently discontinued or modified by the
Board after a hearing on a challenge to the permit.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Sec. 3-13.309. - Limitation of
permit.
(a) The permit process of this chapter
is not to be construed as a grant of any right or entitlement but rather
the permit evidences that the health, welfare, and safety of the
residents of the County will not be harmed by the extraction of
groundwater from any of the groundwater basins underlying the County for
use outside the basin from which it was extracted.
(b) The permit does not waive compliance
with any other applicable provision of federal, state or local laws or
regulations.
(c) Upon the adoption of a groundwater
management plan or similar plan affecting a particular groundwater basin
or aquifer within Siskiyou County, as approved by the Board of
Supervisors, compliance with the provisions addressing extractions
authorized pursuant to that plan shall be deemed to comply with the
permitting requirements of this chapter.
(d) No permit should be denied where
that denial would cause an unreasonable use or waste of water, an
unconstitutional taking without just compensation, or any other
violation of the United States or California Constitutions.
(e) The permitting requirements of this
chapter shall be waived when applying them would delay effective
response to a general emergency declared by the Governor or the Siskiyou
County Board of Supervisors. "General emergency," as used herein, refers
to a sudden, unexpected occurrence, involving a clear and imminent
danger, demanding immediate action to prevent or mitigate loss of, or
damage to, life, health, property, or other essential public services.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
c. 3-13.401. -
Inspection.
Sec. 3-13.401. - Inspection.
The Director, with good cause,
may at any and all reasonable times enter any and all places, property
and enclosures, for the purposes of making examinations and
investigations to determine whether any provision of this chapter is
violated.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Article 5. - Effective Date as to Cities
Sec. 3-13.501. -
Effective date.
Sec. 3-13.501. - Effective
date.
The provisions of this chapter
shall become effective in the incorporated portions of the cities within
Siskiyou County upon adoption by each city of an ordinance which makes
the provisions of this chapter applicable to the incorporated area or
which independently establishes an ordinance incorporating compatible
provisions.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Article 6. - Violations
Sec. 3-13.601. -
Civil penalty.
Sec. 3-13.601. - Civil penalty.
The County may elect to
proceed with a civil action against a violator, including injunctive
relief. Any person or entity who violates this chapter shall be subject
to fines of up to Five Thousand ($5,000) Dollars per separate violation.
A person shall be deemed to have committed separate violations for each
and every day or portion thereof during which any such violation is
committed, continued, or permitted as well as for each and every
separate groundwater well with which any such violation is committed,
continued, or permitted.
(§ I, Ord. 98-15,
eff. August 14, 1998; § I, Ord. 01-16, eff. September 6, 2001)
Marcia Armstrong, Supervisor District 5
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