HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-02-27 - Citizens Advisory Committee Meeting Agenda PacketYorba Linda
Water District
AGENDA
YORBA LINDA WATER DISTRICT
CITIZENS ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING
Monday, February 27, 2012, 8:30 AM
1717 E Miraloma Ave, Placentia CA 92870
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Daniel Mole, Chair
Bill Guse, Vice Chair
Lindon Baker
Carl Boznanski
Gus Bruner
Rick Buck
Oscar Bugarini Sr.
Fred Hebein
Joe Holdren
Modesto Llanos
Greg Myers
Cheryl Spencer- Borden
1. PUBLIC COMMENTS
Any individual wishing to address the committee is requested to identify themselves and state the matter on
which they wish to comment. If the matter is on this agenda, the committee Chair will recognize the individual for
their comment when the item is considered. No action will be taken on matters not listed on this agenda.
Comments are limited to matters of public interest and matters within the jurisdiction of the Water District.
Comments are limited to five minutes.
2. DISCUSSION ITEMS
This portion of the agenda is for matters such as technical presentations, drafts of proposed policies, or similar
items for which staff is seeking the advice and counsel of the Committee members. This portion of the agenda
may also include items for information only.
2.1. Introduction to Orange County Water District and the Groundwater Basin with Director
Roger Yoh and John Kennedy, Executive Director Engineering and Local Resources
2.2. Introduction to Metropolitan Water District with Director Brett Barbre
2.3. Future Agenda Items
Golden State Water Company
District Emergency Preparedness Efforts
District Public Affairs Efforts
3. ADJOURNMENT
3.1. The next meeting of the Citizens Advisory Committee will be held March 26, 2012 at 8:30
a.m.
Items Distributed to the Committee Less Than 72 Hours Prior to the Meeting
Pursuant to Government Code section 54957.5, non - exempt public records that relate to open session agenda items
and are distributed to a majority of the Committee less than seventy -two (72) hours prior to the meeting will be available
for public inspection in the lobby of the District's business office located at 1717 E. Miraloma Avenue, Placentia, CA
92870, during regular business hours. When practical, these public records will also be made available on the District's
internet website accessible at http: / /www.ylwd.com /.
Accommodations for the Disabled
Any person may make a request for a disability - related modification or accommodation needed for that person to be
able to participate in the public meeting by telephoning the Executive Secretary at 714 - 701 -3020, or writing to Yorba
Linda Water District, P.O. Box 309, Yorba Linda, CA 92885 -0309. Requests must specify the nature of the disability and
the type of accommodation requested. A telephone number or other contact information should be included so the
District staff may discuss appropriate arrangements. Persons requesting a disability - related accommodation should
make the request with adequate time before the meeting for the District to provide the requested accommodation.
ITEM NO. 2.1
AGENDA REPORT
Meeting Date: February 27, 2012
Subject: Introduction to Orange County Water District and the Groundwater Basin with
Director Roger Yoh and John Kennedy, Executive Director Engineering and
Local Resources
ATTACHMENTS:
Description: Type:
OCWD Presentation. Pdf PowerPoint Presentation Backup Material
SINCE 1933
Orange County
Water District
Director Roger Yoh
Water Agencies and
-- S U ies
Metropolitan Water District
(MWD) of Southern
California
Municipal Water District
of Orange County
(MWDOC)
Imported Water
Orange County
Water District (OCWD)
California Imported
I OF
Central
Valley 4LO
Project
I
1931 1
Water
cabrada
Rw
1939
Orange County Water District
AM--
• OCWD, formed in 1933, is
HA &" 410 ,__ responsible for managing
FULtHN t'(� and protecting the Orange
mX
HA l� -
P/,4H County groundwater
fir- r.-r - -- �r'-
L ANA loud
+F� basin
I L C*NNGF
V T 9Aa3
OCWD encompasses
. asses p
y,Wrp
-� AW 229,000 acres in the lower
2,1 N NGr - FnLWrnm }i 1F � � A F•:� �.� i
�J�ALW wACirkC � :�. � l._
-: } ' _ - �n r:# watershed of the Santa
Ana River (SAR)
x f.
� �h�L�fOf7�r �r�.
MACH 44A
Orange County Water District Bounda
r.. =... OCIND Bourpdar�
r � - ., � '„ fir: �.V � `' [mg+ •' � F .. y
6EAC`. L+i:U.Wl
t .iu.5x 5
AP3rR.{NR
W
M
*Orange County
groundwater basin
provides water for over
2.4 million people
'F
0IMTA I ReT:T'@T,,T&F.1 ■ ril t.TTiiF.i fro
1W IM
OCWD governed by a 10 person publically
elected board of directors
► Each year OCWD sets the percentage of
groundwater that can be pumped by retailers
(Basin Production Percentage - BPP)
► Each year OCWD sets a Replenishment
Assessment (RA) and Basin Equity
Assessment (BEA) for the cost of pumping
groundwater
h- www.ocwd.com
0IyTJlIi li�TiT-TFi:1 ■fiSt.TiTiFlfro
Non - adjudicated groundwater basin
No individuals /agencies own any rights to the
groundwater
Managed groundwater basin
Only non - adjudicated major groundwater
basin in Southern California
Any individual /agency can construct a
groundwater well
I
—7= -21111111
*Protect Water Quality *Manage Pumping *Replenish k3asin
Huntington Drinking Water Wells Anaheim
Beach
�► � �' Recharge Area
0'
1,000'
2,000'
3,000'
0 miles 5 10
►IL ^rn_Wne
_ - - -��_ _
- -- i
-Water measurement established by early
farmers
1 Acre -foot = 43,568 square foot area
covered with 1 foot of water
Approximately 1 football field
= 325,850 gallons
Santa Ana River (SAR) Watershed
Typical OCWD Water Supply Sources to
Recharge the Groundwater Basin (afy)
oricai
ft ^ ^IIW" I
� e
011iM
•
0
-50
�= -100
0
°o -150
-200
-250
-300
a� -350
O -400
a -450
-500
E -550
-600
a -650
700
C7 r M LL's 1` M � M LCD 1` M � M LCD 1` M � M LCD 1` M r M
co 1` 1` 1` 1` 1` w w w w w m m m m M 0 0 0 0 0 r r
� � � � � � � � � T— � � � � � � N N N N N N N
v
U)
='
O
CD
v
cQ
v
CD
Operational Recharge Facilities
Prado Wetlands
• i
C Imperial Inflatable Dam
r (Headgates)
ANA FJOR
i
Five Ce
I d table Dam
1,100 acres of recharge
°1 a
BA S facilities
250,000 afy of recharge
into groundwater basin
Santog.
AL
On River Recharge Area
Off River Recharge Area OCWD Recharge
Deep Basin Recharge Area w E Facilities
Diversion Pipeline s
CDNon- Waterbearing Formation H Inflatable Rubber Dam 3000 0 3000 Feet
G W R S
GROUNDWATER REPLENISHMENT SYSTEM
The Groundwater
Replenishment System
A joint project of the:
Orange County Water District and the
Orange County Sanitation District
1
I�1
SINCE 19]3
www.GWRSystem.com
► New 70 -MGD advanced water
purification facility
11
Takes treated sewer water that
otherwise would be wasted to the
ocean, purifies it to near distilled
quality and then recharges it into
the groundwater basin
Provides a new 72,000 acre -feet
per year source of water, which is
enough water for nearly 600,000
people
► Operational since January 2008
0
A .,i (I
Replenishm(
► New 70 -MGD advanced water
purification facility
11
Takes treated sewer water that
otherwise would be wasted to the
ocean, purifies it to near distilled
quality and then recharges it into
the groundwater basin
Provides a new 72,000 acre -feet
per year source of water, which is
enough water for nearly 600,000
people
► Operational since January 2008
0
A .,i (I
�E CC f
Source
Control
niancv Hasnonsih-11-It-IF
♦ Orange County Water District provides local water
retailers with a reliable, adequate, high - quality
groundwater supply at the lowest reasonable cost in an
environmentally responsible manner
Orange County Sanitation District protects public
health and the environment by providing effective
wastewater collection, treatment, and recycling
C91*u
Primary
Treatment
Secondary
Treatment
C�ZIVM
dva n ced Wate
Purification
Sewaae I ' I ' ' Reuse
0INTA I ZAi0I04.`1 1l :FwTi re r:M UP
Anaheim Recharge
Basins 0
Talbert Barrier
Seawater Injection Wells
.E
M
r
OCWD
GWRS
MF, RO, UV Treatment
Collection System
Primary and
- ondary Treatment
Discharge to Pacific Ocean
■
•
1--cation Process
Ultraviolet Light (UV)
Microfiltration (MF) Reverse Osmosis with Hydrogen Peroxide
(RO)
OCSD Seawater
�� � �`��� Barrier
Secondary �- �.� a e r
Effluent: r -�-
Normally
Goes to Recharge
Ocean Basins in
Anaheim
I IIW reate
Backwash in OCSD Outfall
Sent to OCSD
-Jurftfcation Stec
► Like a hollow straw with holes in the
sides 300 times smaller than human
hair
► Suction pulls the water from the
outside into the middle of the straw
► Removes any bacteria, protozoa and
suspended solids
► Excellent pre - treatment before
reverse osmosis (RO)
Second Purification Step
v
Prot"aft u L L
I!1
Bacteria ■ ■ . ■ . ■
°A
z_
Virus■■■■■■■■■■■
Most Organics ...... .
Most Inorganics ... , �.
Water Molecules ...... .
L L
111merse
U 'q J't
�Lrtlll�[� LPL
"Ic" k�
Ni.
d Pur-Ificafic
} � r
`- 4
Y
*44
�F
a
e ti � r � •+t � a' -
a
r
ao
Intense UV light and the addition of
hydrogen peroxide (1-12O2) destroys
any trace organic compounds that
may remain in the water
Overall a multiple barrier, redundant
approach fully endorsed by
regulatorsagencies
Seawater Intrusion
OCSD
Contribution,
$196,0
;5 Project Funding
Million Capital Co�
m �77
OCWDq
State Grants, Federal Grant,
$6990009000 $2090009000
M
Creates a new 1= water supply
► Reuses a wasted resource
Expands the seawater barrier
Increases water supply reliability
. Offsets imported water cutbacks
► Costs less than imported water
Saves half the energy over imported
water or desalinated seawater
Improves quality of water in the basin
R5 Expansion Pro-it;
► $137 million
Create additional 31,000 afy of new local
water
► Provide water for approximately 250,000
residents
► Construction underway
► Completion ~ December 2014
•INTA t
► Tours are available
► WWW.00WD.com
► WWW.GWRSystem.com
► Questions ?
Meeting Date:
Subject:
ATTACHMENTS:
AGENDA REPORT
February 27, 2012
ITEM NO. 2.2
Introduction to Metropolitan Water District with Director Brett Barbre
Name: Description: Type:
MWDOC Presentation. pdf PowerPoint Presentation Backup Material
Municipal Water District of Orange County
60 Years of Reliability through
Leadership and Innovation
February 2012
i
Director Brett R. Barbre
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
representing
Municipal Water District of Orange County
I WATER
PEI
ORANGE
GGLJNTY
6a Yr«rs n{ reli��a'r (195a' 20A)
►AI
_1)
Acre -foot of Water
Wm )d 7110 4141C
{
lq. 1Myit �yYS
I VMiew.
GI4TFdCT
ORANGE
COUNTY
bO
Yr« s of relia6ilitr tllmughrh+vlGr �mt195a nx�
■ 326,000 gallons
■ Enough water to cover 1
acre to a depth of 1 foot
■ One -year supply of water
for 2.5 families
Orange County uses
600,000 acre feet
annually
r
9
J
r
" ..
MUNICIPAL
WATER
--
DISTRICT
or
ORANGE
COUNTY
State N"
Water �
Project
Entitlemen *.
(1972)
Local Supp
,• 6p �u6!�
Where Southern California
Gets
500/o
Bay Delta Area
r & Recycling
:ion. and ��ti� " ",•:'...
Water
500/o Local
Transfers & Storage
Local Supplies
LA Aqueduct (1913)
Colorado River
Aqueduct (1. 41
Who are the players?
• DWR — State planning entity; operates the State Water
Project
• MET — Southern California importer of water from the
Colorado River and the State Water Project
• MWDOC — Planning and facilitation agency covering the
entire county except for the Three Cities (although we
work closely with them);
• Comprised of 28 member agencies
• One of MET's 26 member agencies
• Three Cities — Anaheim, Fullerton and Santa Ana { were'
original MET cities when MET was formed in 192' - --
�
ORANGE
GGLJNTY
L��
bY�,,,� »f relia6ilitr through le �+a'2 f �mt195a„ � �1
.-100
Who are the planers?
• OCWD — Groundwater management agency in
North Orange County (works closely with MWDOC);
■ Groundwater basin uses Santa Ana River flows, treated
wastewater and imported water for replenishment
purposes.
■ The basin produces over 300,000 AF per year
• Retailers — There are 32 retail agencies in Orange
County (water districts, cities, mutual water,
f
companies and investor owned utilities)
4
7
I Mum
WATER
oraTS.cT
COUNTY
COUNTY
Yr« s of relia6ilitr through rh+ vlGr (1951-2101 1
Where Orange County Gets its Water
Source
Natural Flows Rivers /Streams
Indirect Recycled (Santa Ana River)
GWRS Purified Water
Draw on OCWD Groundwater Storage
Recycled— Direct (landscape irrig.)
2009 -10 AF %
133,000
21
Mu m
46%
86,000
13
WXMM
Local
66,000
10
(23,000)
-4 (added storage)
37,000
6 •
Imported for Replenishment 26,000 4
Imported for Direct Use 254,000 40
Consumptive Use 579,000 90
Total
644"000 11'.
Mu m
WXMM
I
OtSTFUCT
or
ORANGE
GCLJNTY
bO Y�,,� »{ relia6ilitr tlimugh le�+��r f �mt195a „1
644"000 11'.
MWDOC
Member
Agencies
• 14 cities
• 11 water districts
• 2 private water
companies
• 1 community service
district
• Orange County Water
District
• Total = 29 water
L.
Golden
Store
wrsee ce.
Seel
bean
iionln Ann
rosnraln � �
Yelltr7
- Iry na It n p.
Hun[Ralvr 11es� Ylgler Pistrisr
H B Desa I 9eo• h Ccnsclldus C°
Vlxer Dist.
• Population = 2.3 million
orsTrracr -
'ORANGE
COUNTY
Lit
`tea Yrr�rs of relinhiliLr rhrarr84 Irk
b rrslrrp, c�ir+ Y+rrniml, and innot•nci `
I Pbtrict
N ewpr.rr eeeeH V ri Tem
wei ei o,.rn�,
6„ererd By Scarce Gls'rb:t� Mrre, Hipuel
Vla[er Bisiric[
Legeee.e I, County
War., Gietdc[
VIVIDOC Mernoer Agency
East Orange County Waler Dietnt (Wholesale)
0 Orange Cctnty Water Distri -1
Nan -MWDOC Service Area
L Inside MWDOC bul Oulside Retail Water Agency Boundary
Freeway a• Tollway
Pro?asec Freeway or Tel way
a
Trehaso
cancan
N'.ur
Pisrin
$Pra4liprtpNla
Niter Uslria
Ban
Cgpnrrertv
r nn h
1 � San 1
III elamella
Suu[ ?'Cae9
v'�r�, ❑�s,rl ��. .ti j
SOCOD
Desal
W +NNE
E
S
F411Pngre
Yvrha Linde r'Narer
if
6trene
�
cs -w.t,
Ia.k
Scnx.o ri'.1er '71enge Per
Mu,u iWa
plSUie1 �
�R
Cren9e
=ocw'e reareu
GirM rim
Lone
Is
G,S.w
iionln Ann
rosnraln � �
Yelltr7
- Iry na It n p.
Hun[Ralvr 11es� Ylgler Pistrisr
H B Desa I 9eo• h Ccnsclldus C°
Vlxer Dist.
• Population = 2.3 million
orsTrracr -
'ORANGE
COUNTY
Lit
`tea Yrr�rs of relinhiliLr rhrarr84 Irk
b rrslrrp, c�ir+ Y+rrniml, and innot•nci `
I Pbtrict
N ewpr.rr eeeeH V ri Tem
wei ei o,.rn�,
6„ererd By Scarce Gls'rb:t� Mrre, Hipuel
Vla[er Bisiric[
Legeee.e I, County
War., Gietdc[
VIVIDOC Mernoer Agency
East Orange County Waler Dietnt (Wholesale)
0 Orange Cctnty Water Distri -1
Nan -MWDOC Service Area
L Inside MWDOC bul Oulside Retail Water Agency Boundary
Freeway a• Tollway
Pro?asec Freeway or Tel way
a
Trehaso
cancan
N'.ur
Pisrin
$Pra4liprtpNla
Niter Uslria
Ban
Cgpnrrertv
r nn h
1 � San 1
III elamella
Suu[ ?'Cae9
v'�r�, ❑�s,rl ��. .ti j
SOCOD
Desal
W +NNE
E
S
About MWDOC
• Who we are
• Wholesale water supplier and resource planning agency
• Third largest member agency of Metropolitan Water
District of Southern California (MWD)
■ Service area:
• 600 square miles, 2.3 million residents
— Includes all of Orange County except Santa Ana, Anaheim and
Fullerton f
■ 29 client agencies:
• 14 cities • 1 community service district
• 11 water districts • 2 private water company
• 1 groundwater management agency
■ Governed by seven - member Board of Directors,
elected by the public
I Or
GIaTA1Cr
ORANGE
GALJNTY
Ye,,S le
»{ relia6ilitr through ,�4+A�r f �mt195a „1
i
.r
1�
r
About MWDOC
• What we do
• Metropolitan representation
• Regional reliability planning and facilitation agency
• Provides countywide water conservation programs
• Implements countywide water education school
program through partnership with Discovery
Science Center
• Facilitates countywide emergency preparedness
through the Water Emergency Response
Organization of Orange County (WEROC)
• Coordinates with local and regional water providers
including OCWD and retail water agencies
I °
OOANTY
GALJNTY
L��
6a Y""s n{ reli tbilitr tlimugh lerul +A�'Wlrr
FA
MWDOC PROCURES OUTSIDE FUNDING
CQu w- �
Water Use Efficiency Competitive Grants
Water Use Efficiency Metropolitan Credits
OCWD & OCSD Water Use Efficiency Funding
South County Study & Ocean Desalination
Natural Resources Protection
Emergency Response, Mitigation and Interconnections
Water Conservation Outreach and Education
Metropolitan Local Resources Program (LRP)
I �
%KnHC
GtSTSacT
ORANGE
COUNTY
Yr« s of relia6ilitr through r1A mt195a j1x ftf1ffi�
$ 8,526,387.00
$25,721,568.00
$ 3,517,397.00
$ 4,402.300.00
$ 574,000.00
$ 8,253,053.00
$ 317,581.00
$57,015,404.00
r
f
Total Outside Fundin
Received
$108.327,690.00
Insert Total MWDOC Budgets for 2001 -2010
to show MWDOC has brought in X times our
total cost for providing these services
I •,FA -Mx lnpL
vwTe
G14TFdCT
ORANGE
GGLJNTY
rV
6a Yr«rs n{ reliu6ilitr tlimugh lerul�+��'Wlrr �rn`i95a' ���
Id
l�
Major Water Supply Issues in California
• Regulatory- imposed pumping restrictions have reduced
State Water Project pumping in the past up to 50%;
• Long -term resolution of Bay -Delta fix is uncertain at this
time, but likely many years away
• Water recycling, development of other sources and
water conservation are ALL NEEDED to close the suppl
gap
4
i
• Ocean desalination s one new source that needs
v California n n other
to be developed in Ca e o as daI o g'
coastal States of the U.S.
WATn RrF+AL
AT ;R
I
£.'f Ik lCT
O
O
P RxArrP6
COU.TY
1
reli�a f �mt195a„
WHISKEY'S FOR DRINKING, WATER'S
FOR FIGHTING OVER...
ri::. : ►
MuencsRAVI
I VMTM.
ORANGE
GGLJNTY
Yr«rs of relia6ilitr through �'`�rh+�vlGr �mt195a j1x����
Battlegrounds for U s. Capitol
Water in California
_ Legislature
1 � � � ti � a��r • 77
Court Room
J •- 1
1
1•
---- - - - - --
• 1 '
14'
•f
tiM6�
Imported Water Su
• Delta Smelt
• Other Environmental Issues
• State Budget Issues
• Non - functional Legislature
• Bay -Delta Issues
■ lack of Agreement as to what to do
■ Fisheries /Levees /Other
■ Funding
■ 20 year process to fix
• Climate Change Hoax
I MuNlccvl�L
rvnTe�e
O"R"A" cr
COUNTY
GALJNTY
j
ly Issues
.j
1500
1000
500
0
N Re
c0 c0
0 0
T- Ir-
DPCI i nP in ❑
WATUR
G14TFdCT
ORANGE
COUNTY
w co CD co co 0 0 0 0 w co 0 O
0 0 0 0 G) G) G) O
T- T- T- T- T- T- T- N
1500
1006
500
Ponu latid
Delta Smelt
0 M = ^ .
OO OO OO OO O O O O O O O O O
O O O O O O O O O O O O O
Endangered Species Act —More to come
The Longfin Smelt
The Chinook Salmon
I -MU�dI L
WATER
0-A-"- CT
4F
COUNTY
COUNTY
Y�,,,� »{ relia6ilitr through le,��+��'�r f �mt195a „����1
Longfin Delta Smelt
Chinook Salmon
♦ State Water Project
being managed by
courts one endangered,
species at a time
Pumping restrictions
last year did not0__�
improve fisheries
2008 Court/Fisheries Ruling
Restricts conveyance when fish present
Ar
� tr -;
-Sy
LW 'wv+•"• .} �. Jam+ � �` -��.,a
-4r'
Ir
-Purdk "W
n
- . .•'i ' f -'J� *P�� • •�.{' J _ � � r� .� �.� _ �� �Y '-yam
ii_
Challenges to Colorado River
Growth in other
basin states
Over allocation
Impact of 8 year
drought
Treaty
agreements
with Mexico
Water quality
I
P
Colorado River Basin
i
UT
w N
`• { PPER
BASIN
? California
� Aquedual �
4 ;LAKE LEE
�+ La�ARgOff' FERRY
A Aqueduct EAO
kk
Colorado
River
Aqmdmt
All
cvwi'-
lio
AgOrvn
Cabal
POWELL
LAKE MOHAVE �_ LOWER
ASiN
A
Tumo
I
W
I
o
i
I
I
I
I
I
N I
i
MEXICO
MUiIlCiGl�L
W0.7C1!
I
OIS'[IR1CT
or
PRANGS
GGUNTY
Anni
b
YILVS 4 relia6ilirr tllmugh le4derJ4,A L ' f
I
P
Colorado River Basin
i
UT
w N
`• { PPER
BASIN
? California
� Aquedual �
4 ;LAKE LEE
�+ La�ARgOff' FERRY
A Aqueduct EAO
kk
Colorado
River
Aqmdmt
All
cvwi'-
lio
AgOrvn
Cabal
POWELL
LAKE MOHAVE �_ LOWER
ASiN
A
Tumo
I
W
I
o
i
I
I
I
I
I
N I
i
MEXICO
NEW Sources of Su
ly in OC
Groundwater Replenishment System
Purifies wastewater to better than drinking water
standards and sinks it in the OCWD Groundwater Basin
Ocean Desalination —Two projects in Orange
County under study at this time
Dana Point
♦ Huntington Beach
♦ Recycling — Treated
other purposes
I 1NATER Fl�L
wnTen
orsTmcr
ORANGE
COUNTY
j
i /
wastewater for irrigation (an
1�
Ocean Desal in Orange County
• Huntington Beach — 50 MGD facility being proposed
by Poseidon Resources Corporation using the power
plant intake and outfall
0
Dana Point —15 MGD facility using a subsurface
intake system and existing wastewater outfall, under
development by MWDOC and five local entities
San Onofre— Existing nuclear power facility — future
consideration
COUNTY
COUNTY
b, " "S »{ relia6ilitr tlimugh le �+�� r f �mt195a 1
California Countin
On Desalination
• State Water Plan Update —need for 500,000
AF /Year of desalination by 2030
• MET —old IRP planning on 150,000 AF /Year of
desalination by 2020; new IRP goals being
established NOW
• Regional and local water agencies adopting
desalination as part of water management
plans
• Approximately 20 seawater desalination
projects in various stages of development
I ATIi I WR AT ;
O �.'f R,11 PRANPPU T
20 - 80 MGD
10.0 MGD
oxu i MUldC1 , -.10 1
2 -5 MGD
Santa Cruz �.
10 - 20 MGD Moss i_andinWMonIerey
3.0 MGD
Bay R&jgio"[ P ruled
Marina Coast Water OisinCL
7.5 MGD Sand Citv
1.1 MGD Cambria
Proposed
Seawater
Dealinat 'lon
Plants in
California
(Currently, no plans) PIa a Del Roy
20.0 MGD EI $ogundo 4.
10.0 MGD Lonq Beaoh
50.0 MGD Huntington Demb
15.0 MGD Cana P.
(Currently, no plans) San Onofre
(^.
50.0 MGD
San Diego CWA 50 —100 MGD
South
Orange
Coastal
Ocean
Desalination
Project
Concept
Project
Layout
I M
WATQR'
O14TPdOT
'
ORANGE
GOLJNTY
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Drill
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.. Slant Well Schematic
Ocean Surfac�
Land Surface
................. ...............................
feet:
Main Aquifer
40 to 130 feet ±
4F
ORANGE
GGLJNTY
bors n{ reli tbilitr
,. by , r � �h +D. �vllrrinrniion, and inno�nt'�"
Ocean Botto
1 I Infiltration
Test Slant Well
325 feet
.*
-, P-1 "
0
South Orange
Coastal Ocean
Desalination
Project
• 15 million gallons per day
meets about 25% of the
2025 water demands for:
1. Laguna Beach
2. San Clemente
3. San Juan Capistrano
4. Moulton Niguel WD
5. South Coast WD
• All five agencies can
physically receive the
water into their systems
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PRxANG6
COUNTY
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LOw�f FeerJ�f
u.� Regional Imported Water distribution System
,. Serving South Orange C❑unty
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Struggles with Ocean Desal
• Availability of funding
• Water Supply Allocation Issues
• Permitting &environmental issues — 32 permits ±
and much uncertainty at the State Level
• Energy — production and consumption
I WMTBR .
ora-rsacr
ORANG22 E
GG
Yr«rs of relia6ilitr through �'`�rh+�vlGr �mt195a j1x����
r
Water Supply Strategy Tomorrow's Reliability
Maintain diverse resource options
Increase recycling and desalination
Strengthen partnerships to develop and manage
additional water supplies.
Invest in water quality and infrastructure,
including Delta improvements
Link investments to energy, wastewater, storm
water, and watershed management
{
Maintain financial strength — Pensions, OPEB, �
etc. r
t,
WATUR
�l orassncT
ORANGE
COUNTY
Yr« s of relia6ilitr through rh+ vlGr (1951-2101 1
J
Urban Water Management Plans
• Required by law to be prepared every five years
• Purpose is to document where your water supplies will be coming
from over the next 20 years
• Reliability needs to be demonstrated for average conditions,
single dry year and multiple dry year events
• Water allocations are acceptable for balancing supplies and
demands
• Identify planned water supply projects including recycling and
desal
• Detail water supply shortage contingency planning for 50%
reduction and interruption of service
• Describe current and planned water demand managemen __" -�
measu res �-
I t
EE
ORANGE
COUNTY
bYILVS 4 relia6ilitr through rh+ vlGr �mt195a j1x �
Integrated Resources Plan.
• Main Regional Planning Document by MET for determining
the sources of supply to meet demands in Southern
California out to 2035
• Cooperative effort between MET, their member agencies
and the retailers in Southern California to develop a broad
resources mix to meet existing and future demands,
including Water Use Efficiency efforts
• The 2010 report concludes
that the region
is reliable
under
all conditions out to 2035,
but allocations
and draws
from ,
storage may be needed in certain years
• Acknowledges there is a great deal of uncertainty in t
future
I Mum
WATER
oraTSacT
COUNTY
COUNTY
Yr« s of relia6ilitr through rh+ vlGr (1951-2101 1
r'
OC Report Card
• The aging infrastructure requires that investments
continue over the long run - planning + investments
= reliability; this means rates will continue to
increase over time
• OC has done a pretty good job of investing in the
local and regional water systems
• However, water supply reliability in OC is affected
by occurrences affecting imported supplies from
outside the region
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GALJNTY
Y�,,,� »{ relia6ilitr through le,��+��'�r f �mt195a „����1
-9r. .