Amended in Senate August 7, 2014

Amended in Senate August 4, 2014

Amended in Senate June 17, 2014

Amended in Assembly April 22, 2014

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 1739


Introduced by Assembly Member Dickinson

(Principal coauthor: Senator Pavley)

(Coauthor: Assembly Member Rendon)

February 14, 2014


An act to amend Sections 65352 and 65352.5 of, and to add Section 65350.5 to, the Government Code, and to amend Sectionsbegin insert 348,end insert 1120,begin insert 1552,end insert 1831, 10927, 10933, and 12924 of, to add Sections 113, 1529.5, and 10750.1 to, to add Part 5.2 (commencing with Section 5200) to Division 2 of, and to add Part 2.74 (commencing with Section 10720) to Division 6 of, the Water Code, relating to groundwater.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 1739, as amended, Dickinson. Groundwater management.

(1) The California Constitution requires the reasonable and beneficial use of water. Existing law establishes various state water policies, including the policy that the people of the state have a paramount interest in the use of all the water of the state and that the state is required to determine what water of the state, surface and underground, can be converted to public use or be controlled for public protection.

This bill would state the policy of the state that groundwater resources be managed sustainably for long-termbegin delete water supplyend delete reliability and multiple economic, social,begin delete orend deletebegin insert andend insert environmental benefits for current and future beneficial uses. This bill would state that sustainable groundwater management is best achieved locally through the development, implementation, and updating of plans and programs based on the best available science.

(2) Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources, in conjunction with other public agencies, to conduct an investigation of the state’s groundwater basins and to report its findings to the Legislature not later than January 1, 2012, and thereafter in years ending in 5 and 0. Existing law requires the department to identify the extent of monitoring of groundwater elevations that is being undertaken within each basin or subbasin and to prioritize groundwater basins and subbasins.

This bill would require the department, in consultation with the Department of Fish and Wildlife, to identify and develop prioritization criteria for the purpose of identifying groundwater basins and subbasins that should be prioritized based on adverse impacts to habitat and surface water resources. This bill would require the department to categorize each basin as high-, medium-, low-, or very low priority and would require the initial priority for each basin to be established no later than January 1, 2017. This bill would authorize a local agency to request that the department revise the boundaries of a basin. This bill would require the department to provide a copy of its draft revision of a basin’s boundaries to the California Water Commission and would require the commission to hear and comment on the draft revision.

(3) Existing law authorizes local agencies to adopt and implement a groundwater management plan. Existing law requires a groundwater management plan to contain specified components and requires a local agency seeking state funds administered by the Department of Water Resources for groundwater projects or groundwater quality projects to do certain things, including, but not limited to, preparing and implementing a groundwater management plan that includes basin management objectives for the groundwater basin.

This billbegin insert, with certain exceptions,end insert would prohibit, beginning January 1, 2015, a new groundwater management plan from being adopted or an existing groundwater management plan from beingbegin delete renewed, except for a low- or very low priority basin.end deletebegin insert renewed.end insert

This bill would require, by January 31, 2020, all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainabilitybegin delete plans of a groundwater sustainability agency,end deletebegin insert plans,end insert with specified exceptions. This bill would require a groundwater sustainability plan to be developed and implemented to meet the sustainability goal, established as prescribed, and would require the plan to include prescribed components.begin delete This bill would require a groundwater sustainability agency to certify to the department that its plan complies with the requirements of the act no later than January 31, 2020, and every 5 years thereafter.end delete This bill would encourage and authorize basins designated as low- or very low priority basins to be managed under groundwater sustainability plans.

This bill would authorize any local agency, as defined, or combination of local agencies to elect to be a groundwater sustainability agency and would require, within 30 days of electing to be or forming a groundwater sustainability agency, the groundwater sustainability agency to inform the department of its election or formation and its intent to undertake sustainable groundwater management. This bill would provide that a county within which an area unmanaged by a groundwater sustainability agency lies is presumed to be the groundwater sustainability agency for that area and would require the county to provide a prescribed notification to the department. This bill would provide specific authority to a groundwater sustainability agency, including, but not limited to, the ability to require registration of a groundwater extraction facility, to require that a groundwater extraction facility be measured with a water-measuring device, to regulate groundwaterbegin delete pumping,end deletebegin insert extraction,end insert and to impose certain fees.

This bill would authorize the department or a groundwater sustainability agency to provide technical assistance to entities that extract or use groundwater to promote water conservation and protect groundwater resources. This bill would require the department, by January 1, 2017, to publish on its Internet Web site best management practices for the sustainable management of groundwater.

This bill would require a groundwater sustainability agency to submit a groundwater sustainability plan to the department for review uponbegin delete completionend deletebegin insert adoptionend insert. This bill would require the department to periodically review groundwater sustainability plans, and by June 1, 2016, would require the department, in consultation with the State Water Resources Control Board, to developbegin delete guidelines for evaluating groundwater sustainability plans and groundwater sustainability programsend deletebegin insert certain guidelinesend insert. This bill would authorize a local agency to submit to the department for evaluation and assessment an alternativebegin delete plan that is not a groundwater sustainability planend delete that the local agency believes satisfies the objectives of thesebegin delete provisions as a functional equivalent. This bill would provide that a basin is in compliance with these provisions if a groundwater agency or other local agency submits to the department, no later than January 31, 2020, a copy of a governing final judgment or other judicial order or decree establishing a groundwater sustainability program for the basin or a prescribed report that shows that current management or operations activities have been consistent with the sustainable yield of the basin over a period of at least 10 years.end deletebegin insert provisions.end insert This bill would require the department to review any of the above-described submissions at least every 5 years after initial submission to the department. This bill would require the department to adopt a schedule of fees to recover costs incurred.

This bill would authorize a groundwater sustainability agency and the board to conduct inspections and would authorize a groundwater sustainability agency or the board to obtain an inspection warrant. Because the willful refusal of an inspection lawfully authorized by an inspection warrant is a misdemeanor, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program by expanding the application of a crime.

This bill would authorize the board to designate a basin as a probationary basin, if the board makes a certain determination. This bill would authorize the board to develop an interim plan for a probationary basin if the board, in consultation with the department, determines that a local agency has not remedied a deficiency that resulted in designating the basin as a probationary basin within a certain timeframe. This bill would authorize the board to adopt an interim plan for a probationary basin after notice and a public hearing and would require state entities to comply with an interim plan. This bill would specifically authorize the board to rescind all or a portion of an interim plan if the board determines at the request of specified petitioners that a groundwater sustainability plan or adjudication action is adequate to eliminate the condition of long-term overdraft or condition where groundwater extractions result in significant depletions of interconnected surface waters. This bill would provide that the board has authority to stay its proceedings relating to an interim plan or to rescind or amend an interim plan based on the progress made by a groundwater sustainability agency or in an adjudication action.

begin delete

Existing

end delete

begin insert(4)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertExistingend insert law establishes the Water Rights Fund, which consists of various fees and penalties. The moneys in the Water Rights Fund are available, upon appropriation by the Legislature, forbegin insert, among other things,end insert the administration of thebegin delete board’send deletebegin insert State Water Resource Control Board’send insert water rights program.

begin insertThis bill would provide that the money in the Water Rights Fund is available for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of state board enforcement of the provisions of this bill. end insertThis bill would require the board to adopt a schedule of fees in an amount sufficient to recover all costs incurred and expended from the Water Rights Fundbegin delete for the purpose of administering the above-described provisions.end deletebegin insert by the board for this bill.end insert

Under existing law, a person who violates a cease and desist order of the board may be liable in an amount not to exceed $1,000 for each day in which the violation occurs. Revenue generated from these penalties is deposited in the Water Rights Fund.

This bill would authorize the board to issue a cease and desist order in response to a violation or threatened violation ofbegin delete the above-described provisions.end deletebegin insert any decision or order of the board or any extraction restriction, limitation, order, or regulation adopted or issued under the provisions of this bill.end insert

begin insert

(5) Existing law, with certain exceptions, requires each person who diverts water after December 31, 1965, to file with the State Water Resources Control Board a prescribed statement of diversion and use. Existing law subjects a person to civil liability if that person fails to file, as required, a diversion and use statement for a diversion or use that occurs after January 1, 2009, tampers with any measuring device, or makes a material misstatement in connection with the filing of a diversion or use statement. Existing law provides that the making of any willful misstatement in connection with these provisions is a misdemeanor punishable as prescribed.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would establish groundwater reporting requirements to the board or certain other entity for a person extracting groundwater in an area within a basin that is not within the management area of a groundwater sustainability agency or a probationary basin. This bill would require each report to be accompanied by a specified fee. This bill would apply the above-described criminal and civil liability provisions to a report or measuring device required by this reporting requirement. By expanding the definition of a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

end insert
begin insert

Existing law authorizes the board or the Department of Water Resources to adopt emergency regulations providing for the filing of reports of water diversion or use that are required to be filed.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would authorize the board or the department to adopt emergency regulations providing for the filing of reports of water extraction.

end insert
begin delete

(4)

end delete

begin insert(6)end insert Existing law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city with specified elements, including, among others, land use and conservation elements. Existing law requires a city or county, upon the adoption or revision of its general plan, on or after January 1, 1996, to utilize as a source document any urban water management plan submitted to the city or county by a water agency.

This bill would require, prior to the adoption or any substantial amendment of a general plan, the planning agency to review and consider a groundwater sustainability plan, groundwater management plan, groundwater management court order, judgment, or decree, adjudication of water rights, or a certain orderbegin delete ofend deletebegin insert or interim plan byend insert the State Water Resources Control Board. This bill would require the planning agency to refer a proposed action to adopt or substantially amend a general plan to any groundwater sustainability agency that has adopted a groundwater sustainability plan or local agency that otherwise manages groundwater and to the State Water Resources Control Board if it has adopted an interim plan that includes territory within the planning area.

Existing law requires a public water system to provide a planning agency with certain information upon receiving notification of a city’s or a county’s proposed action to adopt or substantially amend a general plan.

This bill would also require a public water system to provide a report on the anticipated effect of the proposed action on implementation of a groundwater sustainability plan. This bill would require a groundwater sustainability agency to provide the planning agency with certain information as is appropriate and relevant.

By imposing new duties on a city or county, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

begin delete

(5) This bill would state the intent of the Legislature to subsequently amend this measure to adopt extraction reporting requirements for basins identified by the State Water Resources Control Board as probationary basins or basins without a groundwater sustainability agency.

end delete
begin delete

(6)

end delete

begin insert(7)end insert The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that with regard to certain mandates no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

With regard to any other mandates, this bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs so mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.

begin delete

(7)

end delete

begin insert(8)end insert Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.

This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P7    1

SECTION 1.  

(a) The Legislature finds and declares as follows:

2(1) The people of the state have a primary interest in the
3protection, management, and reasonable beneficial use of the water
4resources of the state, both surface and underground, and that the
5integrated management of the state’s water resources is essential
6to meeting its water management goals.

7(2) Groundwater provides a significant portion of California’s
8water supply. Groundwater accounts for more than one-third of
9the water used by Californians in an average year and more than
10one-half of the water used by Californians in a drought year when
11other sources are unavailable.

12(3) Excessive groundwaterbegin delete pumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert can cause
13overdraft, failed wells, deteriorated water quality, environmental
14damage, and irreversible land subsidence that damages
15infrastructure and diminishes the capacity of aquifers to store water
16for the future.

P8    1(4) When properly managed, groundwater resources will help
2protect communities, farms, and the environment against prolonged
3dry periods and climate change, preserving water supplies for
4existing and potential beneficial use.

5(5) Failure to manage groundwater to prevent long-term
6overdraft infringes on groundwater rights.

7(6) Groundwater resources are most effectively managed at the
8local or regional level.

9(7) Groundwater management will not be effective unless local
10actions to sustainably manage groundwater basins and subbasins
11are taken.

12(8) Local and regional agencies need to have the necessary
13support and authority to manage groundwater sustainably.

14(9) In those circumstances where a local groundwater
15management agency is not managing its groundwater sustainably,
16the state needs to protect the resource until it is determined that a
17local groundwater management agency can sustainably manage
18the groundwater basin or subbasin.

19(10) Information on the amount of groundwater extraction,
20natural and artificial recharge, and groundwater evaluations are
21critical for effective management of groundwater.

22(11) Sustainable groundwater management in California depends
23upon creating more opportunities for robust conjunctive
24management of surface waterbegin insert and groundwaterend insert resources. Climate
25change will intensify the need to recalibrate and reconcile surface
26begin insert waterend insert and groundwater management strategies.

27(b) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to do all of the
28following:

29(1) To provide local and regional agencies the authority to
30sustainably manage groundwater.

31(2) To provide that if no local groundwater agency or agencies
32 provide sustainable groundwater management for a groundwater
33basin or subbasin, the state has the authority to develop and
34implementbegin delete a groundwater sustainabilityend deletebegin insert an interimend insert plan until the
35time the local groundwaterbegin delete managementend deletebegin insert sustainabilityend insert agency or
36agencies can assume management of the basin or subbasin.

37(3) To require the development and reporting of those data
38necessary to support sustainable groundwater management,
39including those data that help describe the basin’s geology, the
40short- and long-term trends of the basin’s water balance, and other
P9    1measures of sustainability, and those data necessary to resolve
2disputes regarding sustainable yield, beneficial uses, and water
3rights.

4(4) To respect overlying and other proprietary rights to
5groundwater.

6

SEC. 2.  

Section 65350.5 is added to the Government Code, to
7read:

8

65350.5.  

Before the adoption or any substantial amendment
9of a city’s or county’s general plan, the planning agency shall
10review and consider all of the following:

11(a) An adoption of, or update to, a groundwater sustainability
12plan or groundwater management plan pursuant to Part 2.74
13(commencing with Section 10720) or Part 2.75 (commencing with
14Section 10750) of Division 6 of the Water Code or groundwater
15management court order, judgment, or decree.

16(b) An adjudication of water rights.

17(c) An orderbegin insert or interim planend insert by the State Water Resources
18Control Board pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section
1910735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6 of the Water Code.

20

SEC. 3.  

Section 65352 of the Government Code is amended
21to read:

22

65352.  

(a)  Before a legislative body takes action to adopt or
23substantially amend a general plan, the planning agency shall refer
24the proposed action to all of the following entities:

25(1) A city or county, within or abutting the area covered by the
26proposal, and any special district that may be significantly affected
27by the proposed action, as determined by the planning agency.

28(2) An elementary, high school, or unified school district within
29the area covered by the proposed action.

30(3) The local agency formation commission.

31(4) An areawide planning agency whose operations may be
32significantly affected by the proposed action, as determined by the
33planning agency.

34(5) A federal agency, if its operations or lands within its
35jurisdiction may be significantly affected by the proposed action,
36as determined by the planning agency.

37(6) (A) The branches of the United States Armed Forces that
38have provided the Office of Planning and Research with a
39California mailing address pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section
40 65944, if the proposed action is within 1,000 feet of a military
P10   1installation, or lies within special use airspace, or beneath a
2low-level flight path, as defined in Section 21098 of the Public
3Resources Code, and if the United States Department of Defense
4provides electronic maps of low-level flight paths, special use
5airspace, and military installations at a scale and in an electronic
6format that is acceptable to the Office of Planning and Research.

7(B) Within 30 days of a determination by the Office of Planning
8and Research that the information provided by the Department of
9Defense is sufficient and in an acceptable scale and format, the
10office shall notify cities, counties, and cities and counties of the
11availability of the information on the Internet. Cities, counties, and
12cities and counties shall comply with subparagraph (A) within 30
13days of receiving this notice from the office.

14(7) A public water system, as defined in Section 116275 of the
15Health and Safety Code, with 3,000 or more service connections,
16that serves water to customers within the area covered by the
17proposal. The public water system shall have at least 45 days to
18comment on the proposed plan, in accordance with subdivision
19(b), and to provide the planning agency with the information set
20forth in Section 65352.5.

21(8) Any groundwater sustainability agency that has adopted a
22groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to Part 2.74 (commencing
23with Section 10720) of Division 6 of the Water Code or local
24agency that otherwise manages groundwater pursuant to other
25provisions of law or a court order, judgment, or decree within the
26 planning area of the proposed general plan.

27(9) The State Water Resources Control Board, if it has adopted
28an interim plan pursuant tobegin delete Part 2.74 (commencing with
29Sectionend delete
begin delete10720)end deletebegin insert Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735) of
30Part 2.74end insert
of Division 6 of the Water Code that includes territory
31within the planning area of the proposed general plan.

32(10) The Bay Area Air Quality Management District for a
33proposed action within the boundaries of the district.

34(11) A California Native American tribe, that is on the contact
35list maintained by the Native American Heritage Commission and
36that has traditional lands located within the city’s or county’s
37jurisdiction.

38(12) The Central Valley Flood Protection Board, for a proposed
39action within the boundaries of the Sacramento and San Joaquin
40Drainage District, as set forth in Section 8501 of the Water Code.

P11   1(b) An entity receiving a proposed general plan or amendment
2of a general plan pursuant to this section shall have 45 days from
3the date the referring agency mails it or delivers it to comment
4unless a longer period is specified by the planning agency.

5(c) (1) This section is directory, not mandatory, and the failure
6to refer a proposed action to the entities specified in this section
7does not affect the validity of the action, if adopted.

8(2) To the extent that the requirements of this section conflict
9with the requirements of Chapter 4.4 (commencing with Section
1065919), the requirements of Chapter 4.4 shall prevail.

11

SEC. 4.  

Section 65352.5 of the Government Code is amended
12to read:

13

65352.5.  

(a) The Legislature finds and declares that it is vital
14that there be close coordination and consultation between
15California’s water supply or management agencies and California’s
16land use approval agencies to ensure that proper water supply and
17management planning occurs to accommodate projects that will
18result in increased demands on water supplies or impact water
19resource management.

20(b) It is, therefore, the intent of the Legislature to provide a
21standardized process for determining the adequacy of existing and
22planned future water supplies to meet existing and planned future
23demands on these water supplies and the impact of land use
24decisions on the management of California’s water supply
25resources.

26(c) Upon receiving, pursuant to Section 65352, notification of
27a city’s or a county’s proposed action to adopt or substantially
28amend a general plan, a public water system, as defined in Section
29116275 of the Health and Safety Code, with 3,000 or more service
30connections, shall provide the planning agency with the following
31information, as is appropriate and relevant:

32(1) The current version of its urban water management plan,
33adopted pursuant to Part 2.6 (commencing with Section 10610)
34of Division 6 of the Water Code.

35(2) The current version of its capital improvement program or
36plan, as reported pursuant to Section 31144.73 of the Water Code.

37(3) A description of the source or sources of the total water
38supply currently available to the water supplier by water right or
39contract, taking into account historical data concerning wet, normal,
40and dry runoff years.

P12   1(4) A description of the quantity of surface water that was
2purveyed by the water supplier in each of the previous five years.

3(5) A description of the quantity of groundwater that was
4purveyed by the water supplier in each of the previous five years.

5(6) A description of all proposed additional sources of water
6supplies for the water supplier, including the estimated dates by
7which these additional sources should be available and the
8quantities of additional water supplies that are being proposed.

9(7) A description of the total number of customers currently
10served by the water supplier, as identified by the following
11categories and by the amount of water served to each category:

12(A) Agricultural users.

13(B) Commercial users.

14(C) Industrial users.

15(D) Residential users.

16(8) Quantification of the expected reduction in total water
17demand, identified by each customer category set forth in paragraph
18(7), associated with future implementation of water use reduction
19measures identified in the water supplier’s urban water
20management plan.

21(9) Any additional information that is relevant to determining
22the adequacy of existing and planned future water supplies to meet
23existing and planned future demands on these water supplies.

24(10) A report on the anticipated effect of proposed action to
25adopt or substantially amend a general plan on implementation of
26a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to Part 2.74
27(commencing with Section 10720) of Division 6 of the Water
28Code.

29(d) Upon receiving, pursuant to Section 65352, notification of
30a city’s or a county’s proposed action to adopt or substantially
31amend a general plan, a groundwater sustainability agency, as
32defined in Sectionbegin delete 10720.5end deletebegin insert 10721end insert of the Water Code, shall provide
33the planning agency with the following information, as is
34appropriate and relevant:

35(1) The current version of its groundwater sustainability plan
36adopted pursuant to Part 2.74 (commencing with Section 10720)
37of Division 6 of the Water Code.

38(2) If the groundwater sustainability agency manages
39 groundwater pursuant to a court order, judgment, decree, or
40agreement among affected water rights holders, or if the State
P13   1Water Resources Control Board has adoptedbegin delete a groundwater
2sustainabilityend delete
begin insert an interimend insert plan pursuant tobegin delete Part 2.74 (commencing
3with Section 10720)end delete
begin insert Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735)
4of Part 2.74end insert
of Division 6 of the Water Code, the groundwater
5sustainability agency shall provide the planning agency with maps
6of recharge basins and percolation ponds, extraction limitations,
7and other relevant information, or the court order, judgment, or
8decree.

9

SEC. 5.  

Section 113 is added to the Water Code, to read:

10

113.  

It is the policy of the state that groundwater resources be
11managed sustainably for long-termbegin delete water supplyend delete reliability and
12multiple economic, social,begin delete orend deletebegin insert andend insert environmental benefits for
13current and future beneficial uses. Sustainable groundwater
14management is best achieved locally through the development,
15implementation, and updating of plans and programs based on the
16best available science.

17begin insert

begin insertSEC. 6.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 348 of the end insertbegin insertWater Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to read:end insert

18

348.  

(a) The department or the board may adopt emergency
19regulations providing for the electronic filing of reports ofbegin insert water
20extraction orend insert
water diversion or use required to be filed with the
21department or board under this code, including, but not limited to,
22any report required to be filed under Part 5.1 (commencing with
23Section 5100)begin insert or Part 5.2 (commencing with Section 5200)end insert of
24Division 2 and any report required to be filed by a water right
25permittee or licensee.

26(b) Emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this section, or
27any amendments thereto, shall be adopted by the department or
28the board in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
29Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
30Code. The adoption of these regulations is an emergency and shall
31be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary
32for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety,
33and general welfare. Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing
34with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the
35Government Code, any emergency regulations or amendments to
36those regulations adopted under this section shall remain in effect
37until revised by the department or the board that adopted the
38regulations or amendments.

39

begin deleteSEC. 6.end delete
40begin insertSEC. 7.end insert  

Section 1120 of the Water Code is amended to read:

P14   1

1120.  

This chapter applies to any decision or order issued under
2this part or Section 275, Part 2 (commencing with Section 1200),
3Part 2 (commencing with Section 10500) of Division 6, Chapter
411 (commencing with Section 10735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6,
5Article 7 (commencing with Section 13550) of Chapter 7 of
6Division 7, or the public trust doctrine.

7

begin deleteSEC. 7.end delete
8begin insertSEC. 8.end insert  

Section 1529.5 is added to the Water Code, to read:

9

1529.5.  

(a) The board shall adopt a schedule of fees pursuant
10to Section 1530 to recover costs incurred in administering Chapter
1111 (commencing with Section 10735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6.
12Recoverable costs include, but are not limited to, costs incurred
13in connection with investigations, facilitation, monitoring, hearings,
14enforcement, and administrative costs in carrying out these actions.

15(b) The fee schedule adopted under this section may include,
16but is not limited to, the following:

17(1) A fee for participation as a petitioner or party to an
18adjudicative proceeding.

19(2) A fee for the filing of a report pursuant to Part 5.2
20(commencing with Section 5200) of Divisionbegin delete 2 for extractions
21from a source within the boundaries of a probationary basin under
22Section 10735.2.end delete
begin insert 2.end insert

23(c) Consistent with Section 3 of Article XIII A of the California
24Constitution, the board shall set the fees under this section in an
25amount sufficient to cover all costs incurred and expended from
26the Water Rights Fund for thebegin delete purpose ofend deletebegin insert purposes of Part 5.2
27(commencing with Section 5200) andend insert
Chapter 11 (commencing
28with Section 10735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6. In setting these
29fees, the board is not required to fully recover these costs in the
30year or the year immediately after the costs are incurred, but the
31board may provide for recovery of these costs over a period of
32years.

33begin insert

begin insertSEC. 9.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1552 of the end insertbegin insertWater Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to read:end insert

34

1552.  

The money in the Water Rights Fund is available for
35expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the
36following purposes:

37(a) For expenditure by the State Board of Equalization in the
38administration of this chapter and the Fee Collection Procedures
39Law (Part 30 (commencing with Section 55001) of Division 2 of
P15   1the Revenue and Taxation Code) in connection with any fee or
2expense subject to this chapter.

3(b) For the payment of refunds, pursuant to Part 30 (commencing
4with Section 55001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation
5Code, of fees or expenses collected pursuant to this chapter.

6(c) For expenditure by the board for the purposes of carrying
7out this division, Division 1 (commencing with Section 100), Part
82 (commencing with Section 10500)begin insert and Chapter 11 (commencing
9with Section 10735) of Part 2.74end insert
of Division 6, and Article 7
10(commencing with Section 13550) of Chapter 7 of Division 7.

11(d) For expenditures by the board for the purposes of carrying
12out Sections 13160 and 13160.1 in connection with activities
13involving hydroelectric power projects subject to licensing by the
14Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

15(e) For expenditures by the board for the purposes of carrying
16out Sections 13140 and 13170 in connection with plans and policies
17that address the diversion or use of water.

18

begin deleteSEC. 8.end delete
19begin insertSEC. 10.end insert  

Section 1831 of the Water Code is amended to read:

20

1831.  

(a) When the board determines that any person is
21violating, or threatening to violate, any requirement described in
22subdivision (d), the board may issue an order to that person to
23cease and desist from that violation.

24(b) The cease and desist order shall require that person to comply
25forthwith or in accordance with a time schedule set by the board.

26(c) The board may issue a cease and desist order only after
27notice and an opportunity for hearing pursuant to Section 1834.

28(d) The board may issue a cease and desist order in response to
29a violation or threatened violation of any of the following:

30(1) The prohibition set forth in Section 1052 against the
31unauthorized diversion or use of water subject to this division.

32(2) Any term or condition of a permit, license, certification, or
33registration issued under this division.

34(3) Any decision or order of the board issued under this part,
35Section 275, Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 10735) of Part
362.74 of Division 6, or Article 7 (commencing with Section 13550)
37of Chapter 7 of Division 7, in which decision or order the person
38to whom the cease and desist order will be issued, or a predecessor
39in interest to that person, was named as a party directly affected
40by the decision or order.

P16   1(4) A regulation adopted under Section 1058.5.

2(5) Anybegin delete pumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert restriction, limitation, order, or
3regulation adopted or issued under Chapter 11 (commencing with
4Section 10735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6.

5(e) This article does not authorize the board to regulate in any
6manner, the diversion or use of water not otherwise subject to
7regulation of the board under this division or Section 275.

8

begin deleteSEC. 9.end delete
9begin insertSEC. 11.end insert  

Part 5.2 (commencing with Section 5200) is added
10to Division 2 of the Water Code, to read:

11 

12PART 5.2.  Groundwater Extraction Reporting
13for Probationary Basins and Basins Without a
14Groundwater Sustainability Agency

15

 

begin delete
16

5200.  

It is the intent of the Legislature to subsequently amend
17this measure to adopt extraction reporting requirements for basins
18identified as probationary basins pursuant to Section 10735.2, or
19as authorized by subdivision (b) of Section 10724, for basins
20without a groundwater sustainability agency.

end delete
begin insert
21

begin insert5200.end insert  

The Legislature finds and declares that this part
22establishes groundwater reporting requirements for the purposes
23of subdivision (b) of Section 10724 and Chapter 11 (commencing
24with Section 10735) of Part 2.74 of Division 6.

end insert
begin insert
25

begin insert5201.end insert  

As used in this part:

26(a) “Basin” has the same meaning as defined in Section 10721.

27(b) “Board-designated local area” has the same meaning as
28defined in Section 5009.

29(c) “De minimis extractor” has the same meaning as defined
30in Section 10721.

31(d) “Groundwater” has the same meaning as defined in Section
3210721.

33(e) “Groundwater extraction facility” has the same meaning
34as defined in Section 10721.

35(f) “Groundwater sustainability agency” has the same meaning
36as defined in Section 10721.

37(g) “Person” has the same meaning as defined in Section 10735.

38(h) “Probationary basin” has the same meaning as defined in
39Section 10735.

P17   1(i) “Personal information” has the same meaning as defined
2in Section 1798.3 of the Civil Code.

3(j) “Water year” has the same meaning as defined in Section
410721.

end insert
begin insert
5

begin insert5202.end insert  

(a) This section applies to a person who does either of
6the following:

7(1) Extracts groundwater from a probationary basin 90 days
8or more after the board designates the basin as a probationary
9basin pursuant to Section 10735.2.

10(2) Extracts groundwater on or after January 1, 2017, in an
11area within a basin that is not within the management area of a
12groundwater sustainability agency and where the county does not
13assume responsibility to be the groundwater sustainability agency,
14as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 10724.

15(b) Except as provided in subdivision (c), a person subject to
16this section shall file a report of groundwater extraction by
17December 15 of each year for extractions made in the preceding
18water year.

19(c) Unless reporting is required pursuant to paragraph (2) of
20subdivision (c) of Section 10735.2, this section does not apply to
21any of the following:

22(1) An extraction by a de minimis extractor.

23(2) An extraction excluded from reporting pursuant to paragraph
24(1) of subdivision (c) of Section 10735.2.

25(3) An extraction reported pursuant to Part 5 (commencing with
26Section 4999).

27(4) An extraction that is included in annual reports filed with
28a court or the board by a watermaster appointed by a court or
29pursuant to statute to administer a final judgment determining
30rights to water. The reports shall identify the persons who have
31extracted water and give the general place of use and the quantity
32of water that has been extracted from each source.

33(d) Except as provided in Section 5209, the report shall be filed
34with the board.

35(e) The report may be filed by the person extracting water or
36on that person’s behalf by an agency that person designates and
37that maintains a record of the water extracted.

38(f) Each report shall be accompanied by the fee imposed
39pursuant to Section 1529.5.

end insert
begin insert
P18   1

begin insert5203.end insert  

Each report shall be prepared on a form provided by
2the board. The report shall include all of the following information:

3(a) The name and address of the person who extracted
4groundwater and of the person filing the report.

5(b) The name of the basin from which groundwater was
6extracted.

7(c) The place of groundwater extraction. The location of the
8groundwater extraction facilities shall be depicted on a specific
9United States Geological Survey topographic map or shall be
10identified using the California Coordinate System or a latitude
11and longitude measurement. If assigned, the public land description
12to the nearest 40-acre subdivision and the assessor’s parcel
13number shall be provided.

14(d) The capacity of the groundwater extraction facilities.

15(e) Monthly records of groundwater extractions. The
16measurements of the extractions shall be made by a methodology,
17water-measuring device, or combination thereof satisfactory to
18the board.

19(f) The purpose of use.

20(g) A general description of the area in which the water was
21used. The location of the place of use shall be depicted on a specific
22United States Geological Survey topographic map or on any other
23maps with identifiable landmarks. If assigned, the public land
24description to the nearest 40-acre subdivision and the assessor’s
25parcel number shall also be provided.

26(h) As near as is known, the year in which the groundwater
27extraction was commenced.

28(i) Any information required pursuant to paragraph (3) of
29subdivision (c) of Section 10735.2.

30(j) Any other information that the board may require by
31regulation and that is reasonably necessary for purposes of this
32division or Part 2.74 (commencing with Section 10720) of Division
336.

end insert
begin insert
34

begin insert5204.end insert  

(a) If a person fails to file a report as required by this
35part, the board may, at the expense of that person, investigate and
36determine the information required to be reported pursuant to this
37part.

38(b) The board shall give a person described in subdivision (a)
39notice of its intention to investigate and determine the information
P19   1required to be reported pursuant to this part and 60 days in which
2to file a required report without penalty.

end insert
begin insert
3

begin insert5205.end insert  

A report submitted under this part or a determination
4of facts by the board pursuant to Section 5104 shall not establish
5or constitute evidence of a right to divert or use water.

end insert
begin insert
6

begin insert5206.end insert  

Personal information included in a report of groundwater
7extraction shall have the same protection from disclosure as is
8provided for information concerning utility customers of local
9agencies pursuant to Section 6254.16 of the Government Code.

end insert
begin insert
10

begin insert5207.end insert  

(a) A prescriptive right to extract groundwater that may
11otherwise occur shall not arise or accrue to, and a statute of
12limitations shall not operate in favor of, a person required to file
13a report pursuant to this part until the person files the report.

14(b) For purposes of establishing or maintaining a water right,
15failure to file a report required to be filed pursuant to this part
16within six months after the report is due shall be deemed equivalent
17to nonuse during the period for which the report was required.

end insert
begin insert
18

begin insert5208.end insert  

Section 5107 applies to a report or measuring device
19required pursuant to this part. For purposes of Section 5107, a
20report of groundwater extraction, measuring device, or
21misstatement required, used, or made pursuant to this part shall
22be considered the equivalent of a statement, measuring device, or
23misstatement required, used, or made pursuant to Part 5.1
24(commencing with Section 5100).

end insert
begin insert
25

begin insert5209.end insert  

For groundwater extractions in a board-designated local
26area, reports required pursuant to this part shall be submitted to
27the entity designated pursuant to subdivision (e) of Section 5009
28if both of the following occur:

29(a) The board determines that the requirements of subdivision
30(e) of Section 5009 have been satisfied with respect to extractions
31subject to reporting pursuant to this part, in addition to any
32groundwater extractions subject to Part 5 (commencing with
33Section 4999).

34(b) The designated entity has made satisfactory arrangements
35to collect and transmit to the board any fees imposed pursuant to
36paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 1529.5.

end insert
37

begin deleteSEC. 10.end delete
38begin insertSEC. 12.end insert  

Part 2.74 (commencing with Section 10720) is added
39to Division 6 of the Water Code, to read:

 

P20   1PART 2.74.  Sustainable Groundwater
2Management

3

3 

4Chapter  1. General Provisions
5

 

6

10720.  

This part shall be known, and may be cited, as the
7“Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.”

8

10720.1.  

In enacting this part, it is the intent of the Legislature
9to do all of the following:

10(a) To provide for the sustainable management of groundwater
11basins.

12(b) To enhance local management of groundwater consistent
13with rights to use or store groundwater and Section 2 of Article X
14of the California Constitution. It is the intent of the Legislature to
15preserve the security of water rights in the state to the greatest
16extent possible consistent with the sustainable management of
17groundwater.

18(c) To establish minimum standards for sustainable groundwater
19management.

20(d) To provide local groundwater agencies with the authority
21and the technical and financial assistance necessary to sustainably
22manage groundwater.

23(e) To avoid or minimize subsidence.

begin delete

24(d)

end delete

25begin insert(f)end insert To improve data collection and understanding about
26groundwater.

begin delete

27(e)

end delete

28begin insert(g)end insert To increase groundwater storage and remove impediments
29to recharge.

begin delete

30(g)

end delete

31begin insert(h)end insert To manage groundwater basins through the actions of local
32governmental agencies to the greatest extent feasible, while
33minimizing state intervention to only when necessary to ensure
34that local agencies manage groundwater in a sustainable manner.

35

10720.3.  

(a) This part applies to all groundwater basins in the
36state.

37(b) To the extent authorized under federal or tribal law, this part
38applies to an Indian tribe and to the federal government, including,
39but not limited to, the Department of Defense.

P21   1

10720.5.  

Groundwater management pursuant to this part shall
2be consistent with Section 2 of Article X of the California
3Constitution. Nothing in this part modifies rights or priorities to
4use or store groundwater consistent with Section 2 of Article X of
5the California Constitution, except that in basins designated
6medium- or high-priority basins by the department, no extraction
7of groundwater between January 1, 2015, and the date of adoption
8of a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part, whichever
9is sooner, may be used as evidence of, or to establish or defend
10against, any claim of prescription.

11

10720.7.  

begin deleteSubject to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section
1210725), byend delete
begin insert Byend insert January 31, 2020, all basins designated as high- or
13medium-priority basins by the department shall be managed under
14a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater
15sustainability plans pursuant to this part. The Legislature
16encourages and authorizes basins designated as low-and very low
17priority basins by the department to be managed under groundwater
18sustainability plans pursuant to this part.

19

10720.9.  

(a) Except as provided inbegin delete Section 10733.6,end delete
20begin insert subdivision (d),end insert this part does not apply tobegin insert the following
21adjudicated areas orend insert
a local agency that conforms to the
22requirements of an adjudication of water rightsbegin delete in a groundwater
23basin or to that adjudicated basin. For purposes of this section, an
24adjudication includes an adjudication under Section 2101, an
25administrative adjudication, and an adjudication in state or federal
26court, including, but not limited to,end delete
begin insert for one ofend insert the following
27adjudicated begin deletegroundwater basins:end deletebegin insert areas:end insert

28(1) Beaumont Basin.

29(2) Brite Basin.

30(3) Central Basin.

31(4) Chino Basin.

32(5) Cucamonga Basin.

33(6) Cummings Basin.

34(7) Goleta Basin.

35(8) Main San Gabrielbegin delete Basin: Puente Narrows.end deletebegin insert Basin.end insert

36(9) Mojave Basin Area.

37(10) Puente Basin.

38(11) Raymond Basin.

39(12) San Jacinto Basin.

40(13) Santa Margarita River Watershed.

P22   1(14) Santa Maria Valley Basin.

2(15) Santa Paula Basin.

3(16) Scott River Stream System.

4(17) Seaside Basin.

5(18) Six Basins.

6(19) Tehachapi Basin.

7(20) Upper Los Angeles River Area.

8(21) Warren Valley Basin.

9(22) West Coast Basin.

10(23) Western San Bernardino.

11(b) The Antelope Valley basin at issue in the Antelope Valley
12Groundwater Cases (Judicial Council Coordination Proceeding
13Number 4408) shall be treated as an adjudicated basin pursuant to
14this section if the superior court issues a final judgment, order, or
15decree.

begin insert

16(c) If an adjudication action has determined the rights to extract
17groundwater for only a portion of a basin, subdivisions (a) and
18(b) apply only within the area for which the adjudication action
19has determined those rights.

end insert
begin insert

20(d) The watermaster or a local agency within a basin identified
21in subdivision (a) shall do all of the following:

end insert
begin insert

22(1) By January 1, 2016, submit to the department a copy of a
23governing final judgment, or other judicial order or decree, and
24any amendments entered before January 1, 2016.

end insert
begin insert

25(2) Within 90 days of entry by a court, submit to the department
26a copy of any amendment made and entered by the court to the
27governing final judgment or other judicial order or decree on or
28after January 1, 2016.

end insert
begin insert

29(3) By January 1, 2016, and annually by January 1 of each year
30thereafter, submit to the department a report containing the
31following information for the portion of the basin subject to the
32adjudication:

end insert
begin insert

33(A) Groundwater elevation data.

end insert
begin insert

34(B) Annual aggregated data identifying groundwater extraction
35for the preceding water year.

end insert
begin insert

36(C) Surface water supply used for or available for use for
37groundwater recharge or in-lieu use.

end insert
begin insert

38(D) Total water use.

end insert
begin insert

39(E) Change in groundwater storage.

end insert

 

P23   1Chapter  2. Definitions
2

 

3

10721.  

Unless the context otherwise requires, the following
4definitions govern the construction of this part:

5(a) “Adjudication action” means an action filed in the superior
6begin insert or federal districtend insert court to determine the rights to extract
7groundwater from a basin or store water within a basin, including,
8but not limited to, actions to quiet title respecting rights to extract
9or store groundwater or an action brought to impose a physical
10solution on a basin.

11(b) “Basin” means a groundwater basin or subbasin identified
12and defined in Bulletin 118 or as modified pursuant to Chapter 3
13(commencing with Section 10722).

14(c) “Bulletin 118” means the department’s report entitled
15“California’s Groundwater: Bulletin 118” updated in 2003, as it
16may be subsequently updated or revised in accordance with Section
1712924.

18(d) “Coordination agreement” means a legal agreement adopted
19between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that
20provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or
21groundwater sustainability plans within a basin pursuant to this
22part.

23(e) “Debegin delete minimusend deletebegin insert minimisend insert extractor” means a person who
24extracts, for domestic purposes, two acre-feet or less per year.

25(f) “Governing body” means the legislative body of a
26groundwater sustainability agency.

27(g) “Groundwater” means water beneath the surface of the earth
28within the zone below the water table in which the soil is
29completely saturated with water, but does not include water that
30flows in known and definite channels.

31(h) “Groundwater extraction facility” means a device or method
32for extracting groundwater from within a basin.

33(i) “Groundwater recharge” means the augmentation of
34groundwater, by natural or artificial means.

35(j) “Groundwater sustainability agency” means one or more
36local agencies that implement the provisions of this part. For
37purposes of imposing fees pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing
38with Section 10730) or taking action to enforce a groundwater
39sustainability plan, “groundwater sustainability agency” also means
P24   1each local agency comprising the groundwater sustainability
2agency if the plan authorizes separate agency action.

3(k) “Groundwater sustainability plan” or “plan” means a plan
4of a groundwater sustainability agency proposed or adopted
5pursuant to this part.

6(l) “Groundwater sustainability program” means a coordinated
7and ongoing activity undertaken to benefit a basin, pursuant to a
8groundwater sustainability plan.

9(m) “Local agency” means a local public agency that has water
10supply, water management, or land use responsibilities within a
11groundwater basin.

12(n) “Operator” means a person operating a groundwater
13extraction facility. The owner of a groundwater extraction facility
14shall be conclusively presumed to be the operator unless a
15satisfactory showing is made to the governing body of the
16groundwater sustainability agency that the groundwater extraction
17facility actually is operated by some other person.

18(o) “Owner” means a person owning a groundwater extraction
19facility or an interest in a groundwater extraction facility other
20than a lien to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation.

21(p) “Planning and implementation horizon” means a 50-year
22time period over which a groundwater sustainability agency
23determines that plans and measures will be implemented in a basin
24to ensure that the basin is operated within its sustainable yield.

25(q) “Public water system” has the same meaning as defined in
26Section 116275 of the Health and Safety Code.

27(r) “Recharge area” means the area that supplies water to an
28aquifer in a groundwater basin.

29(s) “Sustainability goal” means the existence and implementation
30of one or more groundwater sustainability plans that achieve
31sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing
32the implementation of measures targeted to ensure that the
33applicable basin is operated within its sustainable yield.

34(t) “Sustainable groundwater management” means the
35management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be
36maintained during the planning and implementation horizon
37without causing undesirable results.

38(u) “Sustainable yield” means the maximum quantity of water,
39calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions
40in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be
P25   1withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing
2an undesirable result.

3(v) “Undesirable result” means one or more of the following
4effectsbegin delete occurring after January 1, 2015, andend delete caused by groundwater
5conditions occurring throughout the basin:

6(1) Chronic lowering of groundwater levels indicating a
7significant and unreasonable depletion of supply if continued over
8the planning and implementationbegin delete horizon, excluding lowering
9groundwater levels caused by a drought.end delete
begin insert horizon. Overdraft during
10a period of drought is not sufficient to establish a chronic lowering
11of groundwater levels if extractions and recharge are managed
12as necessary to ensure that reductions in groundwater levels or
13storage during a period of drought are offset by increases in
14groundwater levels or storage during other periods.end insert

15(2) Significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater
16storage.

17(3) Significant seawater intrusion.

18(4) Significant and unreasonable degraded water quality,
19including the migration of contaminant plumes that impair water
20supplies.

21(5) Significant land subsidence that substantially interferes with
22surface land uses.

23(6) Surface water depletions that have significant adverse
24impacts on beneficial uses.

25(w) “Water budget” means an accounting of the total
26groundwater and surface water entering and leaving a basin
27including the changes in the amount of water stored.

28(x) “Watermaster” means a watermaster appointed by a court
29or pursuant to other law.

30(y) “Water year” means the period from October 1 through the
31following September 30, inclusive.

32(z) “Wellhead protection area” means the surface and subsurface
33area surrounding a water well or well field that supplies a public
34water system through which contaminants are reasonably likely
35to migrate toward the water well or well field.

 

P23   1Chapter  3. Basin Boundaries
2

 

3

10722.  

Unless other basin boundaries are established pursuant
4to this chapter, a basin’s boundaries shall be as identified in
5Bulletin 118.

6

10722.2.  

(a) A local agency may request that the department
7revise the boundaries of a basin, including the establishment of
8new subbasins. A local agency’s request shall be supported by the
9following information:

10(1) Information demonstrating that the proposed adjusted basin
11can be the subject of sustainable groundwater management.

12(2) Technical information regarding the boundaries of, and
13conditions in, the proposed adjusted basin.

14(3) Information demonstrating that the entity proposing the
15basin boundary adjustment consulted with interested local agencies
16and public water systems in the affected basins before filing the
17proposal with the department.

18(4) Other information the department deems necessary to justify
19revision of the basin’s boundary.

20(b) By January 1, 2016, the department shall develop and publish
21guidelines regarding the information required to comply with
22subdivision (a). The guidelines required pursuant to this subdivision
23are exempt from Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340)
24of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.

25(c) The department shall provide a copy of its draft revision of
26a basin’s boundaries to the California Water Commission. The
27California Water Commission shall hear and comment on the draft
28revision within 60 days after the department provides the draft
29revision to the commission.

30

10722.4.  

(a) Pursuant to Section 10933, for the purposes of
31this part the department shall categorize each basin as one of the
32following priorities:

33(1) High priority.

34(2) Medium priority.

35(3) Low priority.

36(4) Very low priority.

37(b) The initial priority for each basin shall be established by the
38department pursuant to Section 10933 no later than January 1,
392017.

begin insert

P27   1(c) Anytime the department updates Bulletin 118 boundaries
2pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 12924, the department shall
3reassess the prioritization pursuant to Section 10933.

end insert
begin insert

4(d) Anytime the department changes the basin priorities pursuant
5to Section 10933, if a basin is elevated to a medium or high priority
6basin after January 1, 2015, a local agency shall have two years
7from the date of reprioritization to establish a groundwater
8sustainability agency pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing with
9Section 10723) and five years from the date of reprioritization to
10adopt a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to Chapter 6
11(commencing with Section 10727).

end insert

12 

13Chapter  4. Establishing Groundwater Sustainability
14Agencies
15

 

16

10723.  

(a) Any local agency or combination of local agencies
17may elect to be a groundwater sustainability agency.

18(b) Before electing to be a groundwater sustainability agency,
19and after publication of notice pursuant to Section 6066 of the
20Government Code, the local agency or agencies shall hold a public
21hearing in the county or counties overlying the basin.

22

10723.2.  

The groundwater sustainability agency shall consider
23the interests of all beneficial uses and users of groundwater, as
24well as those responsible for implementing groundwater
25sustainability plans. These interests include, but are not limited to,
26all of the following:

27(a) Holders of overlying groundwater rights, including:

28(1) Agricultural users.

29(2) Domestic well owners.

30(b) Municipal well operators.

31(c) Public water systems.

32(d) Local land use planning agencies.

33(e) Environmental users of groundwater.

34(f) Surface water users, if there is a hydrologic connection
35between surface and groundwater bodies.

36(g) The federal government, including, but not limited to, the
37military and managers of federal lands.

38(h) begin deleteIndianend deletebegin insert California Native Americanend insert tribes.

39

10723.4.  

The groundwater sustainability agency shall establish
40and maintain a list of persons interested in receiving notices
P28   1regarding plan preparation, meeting announcements, and
2availability of draft plans, maps, and other relevant documents.
3Any person may request, in writing, to be placed on the list of
4interested persons.

5

10723.6.  

A combination of local agencies may form a
6groundwater sustainability agency by using any of the following
7methods:

8(a) A joint powers agreement.

9(b) A memorandum of agreement or other legal agreement.

10

10723.8.  

Within 30 days of electing to be or forming a
11groundwater sustainability agency, the groundwater sustainability
12agency shall inform the department of its election or formation
13and its intent to undertake sustainable groundwater management.
14The notification shall include the following information, as
15applicable:

16(a) The service area boundaries, the basin the agency is
17managing, and the other groundwater sustainability agencies
18operating within the basin.

19(b) A copy of the resolution forming the new agency.

20(c) A copy of the bylaws, ordinances, and new authorities.

21

10724.  

(a) In the event that there is an area within a basin that
22is not within the management area of a groundwater sustainability
23agency, the county within which that unmanaged area lies will be
24presumed to be the groundwater sustainability agency for that area.

25(b) A county described in subdivision (a) shall provide
26notification to the department pursuant to Section 10723.8 unless
27the county notifies the department that it will not be the
28groundwater sustainability agency for the area. Extractions of
29groundwater madebegin delete after 2016end deletebegin insert on or after January 1, 2017,end insert in that
30area shall be subject to reporting in accordance with Part 5.2
31(commencing with Section 5200) of Division 2 if the county does
32either of the following:

33(1) Notifies the department that it will not be the groundwater
34sustainability agency for an area.

35(2) Fails to provide notification to the department pursuant to
36Section 10723.8 for an area on or before January 1, 2017.

 

P23   1Chapter  5. Powers and Authorities
2

 

3

10725.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency may exercise
4any of the powers described in this chapter in implementing this
5part, in addition to, and not as a limitation on, any existing
6authority, if the groundwater sustainability agency adopts and
7submits to the department a groundwater sustainability plan or
8prescribed alternative documentation in accordance with Section
910733.6.

10(b) A groundwater sustainability agency has and may use the
11powers in this chapter to provide the maximum degree of local
12control and flexibility consistent with the sustainability goals of
13this part.

14

10725.2.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency may perform
15any act necessary or proper to carry out the purposes of this part.

16(b) A groundwater sustainability agency may adopt rules,
17regulations, ordinances, and resolutions for the purpose of this
18part, in compliance with any procedural requirements applicable
19to the adoption of a rule, regulation, ordinance, or resolution by
20the groundwater sustainability agency.

21(c) In addition to any other applicable procedural requirements,
22the groundwater sustainability agency shall provide notice of the
23proposed adoption of the groundwater sustainability plan on its
24Internet Web site and provide for electronic notice to any person
25who requests electronic notification.

26

10725.4.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency may conduct
27an investigation for the purposes of this part, including, but not
28limited to, investigations for the following:

29(1) To determine the need for groundwater management.

30(2) To prepare and adopt a groundwater sustainability plan and
31implementing rules and regulations.

32(3) To propose and update fees.

33(4) To monitor compliance and enforcement.

34(b) An investigation may include surface waters and surface
35water rights as well as groundwater and groundwater rights.

36(c) In connection with an investigation, a groundwater
37sustainability agency may inspect the property or facilities of a
38person or entity to ascertain whether the purposes of this part are
39being met and compliance with this part. The local agency may
40conduct an inspection pursuant to this section upon obtaining any
P30   1necessary consent or obtaining an inspection warrant pursuant to
2the procedure set forth in Title 13 (commencing with Section
31822.50) of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

4

10725.6.  

A groundwater sustainability agency may require
5registration of a groundwater extraction facility within the
6management area of the groundwater sustainability agency.

7

10725.8.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency may require
8through its groundwater sustainability plan that the use of every
9groundwater extraction facility within the management area of the
10groundwater sustainability agency be measured by a
11water-measuring device satisfactory to the groundwater
12sustainability agency.

13(b) All costs associated with the purchase and installation of
14the water-measuring device shall be borne by the owner or operator
15of each groundwater extraction facility. The water measuring
16devices shall be installed by the groundwater sustainability agency
17or, at the groundwater sustainability agency’s option, by the owner
18or operator of the groundwater extraction facility. Water-measuring
19devices shall be calibrated on a reasonable schedule as may be
20determined by the groundwater sustainability agency.

21(c) A groundwater sustainability agency may require, through
22its groundwater sustainability plan, that the owner or operator of
23a groundwater extraction facility within the groundwater
24sustainability agency file an annual statement with the groundwater
25sustainability agency setting forth the total extraction in acre-feet
26of groundwater from the facility during the previous water year.

27(d) In addition to the measurement of groundwater extractions
28pursuant to subdivision (a), a groundwater sustainability agency
29may use any other reasonable method to determine groundwater
30extraction.

31(e) This section does not apply to debegin delete minimusend deletebegin insert minimisend insert extractors.

32

10726.  

An entity within the area of a groundwater sustainability
33plan shall only divert surface water to underground storage
34consistent with the plan and shall report the diversion to
35underground storage to the groundwater sustainability agency for
36the relevant portion of the basin.

37

10726.2.  

A groundwater sustainability agency may do the
38following:

39(a) Acquire by grant, purchase, lease, gift, devise, contract,
40construction, or otherwise, and hold, use, enjoy, sell, let, and
P31   1dispose of, real and personal property of every kind, including
2lands, water rights, structures, buildings, rights-of-way, easements,
3and privileges, and construct, maintain, alter, and operate any and
4all works or improvements, within or outside the agency, necessary
5or proper to carry out any of the purposes of this part.

6(b) Appropriate and acquire surface water or groundwater and
7surface water or groundwater rights, import surface water or
8groundwater into the agency, and conserve and store within or
9outside the agency that water for any purpose necessary or proper
10to carry out the provisions of this part, including, but not limited
11to, the spreading, storing, retaining, or percolating into the soil of
12the waters for subsequent use or in a manner consistent with the
13provisions of Section 10727.2. As part of this authority, the agency
14may validate an existing groundwater conjunctive use or storage
15program upon a finding that the program would aid or assist the
16agency in developing or implementing a groundwater sustainability
17plan.

18(c) Provide for a program of voluntary fallowing of agricultural
19lands or validate an existing program.

20(d) Perform any acts necessary or proper to enable the agency
21to purchase, transfer, deliver, or exchange water or water rights of
22 any type with any person that may be necessary or proper to carry
23out any of the purposes of this part, including, but not limited to,
24providing surface water in exchange for a groundwater extractor’s
25agreement to reduce or cease groundwater extractions. The agency
26shall not deliver retail water supplies within the service area of a
27public water system without either the consent of that system or
28authority under the agency’s existing authorities.

29(e) Transport, reclaim, purify, desalinate, treat, or otherwise
30manage and control polluted water, wastewater, or other waters
31for subsequent use in a manner that is necessary or proper to carry
32out the purposes of this part.

33(f) Commence, maintain, intervene in, defend, compromise,
34and assume the cost and expenses of any and all actions and
35proceedings.

36

10726.4.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency shall have
37the following additional authority and may regulate groundwater
38begin deletepumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert using that authority:

39(1) To impose spacing requirements on new groundwater well
40construction to minimize well interference and impose reasonable
P32   1operating regulations on existing groundwater wells to minimize
2well interference, including requiringbegin delete pumpersend deletebegin insert extractorsend insert to operate
3on a rotation basis.

4(2) To control groundwater extractions by regulating, limiting,
5or suspending extractions from individual groundwater wells or
6extractions from groundwater wells in the aggregate,begin delete theend delete
7 construction of new groundwater wells,begin delete the enlargingend deletebegin insert enlargementend insert
8 of existing groundwater wells,begin delete theend deletebegin insert orend insert reactivation of abandoned
9groundwater wells, or otherwise establishing groundwater
10extraction allocations. A limitation on extractions by a groundwater
11sustainability agency shall not be construed to be a final
12determination of rights to extract groundwater from the basin or
13any portion of the basin.

14(3) To authorize temporary and permanent transfers of
15groundwater extraction allocations within the agency’s boundaries,
16if the total quantity of groundwater extracted in any water year is
17consistent with the provisions of the groundwater sustainability
18plan.

19(4) To establish accounting rules to allow unused groundwater
20extraction allocations issued by the agency to be carried over from
21one year to another and voluntarily transferred, if the total quantity
22of groundwater extracted in any five-year period is consistent with
23the provisions of the groundwater sustainability plan.

begin delete

24(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to grant a
25groundwater sustainability agency the authority to issue permits
26for the construction, modification, or abandonment of groundwater
27wells. A county may authorize a groundwater sustainability agency
28to issue permits for the construction, modification, or abandonment
29of groundwater wells.

end delete
begin insert

30(b) This section does not authorize a groundwater sustainability
31agency to issue permits for the construction, modification, or
32abandonment of groundwater wells, except as authorized by a
33county with authority to issue those permits.

end insert
34

10726.6.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts
35a groundwater sustainability plan may file an action to determine
36the validity of the plan pursuant to Chapter 9 (commencing with
37Section 860) of Title 10 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

38(b) Subject to Sections 394 and 397 of the Code of Civil
39Procedure, the venue for an action pursuant to this section shall
P33   1be the county in which the principal office of the groundwater
2management agency is located.

3(c) Any judicial action or proceeding to attack, review, set aside,
4void, or annul the ordinance or resolution imposing a new, or
5increasing an existing, fee imposed pursuant to Section 10730,
610730.2, or 10730.4 shall be brought pursuant to Section 66022
7of the Government Code.

8(d) Any person may pay a fee imposed pursuant to Section
910730, 10730.2, or 10730.4 under protest and bring an action
10against the governing body in the superior court to recover any
11money that the governing body refuses to refund. Payments made
12and actions brought under this section shall be made and brought
13in the manner provided for the payment of taxes under protest and
14actions for refund of that payment in Article 2 (commencing with
15Section 5140) of Chapter 5 of Part 9 of Division 1 of the Revenue
16and Taxation Code, as applicable.

17(e) Except as otherwise provided in this section, actions by a
18groundwater sustainability agency are subject to judicial review
19pursuant to Section 1085 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

20

10726.8.  

(a) This part is in addition to, and not a limitation
21on, the authority granted to a local agency under any other law.
22The local agency may use the local agency’s authority under any
23other law to apply and enforce any requirements of this part,
24including, but not limited to, the collection of fees.

25(b) Nothing in this part is a limitation on the authority of the
26board, the department, or the State Department of Public Health.

27(c) This part does not authorize a local agency to impose any
28requirement or impose any penalty or fee on the state or any
29agency, department, or officer of the state. State agencies and
30departments shall work cooperatively with a local agency on a
31 voluntary basis.

32 

33Chapter  6. Groundwater Sustainability Plans
34

 

35

10727.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability plan shall be
36developed and implemented for each medium- or high-priority
37basin by a groundwater sustainability agency to meet the
38sustainability goal established pursuant to this part. The
39groundwater sustainability plan may incorporate, extend, or be
P34   1based on a plan adopted pursuant to Part 2.75 (commencing with
2Section 10750).

3(b) A groundwater sustainability plan may be any of the
4following:

5(1) A single plan covering the entire basin developed and
6implemented by one groundwater sustainability agency.

7(2) A single plan covering the entire basin developed and
8implemented by multiple groundwater sustainability agencies.

9(3) Subject to Section 10727.6, multiple plans implemented by
10multiple groundwater sustainability agencies and coordinated
11pursuant to a single coordination agreement that covers the entire
12basin.

13

10727.2.  

A groundwater sustainability plan shall include all
14of the following:

15(a) A description of the physical setting and characteristics of
16the aquifer system underlying the basin that includes the following:

17(1) Historical data, to the extent available.

18(2) Groundwater levels, groundwater quality, subsidence, and
19groundwater-surface water interaction.

20(3) A general discussion of historical and projected water
21demands and supplies.

22(4) A map that details the area of the basin and the boundaries
23of the groundwater sustainability agencies that overlie the basin
24that have or are developing groundwater sustainability plans.

25(5) A map identifying existing and potential recharge areas for
26the basin. The map or maps shall identify the existing recharge
27areas that substantially contribute to the replenishment of the
28groundwater basin. The map or maps shall be provided to the
29appropriate local planning agencies after adoption of the
30groundwater sustainability plan.

31(b) (1) Measurable objectives, as well as interim milestones in
32increments of five years, to achieve the sustainability goal in the
33basin within 20 years of the implementation of the plan.

34(2) A description of how the plan helps meet each objective and
35how each objective is intended to achieve the sustainability goal
36for the basin for long-term beneficial uses of groundwater.

37(3) begin insert(A)end insertbegin insertend insert Notwithstanding paragraph (1), at the request of the
38groundwater sustainability agency, the department may grant an
39extension of up tobegin delete 10end deletebegin insert 5end insert years beyond the 20-year sustainability
40timeframe upon a showing of good cause.begin insert The department may
P35   1grant a second extension of up to five years upon a showing of
2good cause if the groundwater sustainability agency has begun
3implementation of the work plan described in clause (iii) of
4subparagraph (B).end insert

begin insert

5(B) The department may grant an extension pursuant to this
6paragraph if the groundwater sustainability agency does all of the
7following:

end insert
begin insert

8(i) Demonstrates a need for an extension.

end insert
begin insert

9(ii) Has made progress toward meeting the sustainability goal
10as demonstrated by its progress at achieving the milestones
11identified in its groundwater sustainability plan.

end insert
begin insert

12(iii) Adopts a feasible work plan for meeting the sustainability
13goal during the extension period.

end insert
begin insert

14(4) The plan may, but is not required to, address undesirable
15results that occurred before, and have not been corrected by,
16January 1, 2015. Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive,
17a groundwater sustainability agency has discretion as to whether
18to set measurable objectives and the timeframes for achieving any
19objectives for undesirable results that occurred before, and have
20not been corrected by, January 1, 2015.

end insert

21(c) A planning and implementationbegin delete horizon of 50 years.end deletebegin insert horizon.end insert

22(d) Components relating to the following, as applicable to the
23basin:

24(1) The monitoring and management of groundwater levels
25within the basin.

26(2) The monitoring and management of groundwater quality,
27groundwater quality degradation, inelastic land surface subsidence,
28and changes in surface flow and surface water quality that directly
29affect groundwater levels or quality or are caused by groundwater
30begin delete pumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert in the basin.

31(3) Mitigation of overdraft.

32(4) How recharge areas identified in the plan substantially
33contribute to the replenishment of the basin.

34(e) A summary of the type of monitoring sites, type of
35measurements, and the frequency of monitoring for each location
36monitoring groundwater levels, groundwater quality, subsidence,
37streamflow, precipitation, evaporation, and tidal influence. The
38plan shall include a summary of monitoring information such as
39well depth, screened intervals, and aquifer zones monitored, and
40a summary of the type of well relied on for the information,
P36   1including public, irrigation, domestic, industrial, and monitoring
2wells.

3(f) Monitoring protocols that are designed to detect changes in
4 groundwater levels, groundwater quality, inelastic surface
5subsidence for basins for which subsidence has been identified as
6a potential problem, and flow and quality of surface water that
7directly affect groundwater levels or quality or are caused by
8groundwaterbegin delete pumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert in the basin. The monitoring
9protocols shall be designed to generate information that promotes
10efficient and effective groundwater management.

begin insert

11(g) A description of the various adopted water resources-related
12plans and programs within the basin and an assessment of how
13the groundwater sustainability plan may affect those plans.

end insert
14

10727.4.  

In addition to the requirements of Section 10727.2,
15a groundwater sustainability plan shall include, where appropriate
16and in collaboration with the appropriate local agencies, all of the
17following:

18(a) Control of saline water intrusion.

19(b) Wellhead protection areas and recharge areas.

20(c) Migration of contaminated groundwater.

21(d) A well abandonment and well destruction program.

22(e) Replenishment of groundwater extractions.

23(f) Activities implementing, opportunities for, and impediments
24to, conjunctive use.

25(g) Well construction policies.

26(h) Measures addressing groundwater contamination cleanup,
27recharge, diversions to storage, conservation, water recycling,
28conveyance, and extraction projects.

29(i) Efficient water management practices, as defined in Section
3010902, for the delivery of water and water conservation methods
31to improve the efficiency of water use.

32(j) Efforts to develop relationships with state and federal
33regulatory agencies.

34(k) Processes to review land use plans and efforts to coordinate
35with land use planning agencies to assess activities that potentially
36create risks to groundwater quality or quantity.

begin insert

37(l) Impacts on groundwater dependent ecosystems.

end insert
38

10727.6.  

Groundwater sustainability agencies intending to
39develop and implement multiple groundwater sustainability plans
40pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 10727 shall
P37   1coordinate with other agencies preparing a groundwater
2sustainability plan within the basin to ensure that the plans utilize
3the same databegin insert and methodologiesend insert for the following assumptions
4in developing the plan:

5(a) Groundwater elevation data.

6(b) Groundwater extraction data.

7(c) Surface water supply.

8(d) Total water use.

9(e) Change in groundwater storage.

10(f) Water budget.

11(g) Sustainable yield.

12

10727.8.  

Prior to initiating the development of a groundwater
13sustainability plan, the groundwater sustainability agency shall
14make available to the public and the department a written statement
15describing the manner in which interested parties may participate
16in the development and implementation of the groundwater
17sustainability plan.begin insert The groundwater sustainability agency shall
18provide the written statement to the legislative body of any city,
19county, or city and county located within the geographic area to
20be covered by the plan.end insert
The groundwater sustainability agency
21may appoint and consult with an advisory committee consisting
22of interested parties for the purposes of developing and
23implementing a groundwater sustainability plan. The groundwater
24sustainability agency shall encourage the active involvement of
25diverse social, cultural, and economic elements of the population
26within the groundwater basin prior to and during the development
27and implementation of the groundwater sustainability plan.

begin delete
28

10728.  

(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), a
29groundwater sustainability agency shall certify that its plan
30complies with this part no later than January 31, 2020, and every
31five years thereafter. A groundwater sustainability agency shall
32submit this certification to the department within 30 days of the
33certification.

34(b) (1) The department may review the submissions made
35pursuant to this section and Section 10733.6 and may request the
36supporting information on which the certification pursuant to
37subdivision (a) relied upon or the other documentation relied upon
38pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 10733.6. The department
39may issue findings concerning the validity of the certification or
40other submission.

P38   1(2) Before issuing findings pursuant to paragraph (1), the
2department shall transmit a draft of its findings to the submitting
3agency and shall consult with that agency. The submitting agency
4may submit a response to the department within 60 days of
5receiving the department’s draft findings.

6(3) If the department’s findings issued pursuant to paragraph
7(1) concern the compliance of a plan with requirements for
8sustainable groundwater management or the operation of a basin
9consistent with the basin’s sustainable yield, the submitting agency,
10within 90 days of receipt, shall consider amendments to its plan
11or technical analysis to address the department’s findings.

end delete
begin insert
12

begin insert10728.end insert  

On the January 1 following the adoption of a
13groundwater sustainability plan and annually on each January 1
14thereafter, a groundwater sustainability agency shall submit a
15report to the department containing the following information
16about the basin managed in the groundwater sustainability plan:

17(a) Groundwater elevation data.

18(b) Annual aggregated data identifying groundwater extraction
19for the preceding water year.

20(c) Surface water supply used for or available for use for
21groundwater recharge or in-lieu use.

22(d) Total water use.

23(e) Change in groundwater storage.

end insert
24

10728.2.  

A groundwater sustainability agency shall periodically
25evaluate its groundwater sustainability plan, assess changing
26conditions in the basin that may warrant modification of the plan
27or management objectives, and may adjust components in the plan.
28An evaluation of the plan shall focus on determining whether the
29actions under the plan are meeting the plan’s management
30objectives and whether those objectives are meeting the
31sustainability goal in the basin.

32

10728.4.  

A groundwater sustainability agency may adopt or
33amend a groundwater sustainability planbegin delete if the groundwater
34sustainability agency holds a public hearing and more than 90 days
35have passed since the groundwater sustainability agency providedend delete

36begin insert after a public hearing, held at least 90 days after providingend insert notice
37to a city or county within the area of the proposed plan or
38amendment. The groundwater sustainability agency shall obtain
39comments from any city or county that receives notice pursuant
40to this section and shall consult with a city or county that requests
P39   1 consultation within 30 days of receipt of the notice. Nothing in
2this section is intended to preclude an agency and a city or county
3from otherwise consulting or commenting regarding the adoption
4or amendment of a plan.

begin insert
5

begin insert10728.6.end insert  

Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the
6Public Resources Code does not apply to the preparation and
7adoption of plans pursuant to this chapter. Nothing in this part
8shall be interpreted as exempting from Division 13 (commencing
9with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code a project that
10would implement actions taken pursuant to a plan adopted
11pursuant to this chapter or a project that would significantly affect
12water supplies for fish and wildlife.

end insert

13 

14Chapter  7. Technical Assistance
15

 

16

10729.  

(a) The department or a groundwater sustainability
17agency may provide technical assistance to entities that extract or
18use groundwater to promote water conservation and protect
19groundwater resources.

20(b) The department may provide technical assistance to any
21groundwater sustainability agency in response to that agency’s
22request for assistance in the development and implementation of
23a groundwater sustainability plan. The department shall use its
24best efforts to provide the requested assistance.

25(c) (1) By January 1, 2017, the department shall publish on its
26Internet Web site best management practices for the sustainable
27management of groundwater.

28(2) The department shall develop the best management practices
29through a public process involving one public meeting conducted
30at a location in northern California, one public meeting conducted
31at a location in the San Joaquin Valley, one public meeting
32conducted at a location in southern California, and one public
33meeting of the California Water Commission.

34 

35Chapter  8. Financial Authority
36

 

37

10730.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency may impose
38fees, including, but not limited to, permit fees and fees on
39groundwater extraction or other regulated activity, to fund the costs
40of a groundwater sustainability program, including, but not limited
P40   1to, preparation, adoption, and amendment of a groundwater
2sustainability plan, andbegin delete program administration,end delete investigations,
3inspections, compliance assistance,begin delete and enforcement.end deletebegin insert enforcement,
4and program administration, including a prudent reserve.end insert
A
5groundwater sustainability agency shall not impose a fee pursuant
6to this subdivision on a debegin delete minimusend deletebegin insert minimisend insert extractor unless the
7agency has regulated the users pursuant to this part.

8(b) (1) Prior to imposing or increasing a fee, a groundwater
9sustainability agency shall hold at least onebegin delete open andend delete public
10 meeting, at which oral or written presentations may be made as
11part of the meeting.

12(2) Notice of the time and place of the meeting shall include a
13general explanation of the matter to be considered and a statement
14that the data required by this section is available. The notice shall
15bebegin delete mailed at least 14 days prior to the meeting to each record owner
16of property within the basinend delete
begin insert provided by publication pursuant to
17Section 6066 of the Government Code, by posting notice on the
18Internet Web site of the groundwater sustainability agency,end insert
and
19begin insert by mailend insert to any interested party who files a written request with the
20agency for mailed notice of the meeting on new or increased fees.
21A written request for mailed notices shall be valid for one year
22from the date that the request is made and may be renewed by
23making a written request on or before April 1 of each year.

24(3) At least 10 days prior to the meeting, the groundwater
25sustainability agency shall make available to the public data upon
26which the proposed fee is based.

27(c) Any action by a groundwater sustainability agency to impose
28or increase a fee shall be taken only by ordinance or resolution.

29(d) (1) As an alternative method for the collection of fees
30imposed pursuant to this section, a groundwaterbegin delete managementend delete
31begin insert sustainabilityend insert agency may adopt a resolution requesting collection
32of the fees in the same manner as ordinary municipal ad valorem
33taxes.

34(2) A resolution described in paragraph (1) shall be adopted and
35furnished to the county auditor-controller and board of supervisors
36on or before August 1 of each year that the alternative collection
37of the fees is being requested. The resolution shall include a list
38of parcels and the amount to be collect for each parcel.

P41   1(e) The power granted by this section is in addition to any
2powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other
3law.

4

10730.2.  

(a) A groundwater sustainability agency that adopts
5a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part may impose
6fees on the extraction of groundwater from the basin to fund costs
7of groundwater management, including, but not limited to, the
8costs of the following:

9(1) Administration, operation,begin delete maintenance, and acquisition of
10lands or other property, facilities, and services.end delete
begin insert and maintenance,
11including a prudent reserve.end insert

begin insert

12(2) Acquisition of lands or other property, facilities, and
13services.

end insert
begin delete

14(2)

end delete

15begin insert(end insertbegin insert3)end insert Supply, production, treatment, or distribution of water.

begin delete

16(3)

end delete

17begin insert(end insertbegin insert4)end insert Other activities necessary or convenient to implement the
18plan.

19(b)  begin deleteFees may be implemented pursuant to Part 2.75
20(commencing with Section 10750)end delete
begin insert Until a groundwater
21sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to this part, a local agency
22may impose feesend insert
in accordance with the procedures provided in
23this sectionbegin insert for the purposes of Part 2.75 (commencing with Section
2410750) as long as a groundwater management plan adopted before
25January 1, 2015, is in effect for the basinend insert
.

26(c) Fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be adopted in
27accordance with subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 6 of Article
28XIII D of the California Constitution.

29(d) Fees imposed pursuant to this section may include fixed fees
30and fees charged on a volumetric basis, including, but not limited
31to, fees that increase based on the quantity of groundwater produced
32annually, the year in which the production of groundwater
33commenced from a groundwater extraction facility, and impacts
34to the basin.

35(e) The power granted by this section is in addition to any
36powers a groundwater sustainability agency has under any other
37law.

38

10730.4.  

A groundwater sustainability agency may fund
39activities pursuant to Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750)
40and may impose fees pursuant to Sectionbegin delete 10732.5end deletebegin insert 10730.2end insert to fund
P42   1activities undertaken by the agency pursuant to Part 2.75
2(commencing with Section 10750).

3

10730.6.  

(a) A groundwater fee levied pursuant to this chapter
4shall be due and payable to the groundwater sustainability agency
5by each owner or operator on a day established by the groundwater
6sustainability agency.

7(b) If an owner or operator knowingly fails to pay a groundwater
8fee within 30 days of it becoming due, the owner or operator shall
9be liable to the groundwater sustainability agency for interest at
10the rate of 1 percent per month on the delinquent amount of the
11groundwater fee and a 10 percent penalty.

12(c) The groundwater sustainability agency may bring a suit in
13the court having jurisdiction against any owner or operator of a
14groundwater extraction facility within the area covered by the plan
15for the collection of any delinquent groundwater fees, interest, or
16penalties imposed under this chapter. If the groundwater
17sustainability agency seeks an attachment against the property of
18any named defendant in the suit, the groundwater sustainability
19agency shall not be required to furnish a bond or other undertaking
20as provided in Title 6.5 (commencing with Section 481.010) of
21Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

22(d) In the alternative to bringing a suit pursuant to subdivision
23(c), a groundwater sustainability agency may collect any delinquent
24groundwater charge and any civil penalties and interest on the
25delinquent groundwater charge pursuant to the laws applicable to
26the local agency or, if a joint powers authority, to the entity
27designated pursuant to Section 6509 of the Government Code. The
28collection shall be in the same manner as it would be applicable
29to the collection of delinquent assessments, water charges, or tolls.

30(e) As an additional remedy, a groundwater sustainability
31agency, after a public hearing, may order an owner or operator to
32cease extraction of groundwater until all delinquent fees are paid.
33The groundwater sustainability agency shall give notice to the
34owner or operator by certified mail not less than 15 days in advance
35of the public hearing.

36(f) The remedies specified in this section for collecting and
37enforcing fees are cumulative and may be pursued alternatively
38or may be used consecutively as determined by the governing
39body.

P43   1

10730.8.  

(a) Nothing in this chapter shall affect or interfere
2with the authority of a groundwater sustainability agency to levy
3and collect taxes, assessments, charges, and tolls as otherwise
4provided by law.

5(b) For the purposes of Section 6254.16 of the Government
6Code, persons subject to payment of fees pursuant to this chapter
7are utility customers of a groundwater sustainability agency.

8

10731.  

(a) begin deleteIf there is reasonable cause to believe that the
9production of groundwater from any groundwater extraction facility
10is in excess of that disclosed by the statements covering the facility
11or if no statement is filed covering the facility, the governing body
12may cause an investigation and report to be made concerning the
13production of groundwater from that groundwater extraction
14facility that includes, but is not limited to, the accuracy of the
15water-measuring device. Theend delete
begin insert Following an investigation pursuant
16to Section 10725.4, theend insert
governing body may make a determination
17fixing the amount of groundwater production from the groundwater
18extraction facility at an amount not to exceed the maximum
19production capacity of the facility for purposes of levying a
20groundwater charge. If a water-measuring device is permanently
21attached to the groundwater extraction facility, the record of
22production as disclosed by the water-measuring device shall be
23presumed to be accurate unless the contrary is established by the
24groundwaterbegin delete managementend deletebegin insert sustainabilityend insert agency after investigation.

25(b) After the governing body makes a determination fixing the
26amount of groundwater production pursuant to subdivision (a), a
27written notice of the determination shall be mailed to the owner
28or operator of the groundwater extraction facility at the address as
29shown by the groundwaterbegin delete managementend deletebegin insert sustainabilityend insert agency’s
30records. A determination made by the governing body shall be
31conclusive on the owner or operator and the groundwater charges,
32based on the determination together with any interest and penalties,
33shall be payable immediately unless withinbegin delete 10end deletebegin insert 20end insert days after the
34mailing of the notice the owner or operator files with the governing
35body a written protest setting forth the ground for protesting the
36amount of production or the groundwater charges, interest, and
37penalties. If a protest is filed pursuant to this subdivision, the
38governing body shall hold a hearing to determine the total amount
39of the groundwater production and the groundwater charges,
40interest, and penalties.begin delete The determination by the governing body
P44   1at the hearing shall be conclusive if based upon substantial
2evidence.end delete
Notice of the hearing shall be mailed to each protestant
3at least begin delete10end deletebegin insert 20end insert days before the date fixed for the hearing. Notice of
4the determination of the governing body hearing shall be mailed
5to each protestant. The owner or operator shall have 20 days from
6the date of mailing of the determination to pay the groundwater
7charges, interest, and penalties determined by the governing body.

8 

9Chapter  9. Groundwater Sustainability Agency
10Enforcement Powers
11

 

12

10732.  

(a) (1) A person who extracts groundwater in excess
13of the amount that person is authorized to extract under a rule,
14regulation, ordinance, or resolution adopted pursuant to Section
1510725.2, shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed five
16hundred dollars ($500) per acre-foot extracted in excess of the
17amount that person is authorized to extract. Liability under this
18subdivision is in addition to any liability imposed under paragraph
19(2) and any fee imposed for the extraction.

20(2) A person who violates any rule, regulation, ordinance, or
21resolution adopted pursuant to Sectionbegin delete 10724.2end deletebegin insert 10725.2end insert shall be
22liable for a civil penalty not to exceed one thousand dollars
23($1,000) plus one hundred dollars ($100) for each additional day
24on which the violation continues if the person fails to comply
25within 30 days after the local agency has notified the person of the
26violation.

27(b) (1) A groundwater sustainability agency may bring an action
28in the superior court to determine whether a violation occurred
29and to impose a civil penalty described in subdivision (a).

30(2) A groundwater sustainability agency may administratively
31impose a civil penalty described in subdivision (a) after providing
32notice and an opportunity for a hearing.

33 (3) In determining the amount of the penalty, the superior court
34or the groundwater sustainability agency shall take into
35consideration all relevant circumstances, including, but not limited
36to, the nature and persistence of the violation, the extent of the
37harm caused by the violation, the length of time over which the
38violation occurs, and any corrective action taken by the violator.

P45   1(c) A penalty imposed pursuant to this section shall be paid to
2the groundwater sustainability agency and shall be expended solely
3for purposes of this part.

4(d) Penalties imposed pursuant to this section are in addition to
5any civil penalty or criminal fine under any other law.

6 

7Chapter  10. State Evaluation and Assessment
8

 

9

10733.  

(a) The department shall periodically review the
10groundwater sustainability plans developed by groundwater
11sustainability agencies pursuant to this part to evaluate whether a
12plan conforms with Sections 10727.2 and 10727.4 and is likely to
13achieve the sustainability goal for the basin covered by the
14groundwater sustainability plan.

15(b) If a groundwater sustainability agency develops multiple
16groundwater sustainability plans for a basin, the department shall
17evaluate whether the plans conform with Sections 10727.2,
1810727.4, and 10727.6 and are together likely to achieve the
19sustainability goal for the basin covered by the groundwater
20sustainability plans.

21

10733.2.  

(a) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insert By June 1, 2016, the department, in
22consultation with the board, shall develop guidelines for evaluating
23groundwater sustainabilitybegin delete plans and groundwater sustainability
24programsend delete
begin insert plans, the implementation of groundwater sustainability
25plans, and coordination agreementsend insert
pursuant to this chapter.

begin delete

26(b)

end delete

27begin insert(2)end insert The guidelines shall identify the necessary plan components
28specified in Sectionsbegin delete 10727.2 and 10727.4end deletebegin insert 10727.2, 10727.4, and
2910727.6end insert
and other information that will assist local agencies in
30developing and implementing groundwater sustainabilitybegin delete plans
31and groundwater sustainability programs.end delete
begin insert plans and coordination
32agreements.end insert

begin delete

33(c)

end delete

34begin insert(b)end insert The department may update the guidelines, including to
35incorporate the best management practices identified pursuant to
36Section 10729.

begin insert

37(c) By June 1, 2016, the department, in consultation with the
38board, shall develop guidelines for evaluating alternatives
39submitted pursuant to Section 10733.6.

end insert

P46   1(d) The guidelines required pursuant to this section are exempt
2from Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of
3Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The establishment
4of guidelines pursuant to this section shall instead be accomplished
5by means of a public processbegin delete reasonably calculated to giveend deletebegin insert that
6givesend insert
interested persons an opportunity to be heard.

7

10733.4.  

(a) Uponbegin delete completionend deletebegin insert adoptionend insert of a groundwater
8sustainability plan, a groundwater sustainability agency shall
9submit the groundwater sustainability plan to the department for
10review pursuant to this chapter.

11(b) If groundwater sustainability agencies develop multiple
12groundwater sustainability plans for a basin, the submission
13required by subdivision (a) shall not occur until the entire basin is
14covered by groundwater sustainability plans. When the entire basin
15is covered by groundwater sustainability plans, the groundwater
16sustainability agencies shall jointly submit to the department all
17of the following:

18(1) The groundwater sustainability plans.

19(2) An explanation of how the groundwater sustainability plans
20implemented together satisfybegin delete Section 10729end deletebegin insert Sections 10727.2,
2110727.4, and 10727.6end insert
for the entire basin.

22(3) A copy of the coordination agreement between the
23groundwater sustainability agencies to ensure the coordinated
24implementation of the groundwater sustainability plans for the
25entire basin.

26(c) Upon receipt of a groundwater sustainability plan, the
27department shall post the plan on the department’s Internet Web
28site and provide 60 days for persons to submit comments to the
29department about the plan.

30(d) The department shall evaluate the groundwater sustainability
31plan within two years of its submission by a groundwater
32sustainability agency and issue an assessment of the plan. The
33assessment may include recommended corrective actions to address
34any deficiencies identified by the department.

begin delete
35

10733.6.  

(a) If there is not a groundwater sustainability plan
36for a basin, but a local agency believes that an alternative plan,
37such as a plan developed pursuant to Part 2.75 (commencing with
38Section 10750), satisfies the objectives of this part, the local agency
39may submit the alternative plan to the department for evaluation
40and assessment of whether the plan is the functional equivalent of
P47   1a groundwater sustainability plan pursuant to this part. In evaluating
2an alternative plan, the department shall, to the extent feasible, use
3the guidelines developed pursuant to Section 10733.2.

4(b) A basin shall be in compliance with this part if a groundwater
5agency for a basin or other local agency submits to the department,
6no later than January 31, 2020, and every five years thereafter, any
7of the following documents:

8(1) A copy of a governing final judgment or other judicial order
9or decree establishing a groundwater sustainability program for
10the basin.

11(2) A report approved by a groundwater agency that shows that
12current management or operations activities have been consistent
13with the sustainable yield of the basin over a period of at least 10
14years. The report shall be prepared by a registered professional
15engineer or geologist who is licensed by the state and submitted
16under that engineer’s or geologist’s seal. The report may
17demonstrate compliance with the sustainability goal in the basin
18by presenting a balanced water budget for the basin, a technical
19analysis demonstrating stable groundwater levels over the relevant
20period, or other sufficient technical analyses.

end delete
begin insert
21

begin insert10733.6.end insert  

(a) If there is no groundwater sustainability plan for
22a basin, but a local agency believes that an alternative described
23in subdivision (b) satisfies the objectives of this part, the local
24agency may submit the alternative to the department for evaluation
25and assessment of whether the alternative satisfies the objectives
26of this part.

27(b) An alternative is any of the following:

28(1) A plan developed pursuant to Part 2.75 (commencing with
29Section 10750) or other law authorizing groundwater management.

30(2) Management pursuant to an adjudication action.

31(3) An analysis of basin conditions that demonstrates that the
32basin has operated within its sustainable yield over a period of at
33least 10 years. The submission of an alternative described by this
34paragraph shall include a report prepared by a registered
35professional engineer or geologist who is licensed by the state and
36submitted under that engineer’s or geologist’s seal.

37(c) A local agency shall submit an alternative pursuant to this
38section no later than January 1, 2017, and every five years
39thereafter.

P48   1(d) The assessment required by subdivision (a) shall include an
2assessment of whether the alternative is within a basin that is in
3compliance with Part 2.11 (commencing with Section 10920). If
4the alternative is within a basin that is not in compliance with Part
52.11 (commencing with Section 10920), the department shall find
6the alternative does not satisfy the objectives of this part.

end insert
7

10733.8.  

At least every five years afterbegin insert initialend insert submissionbegin insert of a
8plan pursuant to Section 10733.4end insert
, the department, in consultation
9with the board, shall review any available groundwater
10sustainability plan, alternativebegin delete planend delete submitted in accordance with
11Sectionbegin delete 10729.6,end deletebegin insert 10733.6,end insert and the implementation of the
12corresponding groundwater sustainability program for consistency
13with this part, including achieving the sustainability goal. The
14department shall issue an assessment for each basin for which a
15plan has been submitted in accordance with thisbegin delete chapter.end deletebegin insert chapter,
16with an emphasis on assessing progress in achieving the
17sustainability goal within the basin.end insert
The assessment may include
18recommended corrective actions to address any deficiencies
19identified by the department.

20

10734.  

(a) Consistent with Section 3 of Article XIII A of the
21California Constitution, the department shall adopt a schedule of
22fees to recover costs incurred in carrying out this chapter.

23(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to amend this measure to
24adopt additional authority for the department to implement the fee
25authority provided by this section.

26 

27Chapter  11. State Intervention
28

 

29

10735.  

As used in this chapter, the following terms have the
30following meanings:

31(a) “Condition of long-term overdraft” means the condition of
32a groundwater basin where the average annual amount of water
33extracted for a long-term period, generally 10 years or more,
34exceeds the long-term average annual supply of water to the basin,
35plus any temporary surplus. Overdraft during a period of drought
36is not sufficient to establish a condition of long-term overdraft if
37extractions and recharge are managed as necessary to ensure that
38reductions in groundwater levels or storage during a period of
39drought are offset by increases in groundwater levels or storage
40during other periods.

P49   1(b) “Person” means any person, firm, association, organization,
2partnership, business, trust, corporation, limited liability company,
3or public agency, including any city, county, city and county,
4district, joint powers authority, state, or any agency or department
5of those entities. “Person” includes, to the extent authorized by
6federal law, the United States, a department, agency or
7instrumentality of the federal government, an Indian tribe, an
8authorized Indian tribal organization, or interstate body.

9(c) “Probationary basin” means a basin for which the board has
10issued a determination underbegin delete this section.end deletebegin insert Section 10735.2.end insert

11(d) “Significant depletions of interconnected surface waters”
12means reductions in flow or levels of a surface water that is
13hydrologically connected to the basin such that the reduced surface
14water flow or level adversely affects beneficial uses of the surface
15 water.

16

10735.2.  

(a) The board, after notice and a public hearing, may
17designate a basin as a probationary basin, if the board finds one
18or more of the following applies to the basin:

19(1) After January 1, 2017, none of the following have occurred:

20(A) begin deleteNoend deletebegin insert Aend insert local agency has elected to be a groundwater
21sustainability agency that intends to develop a groundwater
22sustainability plan for the entire basin.

23(B) begin deleteNoend deletebegin insert Aend insert collection of local agencies has formed a groundwater
24sustainability agency or prepared agreements to develop one or
25more groundwater sustainability plans that will collectively serve
26as a groundwater sustainability plan for the entire basin.

begin delete

27(C) There is no plan developed pursuant to Part 2.75
28(commencing with Section 10750) that satisfies the objectives of
29this part.

end delete
begin delete

30(D) There is no report approved by a groundwater agency that
31shows that current management or operations activities have been
32consistent with the sustainable yield of the basin over a period of
33at least 10 years, as described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b)
34of Section 10733.6.

end delete
begin insert

35(C)  A local agency has submitted an alternative that has been
36approved or is pending approval pursuant to Section 10733.6. If
37the department disapproves an alternative pursuant to Section
3810733.6, the board shall not act under this paragraph until at least
39180 days after the department disapproved the alternative.

end insert

40(2) After January 31, 2020, none of the following have occurred:

P50   1(A) begin deleteNoend deletebegin insert Aend insert groundwater sustainability agency has adopted a
2groundwater sustainability plan for the entire basin.

3(B) begin deleteNoend deletebegin insert Aend insert collection of local agencies have adopted groundwater
4sustainability plans that collectively serve as a groundwater
5sustainability plan for the entire basin.

6(C) The department hasbegin delete not determined that a local agency has
7a functional equivalent as described in Section 10733.6.end delete
begin insert approved
8an alternative pursuant to Section 10733.6.end insert

begin delete

9(D) There is no report approved by a groundwater agency that
10shows that current management or operations activities have been
11consistent with the sustainable yield of the basin over a period of
12at least 10 years, as described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b)
13of Section 10733.6.

end delete

14(3) After January 31, 2020,begin delete eitherend deletebegin insert bothend insert of the following have
15occurred:

16(A) Thebegin delete department has determinedend deletebegin insert department, in consultation
17with the board, determinesend insert
that a groundwater sustainability plan
18is inadequate or that the groundwater sustainability program is not
19being implemented in a manner that will likely achieve the
20sustainability goal.

21(B) Thebegin insert board determines that theend insert basin is in a condition of
22long-term overdraft or in a condition where groundwater
23extractions result in significant depletions of interconnected surface
24waters.

25(b) begin delete(1)end deletebegin deleteend deleteIn making the findings associated withbegin delete subparagraph
26(A) ofend delete
paragraph (3) of subdivision (a), thebegin insert department andend insert board
27may rely on periodic assessments the department has prepared
28pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 10733). The
29board may request that the department conduct additional
30assessments utilizing the guidelines developed pursuant to Chapter
3110 (commencing with 10733) and make determinations pursuant
32to this section. The board shall post on its Internet Web site and
33provide at least 30 days for the public to comment on any
34determinations provided by the department pursuant to this
35subdivision.

begin delete

36(2) The board shall consult with the department in assessing
37technical determinations pursuant to subparagraph (A) of paragraph
38(3) of subdivision (a).

39(c) The determination shall set an amount of groundwater
40extractions, for purposes of establishing the amount for which
P51   1reports of groundwater extraction are required under Part 5.2
2(commencing with Section 5200) of Division 2, and may include
3exclusions for certain classes or categories of extractions that are
4likely to have a minimal impact on basin withdrawals.

end delete
begin insert

5(c) (1)   The determination may exclude a class or category of
6extractions from the requirement for reporting pursuant to Part
75.2 (commencing with Section 5200) of Division 2 if those
8extractions are likely to have a minimal impact on basin
9withdrawals.

end insert
begin insert

10(2) The determination may require reporting of a class or
11category of extractions that would otherwise be exempt from
12reporting pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section
135202 if those extractions are likely to have a substantial impact
14on basin withdrawals or requiring reporting of those extractions
15is reasonably necessary to obtain information for purposes of this
16chapter.

end insert
begin insert

17(3) The determination may establish requirements for
18information required to be included in reports of groundwater
19extraction, for installation of measuring devices, or for use of a
20methodology, measuring device, or both, pursuant to Part 5.2
21(commencing with Section 5200) of Division 2.

end insert
begin insert

22(4) The determination may modify the water year or reporting
23date for a report of groundwater extraction pursuant to Section
245202.

end insert
25

10735.4.  

(a) If the board designates a basin as a probationary
26basin pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (a) of Section
2710735.2, a local agency or groundwater sustainability agency shall
28have 180 days to remedy the deficiency. The board may appoint
29a mediator or other facilitator, after consultation with affected local
30agencies, to assist in resolving disputes, and identifying and
31implementing actions that will remedy the deficiency.

32(b) After the 180-day period provided by subdivision (a), the
33board may provide additional time to remedy the deficiency if it
34finds that a local agency is making substantial progress toward
35remedying the deficiency.

36(c) The board may develop an interim plan pursuant to Section
3710735.8 for the probationary basin at the end of thebegin delete timeend delete period
38provided by subdivision (a) or any extension provided pursuant
39to subdivision (b), if the board, in consultation with the department,
40determines that a local agency has not remedied the deficiency
P52   1that resulted in designating the basin as a probationary basin
2begin deletepursuant to this sectionend delete.

3

10735.6.  

(a) If the board designates a basin as a probationary
4basin pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of Section
510735.2, the board shall identify the specific deficiencies and
6identify potential actions to address the deficiencies. The board
7may request the department to provide local agencies, within 90
8days of the designation of a probationary basin, with technical
9recommendations to remedy the deficiencies.

10(b) The board may develop an interim plan pursuant to Section
1110735.8 for the probationary basin one year after the designation
12of the basin pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of Section
1310735.2, if the board, in consultation with the department,
14determines that a local agency has not remedied the deficiency
15thatbegin delete resultend deletebegin insert resultedend insert in designating the basin a probationary basin.

16

10735.8.  

(a) The board, after notice and a public hearing, may
17adopt an interim plan for a probationary basin.

18(b) The interim plan shall include all of the following:

19(1) Identification of the actions that are necessary to correct a
20condition of long-term overdraft or a condition where groundwater
21extractions result in significant depletions of interconnected surface
22waters, including recommendations for appropriate action by any
23person.

24(2) A time schedule for the actions to be taken.

25(3) A description of the monitoring to be undertaken to
26determine effectiveness of the plan.

27(c) The interim plan may include the following:

28(1) Restrictions on groundwaterbegin delete pumping orend delete extraction.

29(2) A physical solution.

30(3) Principles and guidelines for the administration of rights to
31surface waters that are connected to the basin.

32(d) begin deleteTo the extent feasible, consistent withend deletebegin insert Except as provided
33 inend insert
Sections 100 and 275 and subdivision (e), the interim plan shall
34be consistent with water right priorities.

35(e) Where, in the judgment of the board, a groundwater
36sustainability plan, groundwater sustainability program, or an
37adjudication action can be relied on as part of the interim plan,
38either throughout the basin or in an area within the basin, the board
39may rely on, or incorporate elements of, that plan, program, or
40adjudication into the interim plan adopted by the board or allow
P53   1local agencies to continue implementing those parts of a plan or
2program that the board determines are adequate.

3(f) In carrying out activities that may affect the probationary
4basin, state entities shall comply with an interim plan adopted by
5the board pursuant to this section unless otherwise directed or
6authorized by statute and the state entity shall indicate to the board
7in writing the authority for not complying with the interim plan.

8(g) (1) After the board adopts an interim plan under this section,
9the board shall determine if a groundwater sustainability plan or
10an adjudication action is adequate to eliminate the condition of
11long-term overdraft or condition where groundwater extractions
12result in significant depletions of interconnected surface waters,
13upon petition of either of the following:

14(A) A groundwater sustainability agency that has adopted a
15groundwater sustainability plan for the probationary basin or a
16portion thereof.

17(B) A person authorized to file the petition by a judicial order
18or decree entered in an adjudication action in the probationary
19basin.

20(2) The board shall act on a petition filed pursuant to paragraph
21(1) within 90 days after the petition is complete. If the boardbegin insert, in
22consultation with the department,end insert
determines that the groundwater
23sustainability plan or adjudication action is adequate, the board
24shall rescind the interim plan adopted by the board for the
25probationary basin, except as provided in paragraphs (3) and (4).

26(3) Upon request of the petitioner, the board may amend an
27interim plan adopted under this section to eliminate portions of
28the interim plan, while allowing other portions of the interim plan
29to continue in effect.

30(4) The board may decline to rescind an interim plan adopted
31pursuant to this section if the board determines that the petitioner
32has not provided adequate assurances that the groundwater
33sustainability plan or judicial order or decree will be implemented.

34(5) This subdivision is not a limitation on the authority of the
35board to stay its proceedings under this section or to rescind or
36amend an interim plan adopted pursuant to this section based on
37the progress made by a groundwater sustainability agency or in
38an adjudication action, even if the board cannot make a
39determination of adequacy in accordance with paragraph (1).

P54   1

10736.  

(a) The board shall adopt or amend a determination or
2interim plan under Section 10735.2 or 10735.8 in accordance with
3procedures for quasi-legislative action.

4(b) The board shall provide notice of a hearing described in
5subdivision (a) of Section 10735.2 or subdivision (a) of Section
610735.8 as follows:

7(1) At least 90 days before the hearing, the board shall publish
8notice of the hearing on its Internet Web site.

9(2) At least 90 days before the hearing, the board shall notify
10the department and each city, county, or city and county in which
11any part of the basin is situated.

12(3) (A) For the purposes of this paragraph, the terms
13“board-designated local area” and “local agency” have the same
14meaning as defined in Section 5009.

15(B) At least 60 days before the hearing, the board shall mail or
16send by electronic mail notice to all persons known to the board
17who extract or who propose to extract water from the basin, or
18who have made written or electronic mail requests to the board
19for special notice of hearing pursuant to this part. If any portion
20of the basin is within a board-designated local area, the records
21made available to the board by the local agency in accordance with
22paragraph (4) of subdivision (d) of Section 5009 shall include the
23names and addresses of persons and entities known to the local
24agency who extract water from the basin, and the board shall mail
25or send by electronic mail notice to those persons.

26(c) The board shall provide notice of proceedings to amend or
27repeal a determination or plan under Section 10735.2 or 10735.8
28as appropriate to the proceedings, taking into account the nature
29of the proposed revision and the person likely to be affected.

30(d) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), Chapter
313.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 2 of
32Title 2 of the Government Code does not apply to any action
33authorized pursuant to Section 10735.2 or 10735.8.

34(2) The board may adopt a regulation in accordance with Chapter
353.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 2 of
36Title 2 of the Government Code setting procedures for adopting a
37determination or plan.

38(3) The board may adopt a regulation applying or interpreting
39this part pursuant to Section 1530 if the board determines that the
40emergency regulation is reasonably necessary for the allocation,
P55   1administration, or collection of fees authorized pursuant to Section
21529.5.

3

10736.2.  

Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the
4Public Resources Code does not apply to any action or failure to
5act by the board under this chapter, other than the adoption or
6amendment of an interim plan pursuant to Section 10735.8.

7

10736.4.  

The extraction or use of water extracted in violation
8of an interim plan under this part shall not be relied upon as a basis
9for establishing the extraction or use of water to support a claim
10in an action or proceeding for determination of water rights.

11

10736.6.  

(a) The board may order a person that extracts or
12uses water from a basin that is subject to an investigation or
13proceeding under this chapter to prepare and submit to the board
14any technical or monitoring program reports related to that person’s
15or entity’s extraction or use of water as the board may specify.
16The costs incurred by the person in the preparation of those reports
17shall bear a reasonable relationship to the need for the report and
18the benefit to be obtained from the report. If the preparation of
19individual reports would result in a duplication of effort, or if the
20reports are necessary to evaluate the cumulative effect of several
21diversions or uses of water, the board may order any person subject
22to this subdivision to pay a reasonable share of the cost of preparing
23reports.

24(b) (1) An order issued pursuant to this section shall be served
25by personal service or registered mail on the party to submit
26technical or monitoring program reports or to pay a share of the
27costs of preparing reports. Unless the board issues the order after
28a hearing, the order shall inform the party of the right to request a
29hearing within 30 days after the party has been served. If the party
30does not request a hearing within that 30-day period, the order
31shall take effect as issued. If the party requests a hearing within
32that 30-day period, the board may adopt a decision and order after
33conducting a hearing.

34(2) In-lieu of adopting an order directed at named persons in
35accordance with the procedures specified in paragraph (1), the
36board may adopt a regulation applicable to a category or class of
37persons in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
3811340) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Government Code.

39(c) Upon application of a person or upon its own motion, the
40board may review and revise an order issued or regulation adopted
P56   1pursuant to this section in accordance with the procedures set forth
2in subdivision (b).

3(d) In conducting an investigation or proceeding pursuant to
4this part, the board may inspect the property or facilities of a person
5to ascertain whether the purposes of this part are being met and to
6ascertain compliance with this part. The board may obtain an
7inspection warrant pursuant to the procedures set forth in Title 13
8(commencing with Section 1822.50) of Part 3 of the Code of Civil
9Procedure for the purposes of an inspection pursuant to this
10subdivision.

11

begin deleteSEC. 11.end delete
12begin insertSEC. 13.end insert  

Section 10750.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:

13

10750.1.  

(a) Beginning January 1, 2015, a new plan shall not
14be adopted and an existing plan shall not be renewed pursuant to
15this part, except as provided in subdivision (b). A plan adopted
16before January 1, 2015, shall remain in effect until a groundwater
17sustainability plan is adopted pursuant to Part 2.74 (commencing
18with Section 10720).

19(b) This section does not apply to a low- or very low priority
20basin as categorized for the purposes of Part 2.74 (commencing
21with Section 10720).

begin insert

22(c) This section does not apply to a plan submitted as an
23 alternative pursuant to Section 10733.6, unless the department
24has not determined that the alternative satisfies the objectives of
25Part 2.74 (commencing with Section 10720) on or before January
2631, 2020, or the department later determines that the plan does
27not satisfy the objectives of that part.

end insert
28

begin deleteSEC. 12.end delete
29begin insertSEC. 14.end insert  

Section 10927 of the Water Code is amended to read:

30

10927.  

Any of the following entities may assume responsibility
31for monitoring and reporting groundwater elevations in all or a
32part of a basin or subbasin in accordance with this part:

33(a) A watermaster or water management engineer appointed by
34a court or pursuant to statute to administer a final judgment
35determining rights to groundwater.

36(b) (1) A groundwater management agency with statutory
37authority to manage groundwater pursuant to its principal act that
38is monitoring groundwater elevations in all or a part of a
39groundwater basin or subbasin on or before January 1, 2010.

P57   1(2) A water replenishment district established pursuant to
2Division 18 (commencing with Section 60000). This part does not
3expand or otherwise affect the authority of a water replenishment
4district relating to monitoring groundwater elevations.

5(3) A groundwater sustainability agency with statutory authority
6to manage groundwater pursuant to Part 2.74 (commencing with
7Section 10720).

8(c) A local agency that is managing all or part of a groundwater
9basin or subbasin pursuant to Part 2.75 (commencing with Section
1010750) and that was monitoring groundwater elevations in all or
11a part of a groundwater basin or subbasin on or before January 1,
122010, or a local agency or county that is managing all or part of a
13groundwater basin or subbasin pursuant to any other legally
14enforceable groundwater management plan with provisions that
15are substantively similar to those described in that part and that
16was monitoring groundwater elevations in all or a part of a
17groundwater basin or subbasin on or before January 1, 2010.

18(d) A local agency that is managing all or part of a groundwater
19basin or subbasin pursuant to an integrated regional water
20management plan prepared pursuant to Part 2.2 (commencing with
21Section 10530) that includes a groundwater management
22component that complies with the requirements of Section 10753.7.

23(e) A local agency that has been collecting and reporting
24groundwater elevations and that does not have an adopted
25groundwater management plan, if the local agency adopts a
26groundwater management plan in accordance with Part 2.75
27(commencing with Section 10750) by January 1, 2014. The
28department may authorize the local agency to conduct the
29monitoring and reporting of groundwater elevations pursuant to
30this part on an interim basis, until the local agency adopts a
31groundwater management plan in accordance with Part 2.75
32(commencing with Section 10750) or until January 1, 2014,
33whichever occurs first.

34(f) A county that is not managing all or a part of a groundwater
35basin or subbasin pursuant to a legally enforceable groundwater
36management plan with provisions that are substantively similar to
37those described in Part 2.75 (commencing with Section 10750).

38(g) A voluntary cooperative groundwater monitoring association
39formed pursuant to Section 10935.

P58   1

begin deleteSEC. 13.end delete
2begin insertSEC. 15.end insert  

Section 10933 of the Water Code is amended to read:

3

10933.  

(a)  The department shall commence to identify the
4extent of monitoring of groundwater elevations that is being
5undertaken within each basin and subbasin.

6(b) (1) The department shall prioritize groundwater basins and
7subbasins for the purpose of implementing this section. In
8prioritizing the basins and subbasins, the department shall, to the
9extent data are available, consider all of the following:

10(A) The population overlying the basin or subbasin.

11(B) The rate of current and projected growth of the population
12overlying the basin or subbasin.

13(C) The number of public supply wells that draw from the basin
14or subbasin.

15(D) The total number of wells that draw from the basin or
16subbasin.

17(E) The irrigated acreage overlying the basin or subbasin.

18(F) The degree to which persons overlying the basin or subbasin
19rely on groundwater as their primary source of water.

20(G) Any documented impacts on the groundwater within the
21basin or subbasin, including overdraft, subsidence, saline intrusion,
22and other water quality degradation.

23(H) Any other information determined to be relevant by the
24department.

25(2) The department, in consultation with the Department of Fish
26and Wildlife, shall identify and develop prioritization criteria for
27the purpose of identifying groundwater basins and subbasins that
28should be prioritized based on adverse impacts to habitat and
29surface water resources.begin delete Theend deletebegin insert Theseend insert criteria shall be incorporated
30into the determination of basin and subbasin prioritization at the
31department’s next update of basin and subbasin prioritizations that
32occurs after January 1, 2017.

33(c) If the department determines that all or part of a basin or
34subbasin is not being monitored pursuant to this part, the
35department shall do all of the following:

36(1) Attempt to contact all well owners within the area not being
37monitored.

38(2) Determine if there is an interest in establishing any of the
39following:

P59   1(A) A groundwater management plan pursuant to Part 2.75
2(commencing with Section 10750).

3(B) An integrated regional water management plan pursuant to
4Part 2.2 (commencing with Section 10530) that includes a
5groundwater management component that complies with the
6requirements of Section 10753.7.

7(C) A voluntary groundwater monitoring association pursuant
8to Section 10935.

9(d) If the department determines that there is sufficient interest
10in establishing a plan or association described in paragraph (2) of
11subdivision (c), or if the county agrees to perform the groundwater
12monitoring functions in accordance with this part, the department
13shall work cooperatively with the interested parties to comply with
14the requirements of this part within two years.

15(e) If the department determines, with regard to a basin or
16subbasin, that there is insufficient interest in establishing a plan
17or association described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (c), and
18if the county decides not to perform the groundwater monitoring
19and reporting functions of this part, the department shall do all of
20the following:

21(1) Identify any existing monitoring wells that overlie the basin
22or subbasin that are owned or operated by the department or any
23other state or federal agency.

24(2) Determine whether the monitoring wells identified pursuant
25to paragraph (1) provide sufficient information to demonstrate
26seasonal and long-term trends in groundwater elevations.

27(3) If the department determines that the monitoring wells
28identified pursuant to paragraph (1) provide sufficient information
29to demonstrate seasonal and long-term trends in groundwater
30elevations, the department shall not perform groundwater
31monitoring functions pursuant to Section 10933.5.

32(4) If the department determines that the monitoring wells
33identified pursuant to paragraph (1) provide insufficient
34information to demonstrate seasonal and long-term trends in
35groundwater elevations, the department shall perform groundwater
36monitoring functions pursuant to Section 10933.5.

37

begin deleteSEC. 14.end delete
38begin insertSEC. 16.end insert  

Section 12924 of the Water Code is amended to read:

39

12924.  

(a) The department, in conjunction with other public
40agencies, shall conduct an investigation of the state’s groundwater
P60   1basins. The department shall identify the state’s groundwater basins
2on the basis of geological and hydrological conditions and
3consideration of political boundary lines whenever practical. The
4department shall also investigate existing general patterns of
5groundwaterbegin delete pumpingend deletebegin insert extractionend insert and groundwater recharge within
6those basins to the extent necessary to identify basins that are
7subject to critical conditions of overdraft.

8(b) The department may revise the boundaries of groundwater
9basins identified in subdivision (a) based on its own investigations
10or information provided by others.

11(c) The department shall report its findings to the Governor and
12the Legislature not later than January 1, 2012, and thereafter in
13years ending in 5 or 0.

14

begin deleteSEC. 15.end delete
15begin insertSEC. 17.end insert  

The provisions of this act are severable. If any
16provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity
17shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given
18effect without the invalid provision or application.

19

begin deleteSEC. 16.end delete
20begin insertSEC. 18.end insert  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
21Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution for certain
22costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district
23because, in that regard, this act creates a new crime or infraction,
24eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime
25or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
26Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
27meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
28Constitution.

29However, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that
30this act contains other costs mandated by the state, reimbursement
31to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
32pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division
334 of Title 2 of the Government Code.

34

begin deleteSEC. 17.end delete
35begin insertSEC. 19.end insert  

The Legislature finds and declares that Sectionbegin delete 5end deletebegin insert 11
36of this act, which adds Section 5206 to the Water Code and Section
3712end insert
of this act, which adds Section 10730.8 to the Water Code,
38begin delete imposesend deletebegin insert impose end inserta limitation on the public’s right of access to the
39meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and
40agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the
P61   1California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision,
2the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the
3interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting
4that interest:

5In order to allow this act to fully accomplish its goals, it is
6necessary to protect proprietary information submitted pursuant
7to this act as confidential. Therefore, it is in the state’s interest to
8limit public access to this information.



O

    95