BILL NUMBER: AB 450 INTRODUCED
BILL TEXT
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member De La Torre
FEBRUARY 24, 2009
An act to amend Section 13576 of the Water Code, relating to
water.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 450, as introduced, De La Torre. Recycled water.
Existing law declares that the environmental benefits of recycled
water include a reduced demand for water in the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta.
This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that
provision.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 13576 of the Water Code is amended to read:
13576. The Legislature hereby makes the following findings and
declarations:
(a) The State of California is subject to periodic drought
conditions.
(b) The development of traditional water resources in California
has not kept pace with the state's population, which is growing at
the rate of over 700,000 per year and which is anticipated to reach
36 million by the year 2010.
(c) There is a need for a reliable source of water for uses not
related to the supply of potable water to protect investments in
agriculture, greenbelts green belts ,
and recreation and to , replenish
groundwater basins, and protect and enhance fisheries, wildlife
habitat, and riparian areas.
(d) The environmental benefits of recycled water include a reduced
demand for water in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta which
that is otherwise needed to maintain water
quality, reduced discharge of waste into the ocean, and the
enhancement of groundwater basins, recreation, fisheries, and
wetlands.
(e) The use of recycled water has proven to be safe from a public
health standpoint, and the State Department of Health
Services Public Health is updating regulations
for the use of recycled water.
(f) The use of recycled water is a cost-effective, reliable method
of helping to meet California's water supply needs.
(g) The development of the infrastructure to distribute recycled
water will provide jobs and enhance the economy of the state.
(h) Retail water suppliers and recycled water producers and
wholesalers should promote the substitution of recycled water for
potable water and imported water in order to maximize the appropriate
cost-effective use of recycled water in California.
(i) Recycled water producers, retail water suppliers, and entities
responsible for groundwater replenishment should cooperate in joint
technical, economic, and environmental studies, as appropriate, to
determine the feasibility of providing recycled water service.
(j) Retail water suppliers and recycled water producers and
wholesalers should be encouraged to enter into contracts to
facilitate the service of recycled and potable water by the retail
water suppliers in their service areas in the most efficient and
cost-effective manner.
(k) Recycled water producers and wholesalers and entities
responsible for groundwater replenishment should be encouraged to
enter into contracts to facilitate the use of recycled water for
groundwater replenishment if recycled water is available and the
authorities having jurisdiction approve its use.
() Wholesale prices set by recycled water producers and recycled
water wholesalers, and rates that retail water suppliers are
authorized to charge for recycled water, should reflect an equitable
sharing of the costs and benefits associated with the development and
use of recycled water.