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New
Laws Relating to Land Use and Water Supply Planning
Effective as of January 1, 2002
Four key bills
relating to land use and water supply planning were passed into
law in 2001. A short description of each piece of legislation follows
below. All four became effective January 1, 2002.
Land Use:
water supplies
Prohibits approval of a tentative map, or a parcel map for
which a tentative map was not required, or a development agreement
for a subdivision of property of more than 500 dwelling units, including
the design of the subdivision or the type of improvement, unless
the legislative body of a city or county or the designated advisory
agency provides written verification from the applicable public
water system that a sufficient water supply is available, or a specified
finding is made by the local agency that sufficient water supplies
are, or will be, available prior to completion of the project.
(Chapter 642, SB 221 -- Kuehl)
Water Supply
Planning
Requires a city or county that determines a project is subject
to the California Environmental Quality Act to identify any public
water system that may supply water for the project and to request
those public water systems to assess whether its total projected
water supplies will meet the projected water demand associated with
the proposed project. Requires the assessment to include an identification
of existing water supply entitlements, water rights, or water service
contracts held by the public water system and prior years water
deliveries received by the public water system. Requires the city
or county, if a public water system does not submit the assessment
within 90 days, to request the Department of Water Resources to
submit the assessment to the city or county not later than 90 days
from the date on which the request was received. Provides for the
recovery of the costs incurred by the department in connection with
the preparation of the assessment. Requires the city or county to
include the water supply assessment and other prescribed information
in any environmental document prepared for the project pursuant
to the act. Requires additional information to be included as part
of an urban water management plan if groundwater is identified as
a source of water available to the supplier. Requires an urban water
supplier to include in the plan a description of all water supply
projects and programs that may be undertaken to meet total projected
water use. Prohibits an urban water supplier that fails to prepare
or submit the plan to the department from receiving funding made
available from specified bond acts until the plan is submitted.
Until January 1, 2006, requires the department to take into consideration
whether the urban water supplier has submitted an updated plan in
determining eligibility for funds made available pursuant to any
program administered by the department.
(Chapter 643, SB 610 -- Costa)
California
Water Plan: urban water management plans
Requires the Department of Water Resources to include in the California
Water Plan a report on the development of regional and local water
projects within each hydrologic region of the state to improve water
supplies to meet municipal, agricultural, and environmental water
needs and minimize the need to import water from other hydrologic
regions.
(Chapter 320, SB 672 -- Machado)
Water Supply
Planning
Requires urban water management plans to include information, to
the extent practicable, relating to the quality of existing sources
of water available to an urban water supplier over given time periods,
and the manner in which the water quality affects water management
strategies and supply reliability. Requires a plan to describe plans
to supplement a water source that may not be available at a consistent
level of use.
(Chapter 644, AB 901 -- Daucher)
If you have
any questions, please call the State Legislative Department at 916.441.4545.
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