| Coachella Valley's largest consumers of
local groundwater soon will be paying a little more to help
offset the costs of replenishing the aquifer's supply of
water.
Only those who pump more than 25 acre-feet of water (an
acre-foot is a little less than 326,000 gallons) annually
will be directly affected by increases in the replenishment
assessment charges replenishment assessment charge, which
were approved unanimously Tuesday by Coachella Valley Water
District's (CVWD) Board of Directors.
Replenishment is a key component of CVWD's Groundwater
Management Plan for the entire Coachella Valley, along with
conservation and substituting other sources for
groundwater--such as recycled water or imported water.
Because of the plan, groundwater tables in Palm Desert
are expected to drop only 20 feet between 1999 and 2035,
instead of 200 feet, which is what occur without CVWD's
management efforts.
Effective July 1, golf courses, several resorts, school
districts, agriculture, water providers---CVWD, Indio Water
Authority and the City of Coachella--utilities and other
government entities within the boundaries of the water
district will be billed a replenishment assessment charge
that will be $2.11 to $7.24 higher per acre foot than
current fees.
Water agencies, in turn, divide their replenishment
assessment charge among their customers, which, at least
with respect to CVWD, adds only a couple of cents every
month to the typical domestic water bill.
Replenishment of the aquifer in the Upper Whitewater
River Subbasin Area of Benefit, which encompasses a
significant portion of western Coachella Valley, began in
1973 and is entering its 29th year. More than 2,000,000 acre
feet of water have been returned to the aquifer at recharge
ponds near Windy Point, west of Palm Springs.
The replenishment assessment charge for this area was
increased 2.3%, to $93.78 an acre-foot. Most of the
replenishment assessment charge is to offset certain costs
associated with importing State Water Project Water to the
Coachella Valley. The water is exchanged for Colorado River
water from Metropolitan Water District, but expenses are
those associated with importing the much more costly State
Water Project water.
The board conducted public hearings for the three
subbasin areas of benefit to allow for comments against or
in favor of the replenishment assessment charge increases,
and to collect and count protests. Protests were minimal and
far short of what would have been needed to prevent board
action.
A portion of the Upper Whitewater River Subbasin is
within the boundaries of Desert Water Agency (DWA), which
sets its own replenishment assessment charge. CVWD and DWA
also work together to recharge the Mission Creek Subbasin
Area of Benefit, which serves Desert Hot Springs, Sky Valley
and portions of Indio Hills.
Replenishment there is beginning its sixth year and more
than 56,000 acre-feet have been recharged into that aquifer
subbasin since late 2002. The replenishment assessment
charge was increased about 10 percent, to $79.60. Those who
pump more than 25 acre-feet include CVWD, two resort
facilities and two fisheries.
The replenishment assessment charge will go up 30
percent, but remains the lowest in Coachella Valley, at $10
per acre-foot for the Lower Whitewater Subbasin Area of
Benefit. This subbasin is served by two pilot recharge
facilities---at what is known as Dike 4 (since 1997) near
Avenue 62, and in Martinez Canyon, since 2005.
When both facilities are fully operational, they each
will replenish 40,000 acre-feet into the eastern valley's
aquifer. Both began as pilot programs because it was
necessary to ensure recharge could be accomplished in the
area. A thick layer of clay---known as an aquitard---prevents
recharge toward the center of the valley floor. The confines
of the basin, however, create pressure within the aquifer
that forces water throughout the subbasin.
Engineering reports on the region have concluded that
recharge from Dike 4 and Martinez Canyon will raise
groundwater tables in Indio by as much as 75 feet by 2040,
by 95 feet in Oasis.
Contact:
Coachella Valley Water District
(760) 398-2651
Dennis Mahr, dmahr@cvwd.org,
Ext. 2352
Jack Porrelli,
jporrelli@cvwd.org, Ext. 2355
Heather Engel,
hengel@cvwd.org, Ext. 2353 |