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Ojai Basin Groundwater Management Agency Groundwater Management Plan – 2018 Update

Ojai Basin Groundwater Management Agency (OBGMA) | August 30th, 2018


In September, 2014, Governor Jerry Brown signed into law a package of three bills (AB 1739, SB 1168, and SB 1319) known as the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (“SGMA”). SGMA provides a framework for sustainable management of groundwater supplies by local authorities, with a limited role for state intervention only if necessary to protect the resource. 

The Act requires the formation of local groundwater sustainability agencies that must assess conditions in their local water basins and adopt locally-based management plans. SGMA provides local agencies with the tools and authority to require registration of groundwater wells, measure and manage extractions, require reports and assess fees, and request revisions of basin boundaries, including establishing new subbasins. 

High- and medium-priority basins, as defined by the State of California Department of Water Resources (“DWR”), must adopt groundwater sustainability plans within five to seven years, depending on whether the basin is in critical overdraft. Statewide groundwater basins are prioritized based on eight criteria: (1) overlying population, (2) projected growth of overlying population, (3) public supply wells, (4) total water wells, (5) overlying irrigated acreage, (6) reliance on groundwater as the primary source of water (7) impacts on the groundwater, including overdraft, subsidence, saline intrusion, and other water quality degradation, and (8) any other information determined to be relevant by the DWR. 

Consistent with its Enabling Legislation, the Ojai Basin Groundwater Management Agency (“OBGMA” or “Agency”) has worked to preserve the quantity and quality of groundwater in the Ojai Valley Groundwater Basin (“Ojai Basin”) for sustainable long-term use since the agency’s establishment in 1991. (The Agency’s Enabling Legislation, SB 534, approved by the Governor October 8, 1991, is also referred to herein as the “OBGMA Act.”) These management efforts have resulted in the protection and maintenance of the long-term water supply for the common benefit of all water users in the Basin. As a result, the Ojai Basin has operated within its “sustainable yield” for the past several decades with no evidence of “undesirable results.” 

Per OBGMA Resolution No. 2014-4, adopted by its Board of Directors on December 4, 2014 (copy included as Appendix A), OBGMA is designated as the Groundwater Sustainability Agency (“GSA”) for the Ojai Groundwater Basin. In addition, SGMA identifies OBGMA as an “exclusive local agency” within its statutory boundaries for purposes of implementing the requirements of the Act. (Water Code § 10723(c)(1).) Since OBGMA, in compliance with its Enabling Legislation, already performs many of the planning and management tasks required by SGMA, and sustainable conditions have persisted in the Basin for more than a 10-year period.

OBGMA determined it would comply with SGMA by making the Alternative Demonstration of groundwater sustainability authorized by Water Code § 10733.6(b)(3). 

To comply with SGMA, OBGMA issued its December 23, 2016 “Report Supporting Alternative Demonstration Made Pursuant to Water Code 10733.6(b)(3). The report contained a physical description of the Basin, including groundwater levels, groundwater quality, information on groundwater-surface water interaction, data on historical and projected water demands and supplies, monitoring and management provisions. The report demonstrated how the Ojai Basin has operated within its “sustainable yield” for the past several decades with no evidence of “undesirable results.” 

In sum, OBGMA’s management of the Basin pursuant to its Enabling Legislation has allowed the Agency to make the Alternative Demonstration authorized by SGMA. This 2018 Update to the Agency’s Groundwater Management Plan, undertaken in compliance with its Enabling Legislation, is part of the Agency’s ongoing efforts to preserve the long-term quantity and quality of groundwater in the Ojai Basin for the common benefit all users in the Basin. 

Keywords

Groundwater Exchange, Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP), planning and management, salinity, seawater intrusion, Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)