SGMA Alternative Groundwater Sustainability Plan – Bridge Document for the Indio Subbasin
Stantec, Inc. (Stantec) | December 15th, 2016
Decline in the Coachella Valley’s groundwater table was first noted in the 1910s. Concerned that their artesian wells were drying, local residents and farmers formed the Coachella Valley Water District (CVWD) in 1918. CVWD took steps to secure water supplies from the Colorado River that led to the completion of the Coachella Branch of the All-American Canal in 1949. CVWD and Desert Water Agency (DWA) contracted with the State of California for water from the State Water Project (SWP) in the early 1960s with the first deliveries in 1973. At that time, CVWD and DWA implemented groundwater replenishment programs and collected replenishment assessment from groundwater producers. However, continued growth in the Valley resulted in groundwater level declines and overdraft.
Twenty years before the adoption of SGMA, CVWD began development of the initial Water Management Plan in 1994 after recognizing the need to sustainably manage the Coachella Valley Groundwater Basin. CVWD adopted the Coachella Valley Water Management Plan in 2002 (2002 WMP) to eliminate groundwater overdraft in the Basin.
The 2002 WMP was updated in 2010 (2010 WMP Update) and adopted in 2012. This plan covers the Indio Subbasin of the Coachella Valley Groundwater Basin. CVWD, along with DWA and Mission Springs Water District also prepared the Mission Creek-Garnet Hill Water Management Plan (MCGH WMP) that covers the Mission Creek Subbasin and the Garnet Hill Subarea of the Indio Subbasin.
As of 2016, plan implementation is showing positive results with stabilizing water levels throughout much of the Valley. Continued implementation is expected to eliminate water level declines by about 2025.
Keywords
groundwater pumping impacts, Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP), Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)