ITEM: |
CONSENT CALENDAR |
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2. |
RECEIVE AND FILE ANNUAL MITIGATION PROGRAM REPORT FOR
REPORTING YEAR 2004-2005 |
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Meeting Date: |
March 20, 2006 |
Budgeted: |
N/A |
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From: |
David A. Berger, |
Program/ |
N/A |
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General Manager |
Line Item No.: |
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Prepared By: |
Henrietta Stern |
Cost
Estimate: |
N/A |
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General Counsel Approval: N/A |
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Committee Recommendation: N/A |
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CEQA Compliance:
N/A for report |
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SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATION:
The Board should receive the 2004-2005 Mitigation Program Annual Report,
and direct staff to distribute copies (paper or CD) to resource agencies, local
libraries, and advise the public of its availability. Copies may be purchased for the cost of
reproduction (paper or CD). Staff
recommends that the Executive Summary, shown as Exhibit
2-A, be placed on the District website. The Executive Summary provides an overview of
the major accomplishments, observed trends, conclusions and/or recommendations.
The annual report reviews District
activities that address the effects of community water use on the Carmel River
environment in Fiscal Year 2004-2005 (FY 04-05), defined as the 12-month period
from July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005.
Please note that hydrologic data and all well reporting data are
portrayed using a Water Year (October 1, 2004 through September 30, 2005) in
order to be consistent with reporting required by the State Water Resources
Control Board (SWRCB). This annual
report was delayed until March 2006 so that draft water production data not
available until March 2006 could be incorporated.
This report is the fourteenth annual
report since the Mitigation Program Plan was adopted by the District Board in
November 1990, as part of the certification of the MPWMD Water Allocation
Environmental Impact Report (EIR), in compliance with the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The
full report has been provided to the Board under separate cover, and is also
available for inspection at the District office.
BACKGROUND:
On November 5, 1990, the MPWMD Water Allocation Program Final EIR was
certified by the MPWMD Board. The Board
also adopted findings, and passed a resolution that set Option V as the new
water allocation limit. Option V
resulted in a production limit of 16,744 acre-feet per year (AFY) for the
California American Water (Cal-Am) system.
This amount was increased to 17,641 AFY based on new supply provided by
the Paralta Well in Seaside in 1993, and other changes since 1993. It is notable that restrictions on Carmel
River diversions imposed by SWRCB Order WR 95-10 and management goals for
Cal-Am pumping from the Seaside Basin adopted by the District have limited
actual Cal-Am production to 15,285 AFY.
The Water Allocation EIR determined that
even though Option V is the least damaging alternative of the five options
analyzed, production at this level still may result in significant, adverse,
environmental impacts that must be mitigated.
Thus, the CEQA Findings adopted by the Board in 1990 included a
"Five-Year Mitigation Program for Option V" and several general
mitigation measures. The Five-Year
Mitigation Program formally began in July 1991 with the new fiscal year and was
slated to run until June 30, 1996.
Following public hearings in May 1996 and District Board review of draft
reports through September 1996, the Five-Year Evaluation Report for the
1991-1996 comprehensive program as well as an Implementation Plan for FY 1997
through FY 2001 were finalized in October 1996.
In its July 1995 Order WR 95-10, the SWRCB ordered Cal-Am to carry out
any aspect of the “Five-Year Mitigation Program for Option V” that the District
does not continue after June 1996. To
date, as part of the annual budget approval process, the District Board has
voted to continue the program. The
mitigation program presently accounts for a significant portion of the District
budget in terms of revenue (derived primarily from the MPWMD fee on the Cal-Am
bill) and expenditures.
For projects or programs that entail
significant adverse impacts, CEQA requires that an annual report be prepared
documenting (1) the actual mitigation activities that were carried out by the
lead agency, and (2) the effectiveness of the mitigation activities as measured
via a monitoring program. The 2004-2005
Water Allocation Mitigation Report responds to these requirements.
The first three annual reports (1991,
1992, and 1993) covered the calendar year January 1 through December 31. Because this time period conflicted with the
District’s budget cycle (July 1-June 30), the fourth annual report covered the
18-month period from January 1994 through June 1995 to bridge the transition
from a calendar year to a fiscal year.
The fifth (and subsequent) annual reports cover the fiscal year, defined
as July 1 through June 30 of the following year. A notable exception is that hydrologic data
are always reported in a water year (October 1-September 30) in order to be
consistent with the accounting period used by the SWRCB. Since 2002, well production data are also
reported in a water year to be consistent with SWRCB reporting requirements.
The 2004-2005 report reviews District
activities relating to water supply and demand, followed by mitigation measures
for specific environmental impacts. It
also provides a summary of costs for the Mitigation Program as well as references. For each topic, the mitigation measure
adopted as part of the certified Allocation EIR is briefly described, followed
by a summary of activities carried out in FY 04-05 that relate to the
topic. Monitoring results, where applicable,
are then presented. Finally, a summary
of observed trends, conclusions, and/or recommendations are provided, where
pertinent.
IMPACT ON STAFF/RESOURCES: It is notable that program
implementation entails a significant portion of the District budget. In FY 04-05, total expenses for the July
2004-June 2005 period were about $2.19 million, including direct personnel
expenses of $1.39 million, operating costs totaling $351,425, project expenses
in the amount of $394,906, and $45,341 in capital equipment and fixed asset
purchases. Eight full-time positions
(plus seasonal aides) are devoted primarily to implementation of the Mitigation
Program. Distribution of the Mitigation
Program Annual Report involves the District staff time and cost for copying and
mailing of about 40 reports to agency staff, members of the Carmel River
Advisory Committee, and local libraries.
EXHIBITS
2-A 2004-2005 Mitigation Program Annual Report
Executive Summary
U:\staff\word\boardpacket\2006\2006boardpackets\20060320\ConsentCal\02\item2.doc