EXHIBIT 13-A
SECOND
AN ORDINANCE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
MONTEREY PENINSULA WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT AMENDING
REGULATION XV, THE EXPANDED WATER CONSERVATION AND STANDBY RATIONING PLAN
1.
The Water Management District is charged under the Monterey
Peninsula Water Management District Law with the integrated management of the
ground and surface water resources in the
2.
The Water Management District has general and specific power
to cause and implement water conservation activities as set forth in Sections
325 and 328 of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District Law.
3.
This ordinance responds to present and threatened water
emergencies, as provided by Section 332 of the District Law. Water emergencies addressed by this ordinance
are created by legal circumstances which constrain the amount of water that is
available to serve water users in the
4.
This ordinance reflects a Settlement Agreement between MPWMD
and California American Water regarding CPUC filing A.07-12-010. The Settlement Agreement was dated August 11,
2008, and amended October 8, 2008. MPWMD
agreed to amend Regulation XV to include regulatory rationing, amend its
definition of the Monterey Peninsula Water Resources System to include the
California American Water systems located in the Laguna Seca Subarea
(accomplished upon adoption of Ordinance No. 135 on September 22, 2008),
suspend Water Banking until it can be successfully implemented by either MPWMD
or California American Water, and modify the rationing plan to use the current
12-month rolling average for Unaccounted For Water when determining Water
Rations.
5. MPWMD’s Regulation XV, Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Program, in combination with an extensive public awareness campaign and comprehensive water rate structure for conservation, emergency and rationing rates, has enabled compliance with State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Order No. WR 95-10. The plan also provides the foundation for water rationing in the event of drought or other emergency reductions in water supply.
6.
The Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing
Plan (Regulation XV) is intended to maintain California American Water main
system and other Water Distribution System production within the limits set by
the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) and within
the limits that may derive from the Decision of the Monterey County Superior
Court in California American Water vs. City of
7. Ordinance No. 137 deletes the definition “Satellite Systems” in response to requests by representatives of customers in the Bishop and Hidden Hills systems to define each system separately. In place of “Satellite Systems,” Ordinance No. 137 defines the individual California American Water subsystems, namely Bishop, Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch.
8. Ordinance No. 137 amends Stage 4 to provide additional conservation measures to increase the response to regulatory restrictions, and allows this stage to sunset without Board action when regulatory compliance has been achieved.
9. Ordinance No. 137 adds regulatory triggers to Stages 5 through 7, and extends those stages to apply to any Water Distribution System within the Monterey Peninsula Water Resource System when needed to respond to water supply limits. These Stages also enable an emergency response when immediate reductions in water use are necessary to ensure public health, safety or welfare.
10. Ordinance No. 137 amends Stage 5 to recognize Water Entitlements issued by the District.
11. Ordinance No. 137 eliminates the Unaccounted For Water Use exemption for the California American Water subsystems, making the Board’s current 7 percent standard apply to all California American Water systems.
12. Ordinance No. 137 establishes a “ration” for Unaccounted For Water Use in Water Distribution Systems of 10 or more connections. There are 11 systems that meet this standard within the MPWMD.
13. Ordinance No. 137 requires California American Water to notify customers prior to implementation of emergency rates in accord with California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) requirements.
14.
Ordinance No. 137 sets a minimum per person ration of
35 gallons per day in accord with the standard set forth in the 2008 Drought Urban
Guidebook published by the State of California, Department of Water Resources,
Office of Water Use Efficiency and Transfers.
This standard applies to “inside residential use”. The data are from the
15. Ordinance No. 137 suspends Water Banks until December 31, 2010 to allow California American Water time to upgrade its billing system to calculate and manage Water Banking or MPWMD to complete its database with a component for Water Banking. During the suspension of Water Banking, Water Users will be excused the first time a Water Ration is exceeded in a Ration Year. Second and subsequent offenses will be enforced.
16. Ordinance No. 137 adds Mandatory Conditions of Approval as a prerequisite for a rationing variance. Conditions include installation of low water consumption technology and water efficient irrigation.
17. Ordinance No. 137 adds a requirement for completion of Landscape Water Audits and Budgets at the time a Dedicated Irrigation Meter is installed.
18. Ordinance No. 137 includes an annual procedure for California American Water to review and identify customers that require Landscape Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets. Customers are then required to contact California American Water to arrange for an audit.
19. Ordinance No. 137 relocates separate water metering requirements for outdoor irrigation and fire protection that were adopted with Ordinance No. 135.
20. Ordinance No. 137 was reviewed in concept and draft form by the Water Demand Committee (September 29, 2008 and October 27, 2008), the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) on October 7, 2008 and November 4, 2008, and by the Policy Advisory Committee on November 4, 2008. The Board of Directors considered the ordinance at its October 20, 2008 meeting and referred the ordinance back to committee for further review prior to first reading on November 17, 2008.
21. Ordinance No. 137 is not intended to modify or impair the provisions of any contract for the acquisition of a Water Distribution System by California American Water.
22. Ordinance No. 137 is processed under a Statutory Exemption under Section 15282(v) of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), as set forth at the CEQA Guidelines, Title 14, CCR §15282v. This exemption applies to adoption of an Urban Water Management Plan. In approving this ordinance, the Board determines that water rationing plan is a necessary component to such a Plan, and therefore qualifies for a Statutory Exemption.
23.
The following District Rules are amended by this Ordinance
No. 137: Rule 11 (Definitions), Rule 160 (General Provisions), Rule 161 (Stage
1 Water Conservation), Rule 162 (Stage 2 Water Conservation), Rule 163 (Stage 3
Water Conservation), Rule 164 (Stage 4 Water Rationing), Rule 165 (Stage 5
Water Rationing), Rule 166 (Stage 6 Water Rationing), Rule 167 (Stage 7 Water
Rationing), Rule 168 (Water Banks), Rule 169 (Water Rationing Variance), Rule
170 (Water Use Survey), Rule 171 (Water Waste and Non-Essential Water Use Enforcement),
Rule 172 (Landscape Water Audits), Rule 173 (Regulation of Mobile Water
Distribution Systems), Rule 174 (Regulation of Well Owners or Operators and
Extractors), Rule 175 (Water Rationing Enforcement), and Rule 23-B-2 (Mandatory
Conditions for Action on an Application for a Water Permit to Connect to or
Modify an Existing Water Distribution System).
NOW THEREFORE be it ordained
as follows:
Section One: Short
Title
This ordinance shall be
known as the 2008 Comprehensive Revision to the Expanded Water Conservation and
Standby Rationing Plan of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District.
Section Two: Purpose
This ordinance amends the
Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan (Regulation XV) to
fulfill terms of a Settlement Agreement between MPWMD and California American
Water dated August 11, 2008 and amended October 8, 2008. The Settlement Agreement relates to a pending
application before the California Public Utilities Commission (A.
07-12-010). This ordinance addresses the
issues raised in the Settlement Agreement not addressed in Ordinance Nos. 134
and 135. In addition to responding to
the Settlement Agreement, this ordinance clarifies and expands upon existing Regulation
XV procedures and language, adds definitions for the Seaside Watermaster and
for the California American Water subsystems located in the Laguna Seca Subarea
of the
The entire Regulation XV is provided in this ordinance. Proposed new language is shown in bold
italics.
Proposed deletions are shown in highlighted strikeout.
Section Three: Amendment to Rule 11
Rule 11 shall be
amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
Numbering is provided for convenience and should not be transferred to
the permanent Rule 11.
1.
BISHOP WATER DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM – “Bishop
Water Distribution System” or “Bishop” shall mean the
2.
HIDDEN HILLS SYSTEM – “Hidden Hills System” shall mean the
California American Water subunit subsystem as described in the
purchase agreement between Carmel Valley Mutual Water Company and California
American Water recorded July 8, 1994, Document #49389, Reel 3125, Page 696. The Hidden Hills
System derives its Source of Supply from the Laguna Seca Subarea of the
3.
LARGE RESIDENTIAL WATER USER – “Large Residential Water User”
shall mean any Residential Water User consuming an average of 32 units or more each month (23,936 gallons) or
at least 384 units (287,232 gallons) in the previous Water Year (or an
average of 32 units per month) year prior to establishment of a Landscape Water Budget.
4.
MAIN
5.
MIXED
USE – “Mixed Use” shall mean water used for domestic or other uses from any
Water Distribution System or private Well where one or more water meters or Connections supplies both
Residential and Non-Residential uses, often within the same building.
6.
MOBILE WATER DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM - “Mobile Water Distribution System” means any mobile Potable
or Subpotable water supply delivery that originates at a location apart
from the Site of use and that is delivered via a truck or other movable container. This definition process, includesing,
but is
not limited to, trucked water, used for distribution of water
from a Source of Supply to a User for utilization upon the User’s property.
This definition shall not apply to deliveries of water by commercial companies
in volumes less than or equal to 55 gallons per container.
7.
RYAN RANCH WATER DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM – “Ryan Ranch Water
Distribution System” or “Ryan Ranch” shall mean the
8.
SATELLITE SYSTEMS --
“Satellite Systems” shall mean California American Water's smaller distribution
systems along State Route 68 between
9.
SEASIDE WATERMASTER – “Seaside Watermaster” shall mean either (a) the
court appointed Seaside Basin Watermaster Board pursuant to Section III-L of
the Decision rendered for Monterey County Superior Court Case No. M66343 (
Section Four: Amendment to Rule 160
Rule 160 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face, and
deleted language shown in strikeout
type face.
RULE
160 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
A. All
Water Users within the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District shall comply with the District’s
Water Waste and Non-Essential Water Use prohibitions and
the water conservation requirements of Regulation XIV.
B. Prohibitions
against Water Waste and Non-Essential Water Use shall be enforced by the
District and its designated agents in accordance with Rule 171 (Water Waste and
Non-Essential Water Use Enforcement) and Regulation XI, unless indicated
otherwise.
C. Stage 1 Water Conservation shall appliesy to all Water Users
within the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District.
D. Stages 2 and 3 Water Conservation are
intended to maintain California American Water production within the limits set
by the State Water
Resources Control Board (SWRCB) and by the Seaside Basin Adjudication Decision
(Seaside Decision).
ED. Stage 1 Water Conservation
through Stage 3
7 Water Conservation shall appliesy to Water Users of
any California American Water Distribution System where that system derives its
Source of Supply from the Monterey Peninsula Water Resource System (MPWRS) for
as long as California American Water is subject to legal or regulatory water
production limitations.
FE. Stage 4 Water Rationing through Stage 7 Water Rationing respond
to limitations in supply caused by inadequate system inflow and storage,
regulatory restrictions, or emergency situations that require water
reductions.
F. During Stages 4 through 7,
each Water Distribution System shall provide individual consumption
data pertaining to any Water User of that Water Distribution System upon written
request of the General Manager. Data shall be in the form and
manner specified by the General Manager. Each failure to
respond in full to such written request by the date
specified therein shall result in a penalty to the Water Distribution
System of one-hundred dollars ($100) per day for each day or portion thereof
that the response is delayed. The failure to comply with the data request
shall provide cause for the General Manager to suspend the regulatory trigger
set in Rule 164-A-3, Rule 165-A-2, Rule 166-A-2 and Rule 167-A-2.
The General Manager shall retain and use any data received
under this provision for the sole purposes of testing, administering, evaluating
or enforcing the water rationing, Water Waste, and Water Banking provisions of
Regulation XV. The General Manager shall retain and use these data as a
trade secret and shall not make these available for public review.
G. Stage 4 Water Rationing through
Stage 7 Water Rationing may
apply to all Water Distribution System Water Users and Water Users within the
Monterey Peninsula Water Resource System as a response to limited water
supply. These stages shall also serve as
responses to emergency situations where immediate reductions in water use are
necessary to ensure public
health, safety or welfare. This
Regulation authorizes the Board of Directors to determine by Resolution that
any Water Distribution System or set of Water Users within the Monterey
Peninsula Water Management District shall be subject to Stage 4 Water Rationing
through Stage 7 Water Rationing as provided in this Regulation.
HG. As to water derived from the
MPWRS, California American Water shall maintain
Unaccounted for Water Use in its MPWRS distribution systems at or below seven (7) percent. Average losses of more than seven (7) percent
during the most recent twelve-month period shall be considered Water
Waste. This limitation shall not affect any California
American Water system east of, and including, the Ryan Ranch subunit.
IH. California American Water shall amend its
Urban Water Management Plan and its Rule
14.1, Water Conservation and Rationing Plan--Monterey District, to conform to
this Regulation. A copy of Rule 14.1
shall be filed with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and the
District within thirty (30) days of the effective date of any
amendment to this Regulation.
JI. At least ten (10) days
prior to a first reading by the Board of amendments to Regulation XV, a copy of
the proposed changes shall be provided to the CPUC Division of Ratepayer
Advocates (DRA).
J. Unless amended by an order
of the court or by an order of the Seaside Groundwater Basin Watermaster
Board after December 10, 2008, the decision in California American Water v. City of
Section Five: Amendment to Rule 161
Rule 161 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 161 - STAGE 1 WATER CONSERVATION
Stage 1 Water Conservation is defined as the first
stage in the District’s Expanded Water
Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan. During Stage 1:
A. Stage 1 takes action to maintain California
American Water production from the MPWRS within the limits set by the SWRCB and
the Seaside Decision by increasing conservation activities and preparing for
further stages of conservation and rationing.
BA. During Stage 1 Water
Conservation, California American Water shall maintain
its annual Water
Year (October 1 through September 30) water production from the ValleyThis quantity may be modified by
the SWRCB.
CB. During Stage 1 Water
Conservation, California American Water shall maintain its annual (October 1
through September 30) water production from the complyiance with the production limits
imposed by the Seaside Watermaster.
DC. California
American Water shall obtain and maintain Water User survey information for its
Water Users in compliance with Rule 170.
ED. California
American Water, in coordination with the District, shall conduct Landscape
Water Audits and establish Landscape Water Budgets for all Water Users subject
to Rule 172. Annually, at the beginning of the Water
By
November 1st of each yYear, California American Water shall review
its consumption
records for the previous Water Year to verify that all identify Water Users
required by Rule 172 to have a Landscape Water Budget have met the requirement. Property owners/account holders Water Users that have not met this requirement
are
required to obtain a Landscape Water Audit and Landscape Water Budget shall
be notified by within 30 days by December 1.
F. All Mobile Water Distribution Systems
that obtain water from within the District or that deliver water within the
District shall comply with Rule 173, Regulation of Mobile Water Distribution
Systems.
G. All Non-Residential New Structures
receiving a Water Permit after October 1, 2008 that include irrigated areas
beyond ten (10) feet of any building shall utilize a separate water meter to
measure all exterior water uses.
H. All New Structures receiving a Water
Permit after October 1, 2008 shall have separate water meters for fire
suppression systems.
Section Six: Amendment to Rule 162
Rule 162 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 162 - STAGE 2 WATER CONSERVATION
A. Stage 2 Water Conservation is defined as the second
stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation
and Standby Rationing Plan. that takes action to maintain California
American Water production from the MPWRS
below legal and regulatory constraints.
This is accomplished by requiring implementation of Landscape Water
Budgets for irrigators of three acres or more, Large Residential Water Users,
and Water Users with Dedicated Irrigation Meters.
BA. Stage 2 Water Conservation
shall be enforced in the Main California American Water System
when California American Water production from
the MPWRS exceeds the year-to-date at month-end targets as displayed in Table
XV-1.
1.
The monthly distribution of water
production from the MPWRS, as shown in Table XV-1 shall be approved by the
Board of Directors as part of the Quarterly Water Supply Strategy and Budget
process. The Board shall hold public
hearings during the Board’s regular meetings in September, December, March, and
June, at which time the Board may modify Table XV-1 by Resolution.
[THIS
SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]
Table XV-1
Regulatory Water Production Targets
for
Within the
(All Values in Acre-Feet)
Month |
Monthly Target |
Year-to-Date at Month-End Target |
October |
1,377 |
1,377 |
November |
1,081
|
2,458 |
December |
993 |
3,451 |
January |
961 |
4,412 |
February |
878 |
5,290 |
March |
1,012 |
6,302 |
April |
1,124 |
7,427 |
May |
1,424 |
8,850 |
June |
1,522 |
10,372 |
July |
1,640 |
12,012 |
August |
1,633 |
13,645 |
September |
1,489 |
15,134 |
TOTAL |
15,134 |
-- |
Note: Monthly and
year-to date at month-end production targets are based on the annual
production limit specified for the California American Water
|
Table XV-2
Regulatory Water Production Targets
for Satellite Systems from Sources
Within the Laguna Seca Subarea of the
(All Values in Acre-Feet)
Month |
Monthly Target |
Year-to-Date at Month-End Target |
October |
34 |
34 |
November |
23 |
57 |
December |
19 |
76 |
January |
16 |
92 |
February |
14 |
106 |
March |
19 |
125 |
April |
24 |
149 |
May |
33 |
182 |
June |
38 |
220 |
July |
43 |
263 |
August |
42 |
305 |
September |
40 |
345 |
TOTAL |
345 |
-- |
Notes: Monthly and year-to-date at month-end production targets
are based on the annual production limit specified for the California
American Water Total Production shown on this
Table shall incorporate increased water supplies as may be recognized by the
Seaside |
CB. Stage 2 Water Conservation shall be enforced in the Bishop,
Hidden Hills and/or Ryan Ranch subsystems Satellite Systems and in the Hidden Hills System
when California American Water production from the MPWRS for its Main, Satellite, and Hidden Hills
Systems has exceeded the year-to-date at month-end production as
shown in Table XV-1 and California American Water production from the
MPWRS for its subsystems Satellite Systems and Hidden Hills System has exceeded the year-to-date at
month-end production as shown in Table XV-2.
The
monthly distribution of water production shown in Table XV-2 shall be approved
by the Board of Directors as part of the Quarterly Water Supply Strategy and
Budget process. The Board may modify
Table XV-2 by Resolution following a public hearing held during the Board’s
regular meeting in September, December, March, or June.
DC. STAGE 1
REQUIREMENTS CONTINUE:
Requirements of
Rule 161 imposed
by implementation of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan
through (Stage 1 Water
Conservation) shall remain in force during
Stage 2.
ED. IMPLEMENTATION OF
LANDSCAPE WATER BUDGETS:
During Stage 2, Aall Water Users required to obtain a Landscape Water Budget under District
Rule 172 for the current Water Year are required to shall manage outdoor
irrigation within the Landscape Water Budget assigned to the property.
FE. ENFORCEMENT
OF LANDSCAPE WATER BUDGET WATER WASTE:
Water use in excess of the established
Landscape Water Budget shall be considered Water Waste.
GF. SUNSET OF STAGE 2 WATER CONSERVATION:
Without further action of the Board of Directors, the provisions of
Stage 2 Water
Conservation shall be rescinded sunset for that Water Distribution System(s)
and water use restrictions shall revert
to Stage 1 Water
Conservation upon that Water Distribution
System’s compliance with the year-to-date at
month-end production goal for two (2) consecutive months in the
subsequent Water Year.
HG. NOTICE:
California American Water shall provide
an annual reminder notice to MPWRS Water Users with Landscape Water
Budgets to report modifications in Landscaping which could alter an existing Landscape
Water Bbudget.
IH. MONTHLY
CONSUMPTION REPORTS:
During any Stage 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7,
California American Water shall provide the District with monthly consumption
reports in a format approved by the District.
Reports shall be provided within fifteen (15) days of the close of the
preceding month.
Section Seven: Amendment to Rule 163
Rule 163 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 163 - STAGE 3 WATER CONSERVATION
A. STAGE 3 DEFINITION:
Stage 3 Water
Conservation is defined as the third stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation
and Standby Rationing Plan. that takes action to maintain California
American Water use in the MPWRS
below legal and regulatory constraints.
It provides a procedure to enable emergency temporary increases in the
upper block volume rates and requires increased action by California American
Water to reduce Unaccounted For Water Use and monthly reporting of actions
taken. Stage 3 Water Conservation may
also be triggered upon Resolution of the Board of Directors when there is a
need for an immediate water use reduction in response to an unexpected water
production increase.
A. UNACCOUNTED
FOR WATER USE
Upon implementation of Stage 3 Water Conservation, California American Water shall
immediately submit a plan to the General Manager to reduce Unaccounted For
Water Uses
in its MPWRS Water Distribution Systems to seven (7) percent or less,
measurered
by the most recent twelve-month rolling average, and shall immediately
act on such plan. California American
Water shall provide a progress report on Unaccounted For Water Use to the
Board of Directors monthly until during Stage 3 is sunset.
B. REGULATORY
TRIGGER MAIN SYSTEM:
Stage 3 Water Conservation shall be enforced in its
Main California American Water System when any of the following criteria has been
met: 1) California American Water’s year-to-date production from the MPWRS
exceeds the year-to-date production target shown in Table XV-1 by 5 percent or
more at the end of the first quarter of the Water Year, or 2) California American
Water’s year-to-date production from the MPWRS shown in Table XV-1 exceeds the
year-to-date production target by 4 percent or more at the end of January, or
the year-to-date target by 2.5 percent or more at the end of February, or the
year-to-date target by 1 percent or more at the end of March, or 3) California
American Water’s year-to-date production from the MPWRS shown in Table XV-1 on
a year-to-date basis exceeds the year-to-date targets for a consecutive seven-day
period during the months of April, May or June; or 4) the California American
Water’s production from the MPWRS shown in Table XV-1 on a year-to-date basis
exceeds the year-to-date target on any single day during July, August, or
September; or 5) a Resolution has been adopted by the Board in accord with
Section DE
below.
C. REGULATORY
TRIGGER – SATELLITE
SYSTEMS & HIDDEN HILLS SYSTEM BISHOP, HIDDEN HILLS AND RYAN
RANCH
Stage 3 Water Conservation shall be enforced in California American Water’s
Satellite Systems and
the Hidden Hills System the California American Water subsystems when
any of the criteria in Section C B has been met and when any of the
following criteria has been met: 1) California American Water’s year-to-date
production from the MPWRS for the Satellite Systems and the Hidden Hills System Bishop,
Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch subsystems exceeds the year-to-date
production target in Table XV-2 by 5 percent or more at the end of the first
quarter of the Water Year, or 2) California American Water’s year-to-date
production from the MPWRS for the Satellite Systems and the Hidden Hills System Bishop,
Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch subsystems exceeds the year-to-date production target shown in Table
XV-2 by 4 percent or more at the end of January, or the year-to-date production
target by 2.5 percent or more at the end of February, or the year-to-date
production target by 1 percent or more at the end of March, or 3) California
American Water’s year-to-date production from the MPWRS for the Satellite Systems and the Hidden
Hills System Bishop, Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch subsystems
exceeds the year-to-date
production target shown in Table XV-2 for a consecutive seven-day period during
the months of April, May or June; or 4) California American Water’s year-to-date
production from the MPWRS for the Satellite Systems and the Hidden Hills System Bishop,
Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch subsystems exceeds the year-to-date production target shown in Table
XV-2 on any single day during July,
August, or September; or 5) a Resolution has been adopted by the Board in
accord with Section D below.
D. EMERGENCY
TRIGGER:
Stage 3 Water Conservation shall be implemented for
any Water Distribution System, private Well, or Water User upon
Resolution of the Board of Directors when there is need for an immediate water use
reduction is needed requirement.
E. EMERGENCY
RATE NOTICE:
At least thirty (30) days prior to
implementation, California American Water shall notify its Water Users
that Emergency Rates approved by the CPUC will be imposed upon the effective
date of Stage 3 Water
Conservation.
F. STAGE
1 AND
STAGE 2 REQUIREMENTS CONTINUE:
Requirements imposed by implementation of the Expanded
Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan through Rules
161 and 162 (Stage 1 and Stage 2) Water Conservation shall remain in force. Requirements may be modified or superseded by actions taken in future
stages of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan.
G. SUNSET
OF STAGE 3 WATER
CONSERVATION:
Without further action by the Board of Directors, the provisions of
Stage 3 Water
Conservation shall be rescinded and Water Users shall revert to
Stage 1 Water
Conservation upon that Water Distribution System’s compliance with the applicable year-to-date at month-end
production goal for two (2) consecutive months in the
subsequent Water Year.
Regulatory compliance during a
period of Stage
4 Water Rationing shall not cause a sunset of this provision.
H. CONSERVATION
NOTICE:
California American Water shall provide
notice of mandatory water conservation with each bill.
I. :
California American Water shall implement
the CPUC-approved Emergency Rate schedule to respond to Stage 3 water reduction requirements. California American Water shall file an
Advice Letter with the CPUC to implement Emergency Rates after it has first met
and conferred with the District at least five (5) days in advance of
that filing. The General Manager may
waive this time period for good cause.
Section Eight: Amendment to Rule 164
Rule 164 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 164 - STAGE 4 WATER CONSERVATION/RATIONING
A. STAGE 4 DEFINITION: Stage 4 Water Conservation/Rationing is defined as the fourth
stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation and
Standby Rationing Plan that
responds to a drought situation or other threatened or existing emergency water
supply shortage with a 15 percent reduction goal from system production limits
for non-California American Water Users.
Each
Water Distribution System that is subject to Stage 4 shall also implement Stage
3 requirements to the extent possible.
Fifteen percent Water
use reductions in the California
American Water systems are achieved through Stage 3 Water
Conservation. In the event that
California American Water is not currently at Stage 3, California American
Water shall implement Stage 3 Water Conservation for all affected systems upon
declaration of Stage 4 Water Conservation/Rationing.
BA. TRIGGER
1.
Water Supply Limitation Physical Shortage Trigger
Stage
4 Water Conservation/Rationing
shall become effective
take
effect for any Water Distribution System that relies, in whole or in part, on
production or production offsets from
the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas, on June 1 or such earlier date as may be set by the Board following the District’s May Board
meeting if total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal
Subareas MPWRS
on May 1 is less than 27,807 Acre-Feet and greater than 21,802 Acre-Feet. If total usable storage is equal to or
greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet on May 1, no water rationing shall be imposed.
2.
Regulatory Trigger – Continued Non-Compliance
with Regulatory Limits through Stage 3
Stage
4 shall be enforced for all Water Distribution Systems presently at Stage 3
when Stage 3 has been in effect for at least thirty (30) days and when the
(a) The
year-to-date target at month end during the months of October through March; or
.
(b) The
year-to-date targets for a consecutive seven (7) day period during the months
of April, May or June; or
(c)
3.
Regulatory Trigger – Legally Ordered
Reduction in Supply
Stage 4 shall be enforced in any
Water Distribution System that does not rely to any extent upon production or
production offsets from the Main California
American Water System when that system is required to comply with a final Cease
and Desist Order by the State Water Resources Control Board, the Seaside
Watermaster or any other final court order that reduces available supplies by fifteen
percent (15%) from base year production.
The term “base year” shall refer to the Water Year immediately preceding
any triggering order.
24. Emergency
Trigger
Stage
4 Water Rationing
shall be implemented for any Water Distribution System, private
Well, or Water User upon adoption of a Resolution of the
Board of Directors. In that Resolution, the Board
shall find when
there is need for
an immediate need to reduce production by fifteen percent (15%). water use reduction requirement
in response to an unexpected water supply shortage.
5. Delay
of Stage Implementation
The General Manager may delay implementation of this Stage to ensure
adequate operation of the program.
Delays authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed ninety (90)
days.
C. Requirements previously imposed by implementation
of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan shall remain in
force. Requirements may be modified or
superseded by actions taken in this or future stages of the Expanded Water
Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan.
DB. SUNSET OF STAGE
4 WATER RATIONING
1. Water
Supply Availability
Stage
4 Water Rationing
shall continue to have force and effect until rescinded by
Resolution of the Board of Directors. In
that Resolution the Board shall find upon a determination that the total usable
storage in the Water Rationing may
be made as early as the following January Board meeting can be made if the total usable storage
in the Carmel River System and the Seaside Coastal Subareas portions of the MPWRS
is equal to or greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet on January 1.
2. In
the event total usable storage is greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet, the General Manager shall review California American Water’s year-to-date
production. Upon compliance with the
monthly year-to-date goals specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162 and, unless
otherwise specified in the Resolution rescinding Stage 4 Water Rationing, Water Users shall revert to Stage 1 Water Conservation. If California American Water’s year-to-date
production exceeds the year-to-date goal specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162, California American Water Users shall
revert to either Stage 2 or Stage 3 Water Conservation. If Satellite Systems and the Hidden Hills System
year-to-date production in the California American Water subsystems exceeds
the year-to-date target specified in Table XV-2 of Rule 162, Satellite Systems and the Hidden
Hills System Bishop, Hidden Hills and Ryan Ranch
Water Users shall revert to either Stage 2 or Stage 3
Water
Conservation.
3. Regulatory
Compliance
Upon order of the General Manager,
and without further action by the Board of Directors, the provisions of
Stage 4 shall be rescinded and Water Users shall revert to a lower Stage of water
conservation upon compliance with the applicable year-to-date at month-end
production goal for two (2) consecutive months in the subsequent Water
Year.
34. Emergency
Upon
correction of a water supply limitation caused by an emergency, Stage 4 Water Rationing shall
sunset without action by the Board.
5.
Restoration of Lower Stage
A
Resolution causing the sunset of Stage 4 may also activate any lower Stage as
may be warranted for good cause by circumstances affecting a particular Water
Distribution System, private Well, or Water User.
EC. NOTICE RELATED
TO WATER SUPPLY AVAILABILITY
1. Upon
direction of the General Manager, MPWMD shall notify all
non-California American Water Distribution System Operators of
systems with two (2) or more connections that are affected by Stage 4 Water Rationing that
reductions in water use are necessary and that stricter water rationing use
restrictions are is imminent. Water Distribution System Operators shall
ensure that notices provided or required by the District shall be distributed to their
Water Users. A copy of each notice shall
be filed with the District as well as a current mailing list for all Water
Users in that Ssystem. The District shall preserve the
confidentiality of any mailing list provided pursuant to this Regulation.
2. Upon
direction of the General Manager, tThe District shall notify publish
a notice to inform all Water Users of private Wells (Single-Parcel
Connection Systems) within the MPWRS that reductions in water use are
necessary and that stricter water use restrictions are imminent. The Notice shall be via first class mail and
shall explain the requirements for Stage 4. Water Rationing and shall provide and/or The
District may request additional information from the private Well Owner
as the
General Manager deemsed necessary for the efficient operation of
the rationing program.
3. California
American Water shall provide notice to its customers that water rationing is
imminent. California American Water
shall further provide its customers with a survey form to indicate any change
in the number of residents or the type of Non-Residential use. Surveys shall be returned to California
American Water within 30 days.
D. NOTICE
TO LANDSCAPE IRRIGATORS
Immediately upon implementation of Stage
4, California American Water shall notify its Large Residential Water Users,
Dedicated Irrigation Meter customers, irrigators of three (3) or more acres,
and Water Users who use an average of twelve (12) units or more per month during
the most recent 12 months, of the immediate need for them to reduce outdoor
water use and irrigation to the greatest extent possible to avoid water
rationing.
California American Water shall,
throughout Stage 4, periodically send reminder notices of this urgent need.
E. WATER
WASTE
Section Nine: Amendment to Rule 165
Rule 165 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 165 - STAGE 5 WATER RATIONING
Stage 5 Water Rationing is defined as the fifth stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation
and Standby Rationing Plan. that responds to a drought situation, or other threatened or
existing emergency water supply shortage, or Cease and Desist Order with a
20 16-34
percent reduction goal from system production limits. Reductions are achieved by water use cutbacks
by User
Category and by per-capita Water Rations and a moratorium on Water Permits that
Intensify Water Use.
BA. TRIGGER
1. Water Supply Limitation
Physical
Shortage Trigger
Stage
5 Water Rationing
shall become effective
effective take
effect for any Water Distribution System that that relies, in whole or in part,
on production or production offsets from
the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas, on June 1 or such earlier date as may be set by the Board following the District’s May Board
meeting if total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal
Subareas MPWRS
on May 1 is less than 21,802 Acre-Feet and greater than 15,615 Acre-Feet. If total usable storage is equal to or greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet on
May 1, no water rationing shall be imposed.
The
General
Manager may delay implementation of Stage 5 Water Rationing to ensure adequate
operation of the program. Delays
authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed 90 days.
2. Regulatory
Trigger – Legally Ordered Reduction in Supply
Stage 5 shall be enforced in any Water
Distribution System, including any California American Water subsystem, when
that system is required to comply with a final Cease and Desist Order by the
State Water Resources Control Board, the Seaside Watermaster or any other final
court order that reduces available supplies by:
(a) More
than fifteen percent (15%) but less than thirty-five percent (35%) from
pre-1995 production (16,806 AFA) for any Water Distribution System that relies,
in whole or in part, on production or production offsets from the Main California American Water
System, or
(b) More
than fifteen percent (15%) but less than thirty-five percent (35%) from base year
production (the term “base year” shall refer to the Water Year immediately preceding
any triggering order) for any Water Distribution System that does not rely to
any extent upon on production or production offsets
from the Main California American Water System.
23. Emergency
Trigger
Stage
5 Water Rationing
shall also be implemented for any Water Distribution System, private
Well, or Water User upon adoption of a Resolution of the
Board of Directors. In that Resolution, the Board
shall find when
there is need for
an immediate need to reduce production by at least sixteen percent (16%) but not more
than thirty-four percent (34%). water use reduction requirement in response to an
unexpected water supply shortage.
4. Delay
of Stage Implementation
The General Manager may delay implementation
of Stage 5 Water Rationing for any Water Distribution System to
ensure adequate operation of the program.
Delays authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed ninety
(90) days.
CB. SUNSET OF STAGE
5 WATER RATIONING
1. Water
Supply Availability
Stage
5 Water Rationing
shall continue to have force and effect until rescinded by
Resolution of the Board of Directors. upon a determination In that Resolution, the Board
shall find that the total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the
Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is greater than 21,802 Acre-Feet. This determination will normally be made at
the Board’s May meeting. However, a
determination to rescind Stage 5 Water Rationing may be made as early as the
following January Board meeting can be made if the total usable storage in the Carmel
River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is equal to or greater than
27,807 Acre-Feet on January 1.
2. In
the event total usable storage is greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet, the General
Manager shall review California American Water’s year-to-date
production. Upon compliance with the
monthly year-to-date goals specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162 and, unless
otherwise specified in the Resolution rescinding Stage 5 Water Rationing,
Water Users shall revert to Stage 1 Water Conservation. If California
American Water’s year-to-date production exceeds the year-to-date goal
specified in Rule 162 and Rule 163 Table XV-1 of Rule 162, California
American Water Users shall revert to Stage
2 or Stage 3 Water Conservation.
3. Where
Stage 5 has been imposed upon any Water Distribution System to comply with a
final Cease and Desist Order by the State Water Resources Control Board, the
Seaside Watermaster or any other final court order, Stage 5 shall continue until a Resolution of the Board
of Directors is adopted that finds that the triggering order has been lifted or
no longer applies to that Water Distribution System.
34. Emergency
Upon correction of a water supply limitation caused by an emergency,
Stage 5 Water Rationing
shall be rescinded by Resolution of the Board of Directors.
5. Restoration
of Lower Stage
A
Resolution causing the sunset of Stage 5 may also activate any lower Stage as
may be warranted for good cause by circumstances affecting a particular Water
Distribution System, private Well, or Water User.
DC. AFFECTED WATER USERS AFFECTED WATER USERS
Stage 5 Water Rationing shall
apply to all The Board of Directors may exempt a Water
Distribution Systems,
private Wells,
or Water Users
within the MPWRS
unless specifically exempt by action of the Board of Directors or unless proof
is provided to demonstrate
from
Stage 5 restrictions upon proof of a superior, unimpaired water right to exempt the Water Distribution
System, private Well, or Water User from the Stage 5 rationing restrictions. Evidence of riparian water rights may be established
by a Declaration under penalty of perjury, unless it is refuted by other
proof. As necessary to ensure adequate
water supplies, the Board of Directors may act within its discretion to
authorize activation of Stage 5 Water Rationing within one or
more Water Distribution Systems, private Wells, or Water Users in
the District.
ED. CONSERVATION
REQUIREMENTS CONTINUE
Requirements imposed by implementation
of Stage 1 shall remain in force during Stage 5. Requirements may be modified or superseded by actions taken in this or
future stages of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan.
FE. MORATORIUM
Immediately following
Upon
declaration of Stage 5 Water Rationing, the District shall cease accepting Water Permit applications
associated with Intensification of Use for any affected Water Distribution System,
private Well, or Water User in the District. All
pending Water Permits not issued within 120 days of declaration shall be
suspended. This provision shall not
suspend the issuance of Water Permits that utilize public or private Water Use Credits or
where issuance of a Permit is required by prior agreement or Water
Entitlement issued by the District.
GF. REDUCTION
GOAL
Stage
5 Water Rationing
shall
achieves
water use reductions of 20
16-34
percent of the California American Water and non-California American Water system
production limits in each User Category as follows: Residential single-family and
multi-family, Commercial, /Industrial,
Public Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered Uses, and Reclaimed Water Users.
HG. NOTICE
1. California American Water shall provide
written notice of mandatory water rationing to every rResidencetial and to every Non-Residential business or Water User
within the California American Water system via
first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the first day of rationing Stage
5 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, At
all times during Stage 5, California American Water shall send
monthly reminders of water rationing in the water bill along with information
showing the User’s Water Ration, the quantity of the Water Ration consumed, and
the quantity of water available in the Water User’s Water Bank (when
Water Banking is available).
Finally, California American Water shall update
survey information upon
request as needed.
2. All
other Water Distribution System Operators affected by subject to Stage 5 Water Rationing restrictions
shall provide written notice of mandatory water rationing to every residence and to every
Non-Residential business or Water User within the Water Distribution
System via first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the first day of rationing Stage
5 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, At
all times during Stage 5, each Water Distribution System Operator shall send monthly reminders of
water rationing along with information showing the Water Ration and the
quantity of the Water Ration consumed by the Water User. Finally, the Water Distribution System Operator shall provide each Responsible Party with a survey form at
least once each calendar
Rationing
Yyear
during
Stage 5. Water Distribution
System Operators shall ensure that notices provided or required by the District
shall be distributed to the system Water Users.
3. Upon
direction of the General Manager, tThe District shall notify publish a notice of Water
Rationing to all Water Users of private Wells (Single-Parcel Connection
Systems) within the MPWRS at least thirty (30) days before
the first day of Stage 5. Water Rationing.
Notice shall be via first class mail and shall explain the requirements
for Stage 5 Water Rationing and shall provide and/or request additional
information from the private Well Owner as deemed necessary for the efficient
operation of the program.
4.
California American Water
shall implement the CPUC-approved rationing rate schedule. California American Water shall file an
Advice Letter with the CPUC to implement rationing rates after it has first met
and conferred with the District at least five (5) days in advance of
that filing. The General Manager may
waive this time period for good cause.
5. California American Water and all other
Water Distribution System Operators and the District shall notify Water Users of
the Sunset of Stage 5 Water
Rationing. Notice
shall be via first class mail. The
District shall publish a notice to inform all Private Well Owners that Stage 5
has sunset.
IH. RATIONS BY
CATEGORY
Water
Rations shall be determined by User Category. Each Water User within the Monterey Peninsula
Water Resource System shall be classified in one of the following groups: Residential single-family and multi-family,
Commercial, /Industrial, Public
Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered Use, and Reclaimed Water Users.
JI. REDUCED WATER RATIONING
The
California American Water annual
production limit shall be reduced by 20 16-34 percent during Stage 5 Water Rationing. The resulting production limit shall be
further reduced by the average Unaccounted For Water Use percentage of the Water
Distribution System(s) for the twelve (12) months preceding Stage 5, and by a
wWater rRationing
cContingency
determined by the Board.
Seven (7)
percent of the remainder shall be the maximum California
American Water Unaccounted For Water Use ration.
The remaining water shall be the California American Water annual
production limit for all User Categories.
KJ. REDUCED
NON-CALIFORNIA AMERICAN WATER ANNUAL
PRODUCTION LIMITS DURING STAGE 5 WATER RATIONING
Available
production for other Water Distribution Systems subject to Stage 5 Water Rationing shall
be determined using the same methodology as for California American Water without including a deduction
for Unaccounted For Water Uses.
Systems with less than ten (10) connections shall not have a deduction
for Unaccounted For Water Use. The non-California
American Water annual production limit for the Monterey Peninsula Water
Resource System shall be used as the maximum production limit.
LK. ESTABLISHING THE
RATIONS
1. Rations for each User Category shall be
determined by the General Manager by dividing the reduced
available production by the percentage of use for each Water Distribution
System subject to water rationing. The percentage of use for each User Category
shall be determined by the most recent unrationed Water Year (October 1 through
September 30) data. Priority Water Rations shall be
given to Residential water needs to ensure health, safety and welfare. Residential Water Rations shall under no
circumstance be less than 35 gallons per person per day. provided by California
American Water for Water Users of the Main California American Water System California
American Water that derive water from the MPWRS, and by data provided by the District
from its annual Well
reporting program for non-California
American Water Distribution Systems.
a. Residential Water Users
Each Residential Water User either
served by a water meter reported as “single-family residential” by the Water Distribution System or served by a
private Well shall have an equal portion of the water available to the
single-family Residential category based upon the number of residents reported
on the survey form.
2. Multi-Family
Residential Water Users
Each
multi-family Residential Water User either served by a water meter reported as
“multi-family residential” by the Water Distribution System or served by a
private Well shall have an equal portion of the
water available to the multi-family Residential category based upon the number
of residents reported on the survey form with the following exception:
a. Multi-Family
Residential Sites with common laundry facilities on a separate water meter
shall receive a one-unit
Water Ration for each Dwelling Unit that has access to the
facility. Each Dwelling Unit located on
the Multi-Family Residential Site that has access to the common laundry
facility shall have the Dwelling Unit ration reduced by one unit of water.
3. Commercial
and /Industrial
Water Users
Each
commercial/industrial
Commercial
and Industrial Water User either served by a water meter reported as “commercial” or “industrial”
by the Water Distribution System shall have a Water Ration
determined by applying the current commercial Non-Residential Water Use
Factors to the type(s) of use and/or by using the Landscape Water Budget
established for the Water User. An
alternate Water Ration (variance) may be determined by completion of an audit
by
a. Mixed
Use Water Users. Mixed Use Water
Users shall be classified as Commercial Uses for the purposes of this program. The
Water Ration for a Mixed Use Water User shall include an increment of water for
the Residential Water User.
4. Public
Authority
Public
Authority Uses shall be rationed by Jurisdiction. Each Public Authority Water User may combine multiple accounts or
Connections when the accounts are located within one Jurisdiction. Water Rations shall be determined by
applying the current Non-Residential Water Use Factors to the type(s) of use
and/or by using the Landscape Water Budget established for the Water User. An alternate Water Ration (variance) may be
determined by completion of an audit by
5. Golf
Courses
Golf
Courses supplied water exclusively by the California American Water or non-California American Water Distribution
Systems or Wells may be rationed individually or, upon request to the General Manager, as a group. Water Rations shall be determined by using
the Landscape Water Budget.
6. Other
Water
Users utilizing portable water meters or hydrant meters shall be required to
employ Best Management Practices. California American Water shall be
required to report monthly to the District the location and Responsible Party for all portable water
meters and the amount of use from those meters.
As deemed necessary to achieve the imposed reduction in use, the
District may condition use or suspend use of temporary
Connections.
7. Non-Revenue
Metered Users
Non-Revenue
Metered Uses shall be rationed as a group with the following exception:
a. Irrigation
required by the Mitigation Program adopted when the Water Allocation Program Environmental Impact
Report was adopted in 1990, and as required by SWRCB Order No. WR 95-10, shall
not be subject to reductions in use.
Required irrigation of the Riparian Corridor shall be identified and
reported separately from other Non-Revenue Metered Uses.
8. Non-California
American Water Wells
Regulations for rationing non-California
American Water Wells located within the MPWRS
that are not supplying water to a distribution system shall be considered by
the Board
prior to implementation of Stage
5 Water Rationing.
98. Recycled Water Users
Recycled
Water Irrigation Areas receiving water from the CAWD/PBCSD Wastewater Reclamation Project
shall be subject to Stages 5 Water Rationing and higher for Potable water used during an
Interruption or emergency, in accordance with contractual Agreements between
the District and the respective Owners of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas.
a. Before Project Expansion Is
Completed. Under the agreements
operative before the Project Expansion is Completed (as the capitalized terms
are defined in Rule 23.5), the Owners of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas
shall have the respective irrigation requirements thereof satisfied to the same
degree as any non-Project Golf Course or open space which derive their Source
of Supply from the California American Water system. The irrigation requirements of the Recycled
Water Irrigation Areas will be determined based on the most-recent non-rationed
four-year average irrigation water demand, including both Recycled Water and
Potable water, for each Recycled Water Irrigation Area. The use of Recycled Water, when available in
sufficient quantities to satisfy the irrigation requirements of the Recycled
Water Irrigation Areas, shall not be restricted by this requirement.
Each Recycled Water Irrigation Area
shall be entitled to receive the average irrigation requirement determined
above, reduced by the percentage reduction required by the current stage of
rationing. If the quantity of Recycled
Water that is available is less than the quantity of water that the Recycled
Water Irrigation Area is entitled to, Potable water shall be provided to make
up the difference and satisfy the irrigation requirements of the Recycled Water
Irrigation Area to the same degree that the irrigation requirements of non-
Project Golf Course and open space Users are being satisfied.
The District shall ensure
that the water provided during water rationing is of adequate quality. If the quality does not satisfy the
contractual agreement operative before the Project Expansion is deemed
Completed (as the capitalized terms are defined in Rule 23.5), Potable water
shall be provided in sufficient quantities to improve the quality of the
Recycled Water.
This Subsection L-9-a shall cease to be operative once the Project Expansion is deemed to be Completed (as the capitalized terms are defined in Rule 23.5), and shall thereafter be of no force or effect.
b. When Project Expansion Is Completed. Under the agreements operative once the Project Expansion is deemed Completed (as the capitalized terms are defined in Rule 23.5), the Owners of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas shall have the respective irrigation requirements thereof satisfied to the same degree as any non-Project Golf Course or open space which derives its Source of Supply from the California American Water system. The irrigation requirements of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas will be determined based on the most-recent non-rationed four-year average irrigation water demand, including both Recycled Water and Potable water, for each respective Recycled Water Irrigation Area.
Each Recycled Water Irrigation Area shall be entitled to receive the average irrigation requirement determined above, reduced by the percentage reduction required by the current stage of rationing. If the quantity of Recycled Water that is available is less than the quantity of water that the Recycled Water Irrigation Area is entitled to, Potable water shall be provided to make up the difference and satisfy the irrigation requirements of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas to the same degree that the irrigation requirements of non-Project Golf Course and open space Users are being satisfied.
The
preceding sentence shall not apply to the extent that the irrigation
requirements of any Recycled Water Irrigation Area are met with water legally
available to Buyer from any source other than the Carmel River System or the
When
Recycled Water (as defined in Rule 23.5) is available in sufficient quantities
to satisfy the irrigation requirements of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas,
such irrigation shall not be subject to Stages 5 Water Rationing and higher, and neither
Potable water nor any water described in the preceding sentence (whether or not
it is Potable) shall be used for irrigation of the Recycled Water Irrigation
Areas except to the extent allowed in the circumstances described in the next
two sentences.
If there is an Interruption in Recycled Water deliveries to any Recycled Water Irrigation Area (as the capitalized terms are defined in Rule 23.5), the temporary use of Potable water for irrigating each such Recycled Water Irrigation Area is authorized in the manner described in Rule 23.5, Subsection F.
If MPWMD has adopted an ordinance in response to any emergency caused by drought, or other threatened or existing water shortage pursuant to section 332 of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management Law, said ordinance shall prevail over contrary provisions of this Rule. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, Potable water shall be made available for irrigating tees and greens of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas in sufficient quantities to maintain them in good health and condition during an Interruption, without any limitation on the duration.
The District shall have no obligation to furnish Potable water for irrigation of the Recycled Water Irrigation Areas except in the circumstances set forth above in this Subsection L-9-b.
If (1) an emergency or major disaster is declared by the President of the United States, or (2) a “state of war emergency,” “state of emergency,” or “local emergency,” as those terms are respectively defined in Government Code section 8558, has been duly proclaimed pursuant to the California Emergency Services Act, with respect to all or any portion of the territory of MPWMD, the provisions of this Subsection L-9-b shall yield as necessary to respond to the conditions giving rise to the declaration or proclamation.
This Subsection L-9-b shall be of no force or effect until the Project Expansion is deemed Completed (as the capitalized terms are defined in Rule 23.5), and shall thereafter be operative and of full force and effect.
ML. ADDITIONAL
CONSERVATION ACTIONS
By Resolution, tThe Board shall reconsider adopting restrictions on Non-Residential
outdoor water use that may include any or all of the following and any other conservation method
deemed feasible: Limit outdoor
watering and irrigation to one day per week, or one day every other week;, or prohibit outdoor watering
and irrigation with water from the affected water resource system(s);
prohibit irrigation of non-turf
areas with water from the affected water resource system(s); discontinue
irrigation of public landscaped areas; reduce
Golf Course irrigation from the affected Water Distribution System(s) to a
percentage of the amount required to water tees, greens and landing areas only; prohibit
the use of water to wash any motor vehicle, motorbike, boat, trailer, airplane
or other vehicle unless done at a facility that recycles water; prohibit
the use of water from hydrants for construction purposes or any other
purposes other than fire fighting. The use of Recycled Water, when available, shall not
be restricted by this requirement.
Section Ten: Amendment to Rule 166
Rule 166 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 166 - STAGE 6 WATER RATIONING
A. Stage 6 Water Rationing is defined as the sixth stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation
and Standby Rationing Plan. that responds to a drought situation, or other threatened or
existing emergency water supply shortage with a 35-49 percent reduction goal
from system production limits.
Reductions are achieved by water use cutbacks by User
Category and by per-capita Water Rations and a moratorium on Water Permits that
utilize Water Credits.
BA. TRIGGER
1. Water Supply Limitation
Physical
Shortage Trigger
Stage
6 Water Rationing
shall become effective
effective take
effect for any Water Distribution System that that relies, in whole or in part,
on production or production offsets from
Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas on June 1 or such earlier date as may be set by the Board following the District’s May Board
meeting if total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal
Subareas MPWRS
on May 1 is less than 15,615 Acre-Feet and greater than 9,610 Acre-Feet. If total usable storage is equal to or greater
than 27,807 Acre-Feet on May 1, no water rationing shall be imposed.
The
General
Manager may delay implementation of Stage 6 Water Rationing to ensure adequate
operation of the program. Delays
authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed 90 days.
2. Regulatory
Trigger – Legally Ordered Reduction in Supply
Stage 6 shall be enforced in any Water
Distribution System, including any California American Water subsystem, when
that system is required to comply with a final Cease and Desist Order by the
State Water Resources Control Board, the Seaside Watermaster or any other final
court order that reduces available supplies by:
(a) More
than thirty-five percent (35%) but less than fifty percent (50%) from pre-1995
production (16,806 AFA) for any Water Distribution System that relies, in whole
or in part, on production or production offsets from
the Main California American Water System; or
(b) More
than thirty-five percent (35%) but less than fifty percent (50%) from base year
production (the term “base year” shall refer to the Water Year immediately preceding
any triggering order) for any Water Distribution System that does not rely to
any extent upon on production or production offsets
from the Main California American Water System.
23. Emergency
Trigger
Stage
6 Water Rationing
shall be implemented for any Water Distribution System, private
Well, or Water User upon adoption of a Resolution of the
Board of Directors. In that Resolution, the Board
shall find when
there is need for
an immediate need to reduce production by at least thirty-five percent (35%) but less
than fifty percent (50%). water use reduction requirement in response to an unexpected water
supply shortage.
4. Delay
of Stage Implementation
The General
Manager may delay implementation of Stage 6 Water Rationing to ensure adequate
operation of the program. Delays
authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed ninety (90)
days.
CB. SUNSET OF STAGE
6 WATER RATIONING
1. Water
Supply Availability
Stage 6 Water Rationing shall continue to have force and effect until rescinded by
Resolution of the Board of Directors. upon a determination In that Resolution, the Board
shall find that the total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the
Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is greater than 15,615
Acre-Feet. This determination will
normally be made at the Board’s May meeting.
However, a determination to rescind Stage 6 Water Rationing may be made as early as
the following January Board meeting can be made if the total usable storage in the
Carmel
River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is equal to or greater than
27,807 Acre-Feet on January 1.
2. In
the event total usable storage is greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet, the General
Manager shall review California American Water’s year-to-date
production. Upon compliance with the
monthly year-to-date goals specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162 and, unless
otherwise specified in the Resolution rescinding Stage 6 Water Rationing,
Water Users shall revert to Stage 1. Water Conservation.
If California
American Water’s year-to-date production exceeds the year-to-date goal
specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162, California
American Water Users shall revert to Stage
2 or Stage 3 Water Conservation.
3. Where
Stage 6 has been imposed upon any Water Distribution System to comply with a
final Cease and Desist Order by the State Water Resources Control Board, the
Seaside Watermaster or any other final court order, Stage 6 shall continue until a Resolution of the Board
of Directors is adopted that finds that the triggering order has been lifted or
no longer applies to that Water Distribution System.
34. Emergency
Upon correction of a water supply limitation caused by an emergency,
Stage 6 Water Rationing
shall be rescinded by Resolution of the Board of Directors.
5. Restoration
of Lower Stage
A
Resolution causing the sunset of Stage 6 may also activate any lower Stage as
may be warranted for good cause by circumstances affecting a particular Water
Distribution System, private Well, or Water User.
DC. AFFECTED WATER
USERS
Stage 6 Water Rationing shall
apply to all The Board of Directors may exempt a Water
Distribution Systems,
private Wells,
or Water Users
within the MPWRS
unless specifically exempt by action of the Board of Directors or unless proof
is provided to demonstrate
from
Stage 6 restrictions upon proof of a superior, unimpaired water right to exempt the Water Distribution
System, private Well, or Water User from the Stage 5 rationing restrictions. Evidence of riparian water rights may be established
by a Declaration under penalty of perjury, unless it is refuted by other
proof. As necessary to ensure adequate
water supplies, the Board of Directors may act within its discretion to
authorize activation of Stage 6 Water Rationing within one or more Water Distribution
Systems, private Wells, or Water Users in the District.
ED. CONSERVATION
REQUIREMENTS CONTINUE
Requirements imposed by implementation of
the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan through Stage 5 Water Rationing shall remain in force. Requirements may be modified or superseded by actions taken in this or
future stages of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan.
FE. MORATORIUM
Immediately
following Upon declaration
of Stage 6 Water
Rationing, the District shall suspend acceptance of all Water Permit
applications that utilize a public or private Water Use Credit for any affected system, private
Well, or Water User. All pending
Water Permits not issued within 120 days of declaration shall be suspended. This provision shall not suspend the issuance
of Water Permits where issuance of a Permit is required by prior agreement or
Water Entitlement issued by the District.
Expiration of Water Use Credits shall be suspended during Stage 6 and
Stage 7.
GF. REDUCTION GOAL
Stage
6 Water Rationing
achieves water use reductions of 35 35-49 percent of the California American Water and non-California American Water system
production limits in each User Category as follows: Residential single-family and
multi-family, Commercial, /Industrial,
Public Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered Uses, and Reclaimed
Water Users.
H. NOTICE
1. California American Water shall provide
written notice of mandatory water rationing to every residence and to every
Non-Residential business or Water User within the California American Water system via
first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the first day of rationing Stage
6 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, During
Stage 6, California American Water shall send
monthly reminders of water rationing in the water bill along with information
showing the User’s Water Ration, the quantity of the Water Ration consumed, and
the quantity of water available in the User’s Water Bank (when Water Banking is available). Finally, California American Water shall update
survey information upon request.
2. All
other Water Distribution System Operators affected by subject to Stage 6 Water Rationing restrictions
shall provide written notice of mandatory water rationing to every Rresidencetial
and to every
Non-Residential business or Water User within the Water Distribution
System via first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the first day of rationing Stage
6 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, During
Stage 6, the Water Distribution System Operator shall send monthly reminders of
water rationing along with information showing the Water Ration and the
quantity of the Water Ration consumed by the Water User. Finally, the Water Distribution System Operator shall provide each Responsible Party with a survey form at
least once each calendar
Rationing
Yyear
during
Stage 6. Water Distribution
System Operators shall ensure that notices provided or required by the District
shall be distributed to the system Water Users.
3. Upon
direction of the General Manager, tThe District shall notify publish a notice of Water
Rationing to all Water Users of private Wells (Single-Parcel Connection
Systems) within the MPWRS at least thirty (30) days before
the first day of Stage 6 Water Rationing. Notice shall be via first class mail and shall explain the requirements
for Stage 6 Water Rationing and shall provide and/or request additional
information from the private Well Owner as deemed necessary for the efficient
operation of the program.
4.
California American Water
shall implement the CPUC-approved rationing rate schedule. California American Water shall file an
Advice Letter with the CPUC to implement rationing rates after it has first met
and conferred with the District at least five (5) days in advance of
that filing. The General Manager may waive
this time period for good cause.
5. California American Water and all other
Water Distribution System Operators and the District shall notify Water Users of
the Sunset of Stage 6 Water
Rationing. Notice
shall be via first class mail. The
District shall publish a notice to inform all Private Well Owners that Stage 6
has sunset.
I. RATIONS
BY CATEGORY
Water
Rations shall be determined by User Category. Each Water User within the Monterey Peninsula
Water Resource System shall be classified in one of the following groups: Residential single-family and
multi-family, Commercial,/
Industrial, Public Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered
Use, and Reclaimed Water Users.
J. REDUCED
WATER RATIONING
The
California American Water annual
production limit shall be reduced by 35-49 percent during Stage 6 Water Rationing. The resulting production limit shall be
further reduced by the average Unaccounted For Water Use percentage of the Water
Distribution System for the twelve (12) months preceding water rationing, and
by a wWater rRationing cContingency determined by the Board.
Seven (7)
percent of the remainder shall be the maximum California
American Water Unaccounted For Water Use ration.
The remaining water shall be the California American Water annual production
limit for all User Categories.
K. REDUCED
NON-CALIFORNIA AMERICAN WATER ANNUAL PRODUCTION LIMITS DURING STAGE 6 WATER RATIONING
Available
production for other Water Distribution Systems subject to Stage 6 Water Rationing shall
be determined using the same methodology as for California American Water without including a deduction
for Unaccounted For Water Uses .
Systems with less than ten (10) connections shall not have a deduction
for Unaccounted For Water Use. The non-California
American Water annual production limit for the Monterey Peninsula Water
Resource System shall be used as the maximum production limit.
L. ESTABLISHING
THE RATIONS
Rations
for each User Category shall be determined by the General Manager using the process set forth in
Rule 165-K. by dividing the reduced
available production by the percentage of use. The percentage of use for each
User Category shall be determined by the most recent unrationed
Water Year (October 1 through September 30) data. provided by California
American Water for Water Users of the Main California American Water System California
American Water that derive water from the MPWRS, and by data provided by the District
from its annual Well
reporting program for non-California
American Water Distribution Systems.
All Water Users shall be rationed by
User
Category as outlined in Rule 165 (Stage
5 Water Rationing).
M. ELIMINATION
OR MODIFICATION OF NON-RESIDENTIAL VARIANCES FOR BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
The
General Manager shall require a
percentage reduction of all Commercial, Industrial Water Users granted a
variance for complying with BMPs for the type of use. The amount of the percentage reduction shall
be determined by the General Manager following review of the success of
Non-Residential rationing during Stage 5.
M.N ADDITIONAL
CONSERVATION ACTIONS
1.
By Resolution, tThe Board shall reconsider adopting restrictions on Non-Residential
outdoor water use that may include any or all of the following and any other conservation method
deemed feasible: Limit outdoor
watering and irrigation to one day per week, or one day every other week;, or prohibit outdoor watering
and irrigation with water from the affected water resource system(s);
prohibit irrigation of non-turf
areas with water from the affected water resource system(s); discontinue
irrigation of public landscaped areas; reduce
Golf Course irrigation from the affected Water Distribution System(s) to a
percentage of the amount required to water tees, greens and landing areas only; prohibit
the use of water to wash any motor vehicle, motorbike, boat, trailer, airplane
or other vehicle unless done at a facility that recycles water; prohibit
the use of water from hydrants for
construction purposes or any other purposes other than fire fighting.
The use of Recycled Water, when available, shall not
be restricted by this requirement.
2. All
Water Users shall cease operation and maintenance of all ornamental water uses
(fountains, ponds, etc.) that use water from the affected water supply
system(s). Ornamental water uses
supplied with water from other sources shall clearly display information about
the source of water on or immediately adjacent to the use.
N. Elimination or modification of Commercial/Industrial
variances for Best
Management Practices.
The General
Manager shall be authorized to require a percentage reduction of all Commercial/Industrial
Water Users granted a variance for complying with BMPs for the type of
use. The amount of the percentage
reduction shall be determined by the General Manager following review of the
success of Commercial/Industrial rationing during Stage
5 Water Rationing prior to Stage
6 Water Rationing.
O. All Water Users shall cease operation
and maintenance of all ornamental water uses (fountains, ponds, etc.) that use
water from the affected water supply system(s).
Ornamental water uses supplied with water from other sources shall
clearly display information about the source of water on or immediately adjacent
to the use;.
PO
The
use of water from the Monterey Peninsula Water Resource System shall be
prohibited for dust control purposes, except by prior approval of the General
Manager. Decisions of the General
Manager shall be final.
Section Eleven: Amendment to
Rule 167
Rule 167 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 167 - STAGE 7 WATER RATIONING
A. Stage 7 Water Rationing is defined as the seventh stage in the District’s Expanded Water Conservation
and Standby Rationing Plan. that responds to a drought situation, or other threatened or
existing emergency water supply shortage, or Cease and Desist Order with a
50 percent or greater reduction goal from system production limits. Reductions are achieved by water use cutbacks
by User
Category and by per-capita Water Rations and a moratorium on Water Permits that
utilize Water Credits.
BA. TRIGGER
1. Water Supply Limitation
Physical
Shortage Trigger
Stage
7 Water Rationing
shall become effective
effective take
effect for any Water Distribution System that that relies, in whole or in part,
on production or production offsets from
the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal Subareas on June 1 or such earlier date as may be set by the Board following the District’s May Board
meeting if total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the Seaside Coastal
Subareas MPWRS
on May 1 is less than 9,610 Acre-Feet.
If total usable storage is equal to or greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet on
May 1, no water rationing shall be imposed.
2. Regulatory
Trigger – Legally Ordered Reduction in Supply
Stage 7 shall be enforced in any
Water Distribution System, including any California American Water subsystem,
when that system is required to comply with a final Cease and Desist Order by
the State Water Resources Control Board, the Seaside Watermaster or any other
final court order that reduces available supplies by:
(a) Fifty
percent (50%) or more from pre-1995 production (16,806 AFA) for any Water
Distribution System that relies, in whole or in part, on production or
production offsets from
the Main California American Water System, or
(b) Fifty
percent (50%) or more from base year production (the term “base year” shall
refer to the Water Year immediately preceding any triggering order) for any
Water Distribution System that does not rely to any extent upon on production
or production offsets
from the Main California American Water System.
23. Emergency
Trigger
Stage
7 Water Rationing
shall also be implemented for any Water Distribution System, private
Well, or Water User upon adoption of a Resolution of the
Board of Directors. In that Resolution, the Board
shall find when
there is need for
an immediate need to reduce production by at least fifty percent (50%). water use reduction requirement
in response to an unexpected water supply shortage.
4. Delay
of Stage Implementation
The General Manager may delay implementation of this Stage to ensure
adequate operation of the program.
Delays authorized by the General Manager shall not exceed ninety (90)
days.
CB. SUNSET OF STAGE
7 WATER RATIONING
1. Water
Supply Availability
Stage 7 Water Rationing shall continue to have force and effect until rescinded by
Resolution of the Board of Directors. upon a determination In that Resolution, the Board
shall find that the total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the
Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is greater than 9,610 Acre-Feet. This determination will normally be made at
the Board’s May meeting. However, a determination
to rescind Stage 7 Water
Rationing may be made as early as the following
January Board meeting can
be made if the total usable storage in the Carmel River System or the
Seaside Coastal Subareas MPWRS is equal to or greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet on
January 1.
2. In
the event total usable storage is greater than 27,807 Acre-Feet, the General
Manager shall review California American Water’s year-to-date
production. Upon compliance with the
monthly year-to-date goals specified in Table XV-1 of Rule 162 and, unless
otherwise specified in the Resolution rescinding Stage 7 Water Rationing,
Water Users shall revert to Stage 1 Water Conservation. If California
American Water’s year-to-date production exceeds the year-to-date goal
specified in Rule 162 and Rule 163 Table XV-1 of Rule 162, California
American Water Users shall revert to Stage
2 or Stage 3 Water Conservation.
3.
Where Stage 7 has been imposed upon any Water Distribution System in order to
comply with a final Cease and Desist Order by the State Water Resources Control
Board, the Seaside Watermaster or any other final court order, Stage 7 shall continue until a Resolution of the Board
of Directors is adopted that finds that the triggering order has been lifted or
no longer applies to that Water Distribution System.
34. Emergency
Upon correction of a water supply limitation caused by an emergency,
Stage 7 Water Rationing
shall be rescinded by Resolution of the Board of Directors.
5. Restoration
of Lower Stage
A
Resolution causing the sunset of Stage 7 may also activate any lower Stage as
may be warranted for good cause by circumstances affecting a particular Water
Distribution System, private Well, or Water User.
DC. AFFECTED WATER
USERS
Stage 7 Water Rationing shall
apply to all The Board of Directors may exempt a Water
Distribution Systems,
private Wells,
or Water Users
within the MPWRS
unless specifically exempt by action of the Board of Directors or unless proof
is provided to demonstrate
from
Stage 7 restrictions upon proof of a superior, unimpaired water right to exempt the Water Distribution
System, private Well, or Water User from the Stage 7 rationing restrictions. Evidence of riparian water rights may be established
by a Declaration under penalty of perjury, unless it is refuted by other
proof. As necessary to ensure adequate
water supplies, the Board of Directors may act within its discretion to
authorize activation of Stage 7 Water Rationing within one or more Water Distribution
Systems, private Wells, or Water Users in the District.
ED. CONSERVATION
REQUIREMENTS CONTINUE
Requirements imposed by implementation of the Expanded
Water Conservation and Standby Rationing Plan through Stage 6 Water Rationing shall remain in force. Requirements may be modified or superseded by actions
taken in this stage of the Expanded Water Conservation and Standby Rationing
Plan.
FE. REDUCTION GOAL
Stage
7 Water Rationing
achieves water use reductions of at least 50 fifty percent (50%) of the California American Water and non-California American Water system
production limits in each User Category as follows: Residential single-family and
multi-family, Commercial, /Industrial,
Public Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered Uses, and Reclaimed
Water Users.
GF. NOTICE
1. California American Water shall provide
written notice of mandatory water rationing to every residence and to every
Non-Residential business or Water User within the California American Water system via
first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the first day of rationing Stage
7 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, During
Stage 7, California American Water shall send
monthly reminders of water rationing in the water bill along with information
showing the User’s Water Ration, the quantity of the Water Ration consumed, and
the quantity of water available in the User’s Water Bank (when Water Banking is available). Finally, California American Water shall update
survey information upon request.
2. All
other Water Distribution System Operators affected by subject to Stage 7 Water Rationing restrictions
shall provide written notice of mandatory water rationing to every
residence and to every Non-Residential business or Water User within the Water
Distribution System via first-class mail at least thirty (30) days before the
first day of rationing
Stage
7 water use restrictions are imposed.
Further, During
Stage 7, the Water Distribution System Operator shall send monthly reminders of
water rationing along with information showing the Water Ration and the
quantity of the Water Ration consumed by the Water User. Finally, the Water Distribution System Operator shall provide each Responsible Party with a survey form at
least once each calendar
Rationing
Yyear during
Stage 7. Water Distribution
System Operators shall ensure that notices provided or required by the District
shall be distributed to the system Water Users.
3. Upon
direction of the General Manager, tThe District shall notify publish a notice of Water
Rationing to all Water Users of private Wells (Single-Parcel Connection
Systems) within the MPWRS at least thirty (30) days before
the first day of Stage 7 Water Rationing. Notice shall be via first class mail and shall explain the requirements
for Stage 7 Water Rationing and shall provide and/or request additional
information from the private Well Owner as deemed necessary for the efficient
operation of the program.
4.
California American Water
shall implement the CPUC-approved rationing rate schedule. California American Water shall file an
Advice Letter with the CPUC to implement rationing rates after it has first met
and conferred with the District at least five (5) days in advance of that
filing. The General Manager may waive
this time period for good cause.
5. California American Water and all other
Water Distribution System Operators and the District shall notify Water Users of
the Sunset of Stage 7 Water
Rationing. Notice
shall be via first class mail. The
District shall publish a notice to inform all Private Well Owners that Stage 7
has sunset.
HG. RATIONS BY
CATEGORY
Water
Rations shall be determined by User Category. Each Water User within the Monterey Peninsula
Water Resource System shall be classified in one of the following groups: Residential single-family and
multi-family, Commercial,/
Industrial, Public Authority, Golf Course, “Other,” Non-Revenue Metered
Use, and Reclaimed Water Users.
IH. REDUCED WATER RATIONING
The
California American Water annual
production limit shall be reduced by at least 50 fifty percent (50%) during Stage 7 Water Rationing. The resulting production limit shall be
further reduced by the average Unaccounted For Water Use percentage of the Water
Distribution System for the twelve months preceding water rationing, and by a
wWater rRationing cContingency determined by the
Board. Seven (7) percent of the remainder shall be the maximum California
American Water Unaccounted For Water Use ration.
The remaining water shall be the California American Water annual
production limit for all User Categories.
JI. REDUCED
NON-CALIFORNIA AMERICAN WATER ANNUAL
PRODUCTION LIMITS DURING STAGE 7 WATER RATIONING
Available
production for other Water Distribution Systems subject to Stage 7 Water Rationing shall
be determined using the same methodology as for California American Water without including a deduction
for Unaccounted For Water Uses .
Systems with less than ten (10) connections shall not include a
deduction for Unaccounted For Water Use. The non-California
American Water annual production limit for the Monterey Peninsula Water
Resource System shall be used as the maximum production limit.
KJ. ESTABLISHING THE
RATIONS
Rations
for each User Category shall be determined by the General Manager using the process set forth in
Rule 165-K by
dividing the reduced available production by the percentage of use. The percentage of use for each User
Category shall be determined by the most recent unrationed
Water Year (October 1 through September 30) data. provided by California
American Water for Water Users of the Main California American Water System California
American Water that derive water from the MPWRS, and by data provided by the District
from its annual Well
reporting program for non-California
American Water Distribution Systems.
All
Water Users shall be rationed by User Category as outlined in Rule 165 (Stage
5 Water Rationing).
K. ELIMINATION
OR MODIFICATION OF NON-RESIDENTIAL VARIANCES FOR BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
The
General Manager shall require a
percentage reduction of all Commercial, Industrial Water Users granted a
variance for complying with BMPs for the type of use. The amount of the percentage reduction shall
be determined by the General Manager following review of the success of
Non-Residential rationing during Stage 5.
L. ADDITIONAL
CONSERVATION ACTIONS
By Resolution, tThe Board shall reconsider adopting restrictions on Non-Residential
outdoor water use that may include any or all of the following and
any other conservation method deemed feasible: Limit outdoor watering and irrigation to one day
per week, or
one day every other week;, or prohibit outdoor watering and irrigation
with water from the affected water resource system(s); prohibit irrigation of non-turf areas with
water from the affected water resource system(s); discontinue irrigation of public
landscaped areas; reduce Golf Course irrigation from the affected Water Distribution System(s) to a
percentage of the amount required to water tees, greens and landing areas only; prohibit
the use of water to wash any motor vehicle, motorbike, boat, trailer, airplane
or other vehicle unless done at a facility that recycles water; prohibit
the use of water from hydrants for construction purposes or any other
purposes other than fire fighting. The use of Recycled Water, when available, shall not
be restricted by this requirement.
M. ELIMINATION OR MODIFICATION OF
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL VARIANCES FOR BEST
MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
The General Manager shall be
authorized to require a percentage reduction of all commercial/industrial Water
Users granted a variance for complying with BMPs for the type of use. The amount of the percentage reduction shall
be determined by the General
Manager following review of the success of Commercial/Industrial rationing
during Stage
6 Water Rationing prior to Stage 7 Water Rationing.
NM. PROHIBITION ON
THE USE OF PORTABLE WATER METERS, AND HYDRANT METERS, AND ESTIMATED USE OF HYDRANT
WATER
Water
Users utilizing portable water meters, or hydrant meters, or using hydrants to fill water tanks without the use of a
meter shall be required to cease use of water from the affected water
supply system(s). Each Water User shall be notified by the Water
Distribution System Operator of this requirement. Portable water meters shall be returned to
the water company at least 30 days before the implementation of Stage 7 Water Rationing.
Section Twelve: Amendment
to Rule 168
Rule 168 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 168 - WATER BANKS
Water
Banks in the California American Water Distribution System(s) shall be suspended
until (a) California American Water completes the installation of a computer
system and programming necessary to calculate Water Banking credits; or (b)
MPWMD completes computer programming needed to calculate Water Banking credits;
or (c) December 31, 2010, whichever event occurs first.
During
the suspension of Water Banking, Water Users shall be excused the first time a
Water Ration is exceeded in a Ration Year.
Second and subsequent offenses shall be enforced as Water Waste.
A. Water
Banks shall be available to each Water User during Stages 5 through 7 Water Rationing. A Water Bank shall allow each Water User to
accrue the unused portion of a monthly Water Ration for use in the current
Rationing Year.
B. Water
Banks shall be reset to zero on the first day of each Rationing Year. Ten (10) percent of the remaining Water Bank
shall be credited to the following year’s Water Bank for three months to allow
the establishment of a new bank.
C. The
Water Bank shall be reduced on the first day of the fourth month of the
Rationing Year by the amount of banked water carried over. Water Banks may shall not carry a negative balance.
Section Thirteen: Amendment to
Rule 169
Rule 169 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 169 - WATER RATIONING VARIANCE
A. The
General Manager shall assign additional
water beyond the Water Ration established in Stage 5 Water Rationing through Stage 7 Water Rationing in
the following circumstances upon submittal of the appropriate variance request
form and fees.
B. The
following variances shall be considered and provide cause to allow for
additional water during Stages 5 through 7 Water Rationing.
1. Medical
and/or sanitation needs certified by a doctor;
2. Hospital
and/or health care facilities that have achieved all Best
Management Practices BMPs for
those uses;
3. Drinking
water for large livestock;
4. Commercial/Industrial
Non-Residential
Users that can demonstrate compliance with all BMPs appropriate for the
type of use and where there is minimal exterior water use on the water meter or
water supply serving the use;
5. Leaks,
when an invoice is provided by a licensed plumber or contractor;
6. Commercial
laundromats with signs advising full loads only;
7. Business
in a home on a case-by-case basis;
8. Riparian
irrigation when required as a condition of a riverbank restoration Permit issued by the District or as a condition of a riverbank
erosion protection Permit issued by the District.
9. Emergency,
extreme, or unusual situations on a case-by-case basis;
C. NO
VARIANCE
The
following categories of water use shall not qualify for special consideration or
provide cause for additional water under the provisions of this
Regulation:
1. Visitors
other than those occupying Short-Term Residential Housing as defined in Rule 11
(Definitions) when the property owner has submitted a completed survey form with the applicable
information about the occupancy of the Site. The
District may request additional documentation to substantiate Water Rations for
Short-Term Residential Housing;
2. Irrigation,
other than variances allowed by Rule 169-B-8 of this Regulation.
3. Filling
spas, ponds, fountains, etc.;
4. Long-term Lleaks that are not
repaired after reasonable
within
72 hours of notice.
D. MANDATORY CONDITIONS OF APPROVAL
1. Prior
to approving any Residential or Multi-Family Residential variance pursuant to
Rule 169-B, the Site must be in compliance with all applicable District Rules
and Regulations and the following water conservation standards shall be
achieved in all structures on the Site.
Verification by District inspection shall be conducted prior to granting
a variance.
a. Toilets shall be designed to flush with a maximum of 1.6
gallons-per-flush;
b. Showerheads, Rain Bars, or Body Spray Nozzles shall not emit more
than 2.2 gallons per minute of water in the aggregate per bathing
enclosure;
c. Faucets shall not emit more than 1.5 gallons of water per minute;
d. If an irrigation system is installed, drip irrigation exclusively
shall be used to irrigate non-turf plantings.
This requirement may be waived when outdoor watering is prohibited.
2. Prior
to approving any Non-Residential variance pursuant to Rule 169-B, the Site must
be in compliance with all applicable District Rules and Regulations and the
following water conservation standards shall be achieved in all structures on
the Site. Verification by District
inspection shall be conducted prior to granting a variance.
a. Toilets shall be designed to flush with a maximum of 1.6
gallons-per-flush;
b. Showerheads, Rain Bars, or Body Spray Nozzles shall not be
installed if the fixture is designed to emit more than 2.2 gallons per minute
of water in the aggregate per bathing enclosure;
c. Faucets shall not emit more than 1.5 gallons of water per minute;
d. If an irrigation system is installed, drip irrigation exclusively
shall be used to irrigate non-turf plantings.
This requirement may be waived when outdoor watering is prohibited;
e. Automatic sensor faucets or self-closing faucets shall be installed
where there are more than two washbasins in a room;
f. Site must comply with all BMPs appropriate for the type of
use.
Section Fourteen: Amendment to
Rule 170
Rule 170 shall be
amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 170 - WATER USE SURVEY
A. STAGE 1 WATER CONSERVATION SURVEY
1. California American Water shall maintain
a confidential survey of all Water Users of the California American Water system that
derive their Source of Supply from the MPWRS.
The survey shall request information to determine the number of
Permanent Residents in each Dwelling Unit and the lot size of each Residential
Site with permitted water service; the types of uses and amount of water use on
Non-Residential Sites; and the number of Users and types of use(s) served by
each water meter. Only information
deemed appropriate for the effective operation of this program will be
requested.
2. Survey
forms shall be completed by the Responsible Party and returned to California American Water within 30 days
of mailing. The District shall have access to this data
during Stages 1 through 3 Water
Conservation and shall be provided with a summary of the results of
the survey by census tract annually. California American Water shall maintain
survey information by census tract and shall provide access to individual water
use records in compliance with District Rule 42.
B. STAGE 4 WATER RATIONING SURVEY
1. The
General Manager shall conduct a survey of
MPWRS Water Users not supplied by California American Water prior to the
effective date of Stage 5 Water Rationing. The survey shall request
information to determine the number of Permanent Residents in each Dwelling Unit and the lot size of each
Residential Site with permitted water use; the types of uses and amount of
water use on Non-Residential Sites; and the number of Users and types of use(s)
served by each water meter or Connection. Only information deemed appropriate for the
effective operation of this program will be requested.
2. The
District shall mail the survey form to MPWRS Water Users not supplied water by California American Water. Survey forms
shall be completed by the Responsible Party and returned to the District within
30 days of mailing. The District shall
preserve the confidentiality of this survey data.
3. Failure
to complete and submit a survey shall result in a minimal Water Ration. For Residential Water Users the minimal
ration shall be a Water Rration for one (1) person. For Non-Residential Water Users the minimal Water
Rration shall be two (2) one
(1) units
per month.
C. ADMINISTRATION
OF SURVEY DATA
1.
California American Water shall maintain
survey data for all MPWRS Water Users supplied water by California American Water and shall
provide the District with access to all data in compliance with District Rule
42. California American Water shall provide
the District with an annual summary of survey information, or more frequently
as required by the General Manager. California American Water and MPWMD shall
preserve the confidentiality of survey data.
2. Non-California American Water Users
During
Stage 5 Water Rationing through Stage 7 Water Rationing, the
District shall maintain survey data for all MPWRS Water Users not supplied
water by California American Water.
3. A
full or partial survey may be conducted as deemed necessary by
the District to maintain accurate data.
4. District
staff shall maintain the confidentiality of all customer survey data.
D. REPORTING
1. Responsibility
of Water User
a. Each
Responsible Party shall be responsible for accurately
reporting
the number of Permanent Residents in the Dwelling Unit(s) or and other
information deemed appropriate for the effective operation of the program as
requested on the survey form.
b. Upon
activation of a water meter, each Responsible Party shall complete a survey
form.
i. distribution Ssystem.
ii. Non-California
American Water Users. The
completed survey form shall be submitted to the District or its agent by all
other distribution systems
Water Users. required
to complete a survey form during Stage 4 Water Rationing through Stage 7 Water
Rationing.
c. All Responsible
Parties shall submit revised survey forms whenever there is a change in the
number of Permanent Residents in a Residential Dwelling Unit or whenever there
is a cChange
of
Use in
a water
User
Category in
Non-Residential uses. Revised survey
forms should be submitted to the appropriate party as indicated in Rule
170-D-1-b.
d. Property
owners of Short-Term Residential Housing rentals shall provide information
about the average number of annual occupants and the average rate of occupancy
to the appropriate party as indicated in Rule 170-D-1-b.
2. Intentional
Misrepresentation
Any Water User intentionally
over-reporting the number of Permanent Residents in a Dwelling Unit or other
information pertinent to establishing a Water Ration during Stages 5, 6 and 7 Water Rationing may be charged with a misdemeanor
punishable as an infraction as provided by Section 256 of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management
District Law, Statutes of 1981, Chapter 986.
Violations carry a maximum penalty of up to $250 for each offense. Each separate day or portion thereof during
which any violation occurs or continues without a good-faith effort by the
responsible Water User to correct the violation, may be deemed to constitute a
separate offense, and upon conviction thereof, may be separately punishable.
Alternatively, the District may
pursue any remedy set forth in Regulation XI, Enforcement, to address the
intentional over-reporting of the number of Permanent Residents in a Dwelling
Unit or other information pertinent to establishing a Water Ration during
Stages 5, 6 and 7 Water
Rationing.
3. Additional
Enforcement for Misreporting
In
addition to any charge for
misrepresenting information as provided in Rule 170-D-2, any or all of the
following may be further imposed by the General Manager or his agent where the
violation occurs and continues without a good-faith effort by the responsible Water User to correct the violation. Decisions pursuant to this rule are
appealable pursuant to Regulation XI.
a. Intentional
misrepresentation may be considered a violation of the Water Waste provisions and shall subject
the Water User to a Water Waste fine; and/or
b. Intentional
misrepresentation may cause the loss of any Water Bank accrued and shall cause the Responsible Party to be ineligible to
accrue a Water Bank for a period of sixty (60) months; and/or
c. Intentional
misrepresentation may cause the assignment of a reduced Water Ration that may
be as low as a ration for one pPerson for a period of twelve (12) months.
Alternatively,
the District may pursue any remedy set forth in Regulation XI, Enforcement, to
address the intentional over-reporting
of the number of Permanent Residents in a Dwelling Unit or other
information pertinent to establishing a Water Ration during Stages 5, 6 and 7
Water Rationing.
4. Audit
The
District may periodically audit the
survey data for accuracy. Upon question,
the District may request additional evidence of residency to demonstrate the
number of Permanent Residents at that Site as defined in Rule 11 (Definitions).
Section Fifteen: Amendment
to Rule 171
Rule 171 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 171 - WATER WASTE AND NON-ESSENTIAL WATER USE
ENFORCEMENT
A. Each
occurrence of Water Waste or Non-Essential Water Use, as those terms
are defined by Rule No. 11 (Definitions), which continues after the Water User has had reasonable notice to
cease and desist that type of water use shall constitute a Flagrant Violation.
B. Repeated
occurrences of Water Waste or Non-Essential Water Use, which continue or occur after the Water User
has had a reasonable notice to cease and desist that type of water use, or
which continues or occurs after the Water User has had a reasonable opportunity
to cure any defect causing that type of water use, shall provide cause for the
placement of a Flow Restrictor with a maximum flow rate of six (6) cCcf/month, (but
in no event less than 35 gallons per person per day) within the water
line or water meter.
C. Water Waste, Non-Essential Water Use, and Flagrant Violation fine enforcement shall be governed by Regulation XI unless otherwise indicated.
Section Sixteen: Amendment to
Rule 172
Rule 172 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 172 - LANDSCAPE WATER AUDITS
A. Landscape
Water Audits shall be conducted under the supervision of an individual who has
been certified by the Irrigation Association to conduct audits and establish
Landscape Water Budgets. Each audit
shall be signed by that Person, who shall attest that the audit was performed
under his/her direction.
B. Landscape
Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets shall be offered by the District
and/or California American Water or their agent
free of charge to all Water Users of California American Water with Dedicated
Irrigation Meters, large irrigated areas over three acres, and Large
Residential Water Users. Landscape
Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets shall be required for new Dedicated
Irrigation Meters at the time the meter is installed.
Water
use records shall be reviewed annually by California American Water to identify
new Water Users required to establish a Landscape Water Budget by this Rule. Newly
identified Users shall be notified by California
American Water shall provide the District with copies of all completed
Landscape Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets. Once
notified of the requirement to obtain a Landscape Water Audit and Landscape
Water Budget, a User must arrange to complete the audit process within sixty (60)
days. Existing customers subject to this
Rule shall be given annual notice by
1. California American Water Users shall be
required to obtain Landscape Water Audits and establish Landscape Water Budgets
if the property:
a. Has
a Dedicated Irrigation Meter; or
b. Is
an irrigated area of greater than three acres; or
c. Is
a Large Residential Water User.
2. All
Landscape Water Budgets must be prepared by an individual certified by the
Irrigation Association.
3. All
Water Users required to complete a Landscape Water Audit and establish a
Landscape Water Budget shall have the option of obtaining a Landscape Water
Audit and Landscape Water Budget from a Landscape Irrigation Auditor of their
choice at their own expense if the auditor is certified by the Irrigation Association.
4. Landscape
Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets not conducted and prepared by the
District and/or California American Water shall be completed
as specified in this Rule reported on a Landscape
Water Budget Application. Completed Landscape Water Budgets and
Landscape Water Audits Applications shall be submitted to California American
Water. California American Water shall
forward a copy of all completed Landscape Water Audits and Budgets to the
District within ten (10) days of receipt by California American Water. Landscape Water Audits not performed by the
District or California American Water are subject to
review and acceptance by the District.
Landscape Water Audits and Landscape Water Budgets rejected by the
District may be appealed to the Board of Directors pursuant to Rule 70
(Appeals).
5. Audit
a. An On-Site Landscape Irrigation Audit shall be completed or overseen by a Certified Landscape Irrigation Auditor (CLIA) and shall include evaluation and documentation of the following:
(1) Visual and physical evaluation of Irrigation System.
(2) Description of the type(s) of Irrigation System contained on the property.
(3) Location of problems with Irrigation System which may be contributing to excessive water use.
(4) Condition and performance of the following:
Points of connection
Backflow devices(s)
Valves
Piping (to include mains and laterals)
Control system
Sprinklers/emitters
System coverage
(5) Landscaped areas irrigated by each valve/zone/running station.
(6) Plant materials, plant hydrozone compatibility, soil type, Irrigation System operating pressure, irrigation water requirements, and efficiency for each zone.
(7) Site map, photographs and or a detailed zone description summary including: Zone location, zone efficiency, sprinkler type and zone comments.
b. Upon completion of an On-Site audit, the Irrigation System data shall be analyzed and compiled into a usable, written report that shall include at least the following:
(1) Calculation and determination of Site Landscape Water Budget using the Irrigation Association Water Requirement (WR) calculation, as follows:
WR = ETo x KL x A
DU x Ewm x Cu
Where:
WR = Water Requirement[1]
ETo = Reference Evapotranspiration (inches per year)[2]
KL = Landscape Coefficient
A = Area (square feet)
Cu = Conversion Factor (convert to CCF = 1,200)
Ewm = Management Efficiency[3]
DU = Distribution Uniformity
(2) The budget shall include calculations for each of the following hydrozones assuming they are present in the landscape.
• Cool season turf (.8)
• Warm season turf (.6)
• All other vegetation (.5)
(3) Monthly irrigation schedule.
(4) Condition and functionality of existing Irrigation System.
(5) Recommendations for improvements to Landscape material and Irrigation System (to include “Smart” irrigation technology and information about Rebates available).
(6) Estimate of water and money savings potential, including cost estimates for recommended improvements.
(7) Site map and or a detailed zone description summary which identifies relevant Irrigation System details, including valves/zones, and sprinkler/emitter types for each zone.
The following minimum criteria will be used to establish the hydrozone distribution uniformity:
Type of Zone |
Minimum Distribution Uniformity (DU) |
Fixed Spray |
50% |
Rotor |
60% |
Stream Rotor |
60% |
Impact |
60% |
Micro Spray |
80% |
Drip - Standard |
80% |
Drip - Pressure Compensating |
80% |
Bubbler - Standard |
80% |
Bubbler - Pressure Compensating |
80% |
The following Landscape Coefficients (species factors) shall be used:
Type of
Vegetation |
Coefficient |
Cool Season Turf |
0.80 |
Warm Season Turf |
0.60 |
All Other Landscape Vegetation |
0.50 |
6. California American Water shall provide
monthly status notices to each Water User required to follow a mandatory
Landscape Water Budget during Stage 2 through Stage 4.
C. MODIFICATIONS TO AUDITED LANDSCAPES
Following
significant modification to an existing audited lLandscape, a new Landscape Water
Audit shall be conducted to establish an appropriate Landscape Water
Budget. It shall be the responsibility
of the property owner to ensure that a Landscape Water
Audit is conducted within 60 days of any such change and to submit a new Landscape
Water Audit and Landscape Water Budget Application to California American Water.
D. REPORTING
AND ANALYSIS
California American Water shall preserve
water use records and budgets for all Water Users subject to this
Rule. Updated Landscape Water Budgets
shall supersede previous data. Monthly
during Stages 2 through Stage 4 and above, California American Water
shall notify the District of Water Users who have exceeded their
Landscape Water Budget. Quarterly, a
report shall be compiled by California American Water and provided to
the District showing the account information and comparing the Landscape Water
Budget with actual consumption.
E. LANDSCAPE
IRRIGATION RESTRICTIONS IN
THE MPWRS
Unless
watering is by drip irrigation or through a hand-held
hose with a Positive Action Shut-Off Nozzle, or
performed by a professional gardener or landscaper, the following watering
schedule shall apply:
1. Odd
Numbered Properties shall water after 5 p.m. or before 9 a.m. on Saturdays and
Wednesdays only. This schedule shall
also apply to properties located on the South or West side of the street in
cities where no street address is available.
2.
Even Numbered Properties shall water after 5
p.m. or before 9 a.m. on Sundays and Thursdays only. This schedule shall also apply to properties
located on the North or East side of the street in cities where no street
address is available.
3.
Sprinkler irrigation overseen by a
professional gardener or landscaper who is available on Site may occur between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., but shall not exceed two watering days per week.
Section Seventeen: Rule 173
Rule 173 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 173 - REGULATION OF
A.
No
Person, Extractor, Owner or Operator shall operate a Mobile Water
Distribution System without first securing a written Permit from the District.
In accordance with Monterey County Code (e.g., Title 15.20), no
applications will be accepted or permitted for bulk hauled water for permanent
Potable use. Applications for
establishment of a Mobile Water Distribution System shall be made pursuant to
Rule 22 (Action On Application For Permit To Create/Establish A Water Distribution System)
and shall be investigated, considered, determined, and acted upon on the same
terms and conditions as provided for the approval, conditional approval or
denial of a creation establishment Permit as stated in that rule. The application shall identify each Source of Supply and the location of each
use. For any Sub-potable Mobile Water
Distribution System within the California American Water Service Area, a condition of approval
shall require that California American Water be notified so
that a back-flow protection device can be installed pursuant to Monterey County
Code.
B.
In
the event prior authorization is not obtained by reason of an emergency or
health related situation, authorization for the Mobile Water Distribution System Permit
shall be sought from the District by submittal of a complete application
compliant with Rule 21, within five working days following commencement of the
emergency or health related event.
C.
CD. Delivery and/or receipt of water from an unpermitted Mobile
Water Distribution System shall be deemed Water Waste, and shall be
subject to fine, restriction, and cease and desist order as set forth in Rule
171 and Regulation XI.
Section Eighteen: Rule 174
Ordinance No.
137 does not propose changes to Rule 174.
RULE 174 - REGULATION OF WELL OWNERS OR
OPERATORS AND EXTRACTORS
During a Water Supply Emergency, each Owner or Operator or Extractor of a private water Well, Water Distribution System, or other
Water-Gathering Facility shall comply
with the provisions of this Regulation, as they relate to such Well, Water
Distribution System or other Water-Gathering Facility unless specifically
exempt by action of the Board of Directors.
Section Nineteen: Amendment to
Rule 175
Rule 175 shall
be amended as shown below, with added language as shown in bold italic type face,
and deleted language shown in strikeout type face.
RULE 175 - WATER RATIONING ENFORCEMENT
A. ENFORCEMENT
DURING STAGES 5 THROUGH 7 WATER
RATIONING
For
this Rule, the administrative fines for Stages 5 through 7 water rationing set
forth in the tables below and referenced in this Rule shall control and be
amended from time to time by Resolution duly adopted by the MPWMD Board of
Directors.
Violation
levels shall be based upon violation history for the preceding twelve
(12) months and the rationing condition stage.
[THIS SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]
STAGE
5 WATER RATIONING ENFORCEMENT
Meter Size |
1st Offense |
2nd Offense |
3rd Offense |
4th Offense |
1” and Less |
Courtesy Notice |
$20 |
$40 |
$40 |
>1” to 2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$40 |
$80 |
$80 |
>2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$80 |
$160 |
$160 |
STAGE 6 WATER RATIONING ENFORCEMENT
Meter Size |
1st Offense |
2nd Offense |
3rd Offense |
4th Offense |
1” and Less |
Courtesy Notice |
$25 |
$50 |
$50 |
>1” to 2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$50 |
$100 |
$100 |
>2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$100 |
$200 |
$200 |
STAGE 7 WATER RATIONING
ENFORCEMENT
Meter Size |
1st Offense |
2nd Offense |
3rd Offense |
4th Offense |
1” and Less |
Courtesy Notice |
$50 |
$100 |
$100 |
>1” to 2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$100 |
$200 |
$200 |
>2” |
Courtesy Notice |
$200 |
$400 |
$400 |
1. Courtesy
Notice
For
the first instance of excess water use beyond the Water Ration in Stages 5
through 7 Water Rationing,
a Water User shall be given written notice by the water system Operator of the excess use and shall be notified that such violation
constitutes Water Waste and a Water Waste fine shall
be collected in the event the Water User again exceeds that User’s Water Ration
during any future billing cycle under Stages 5 through 7 Water Rationing. If the Water User complies with all water
rationing and Water Waste and Non-Essential
Water Use requirements during the next month following the first instance of
excess use, the excess use fine shall be deferred.
If the Water User again exceeds that User’s Water Ration during any following
month, the Water Waste fine shall be imposed.
2. Second
Offense
Upon
the second occurrence of excess water use (including any prior excess water use
during any prior stage) within a 12-month period, a Water User shall be charged
with Water Waste and assessed a fine, plus the previously deferred fine by the District or its agent. For example, if a 1” or smaller meter had a
second offense within a 12-month period during Stage 5, a fine of $20 plus the
previously deferred fine of the same amount would be assessed. If the second offense occurred in Stage 6 and
the first offense in Stage 5, the 2nd offense fine would be $25 and the
previously deferred fine would be $20.
3. Third
Offense
A third occurrence of excess water use
(including any prior excess water use during any prior stage) within a 12-month
period shall result in fines listed for a third offense. A third occurrence of excess water use shall
provide cause for the installation of a Flow Restrictor in the water meter or
water supply providing water to the property where the over-use occurred. Restrictors shall remain in place until
conditions are reduced to Stage 2 Water Conservation or a less restrictive
stage. All costs for the installation
and removal of a Flow Restrictor shall be charged to the property owner Water User of the Site
subjected to this action.
4. Fourth
Offense
A
fourth occurrence of water use in excess of the Water Ration shall result in
fines listed for a third offense and shall result in the installation of a Flow
Restrictor with a maximum flow rate of 6 cCcf/month (but not less than 35 gallons per
person per day) by the system Operator in the water meter or water
supply providing water to the property where the over-use occurred. Restrictors shall remain in place until
conditions are reduced to Stage 3 Water Conservation or to a less restrictive
stage. All costs for the installation
and removal of a Flow Restrictor shall be charged to the Water User property owner
of the Site
subjected to this action.
B. FLOW
RESTRICTOR EXEMPTION
Exemptions
to the installation of a Flow Restrictor as a means to enforce the
Water Ration shall occur when there are provable risks to the health, safety
and/or welfare of the Water User. An exemption shall be made for water meters
serving three or more Multi-Family Dwelling units or any Mixed Use by
substituting an excess water use charge equivalent to the appropriate meter
size, rationing stage, and 4th offense amount times the number of Dwelling
Units located on the meter during each month in which a violation of the Water
Ration occurs. The Responsible Party
shall be liable for payment of all excess water use charges.
C. All
notices and assessments of Water Waste and/or excess water use
charges made by a Water Distribution System Operator shall be reported to the District.
Section Twenty: Amendment of Rule 23-B-2
Rule 23-B-2
shall be amended to reflect the relocation of metering provisions adopted in
Ordinance No. 134 (August 18, 2008) as Rule 161-F and 161-G. Rule 23-B-2 shall be amended as shown below,
with added language as shown in bold italic type face, and deleted
language shown in strikeout
type face.
1.
Construction
of a New Structure.
In addition to the “Mandatory
Conditions of Approval for Construction Affecting the Interior or Exterior of
an Existing Structure”, a
a.
All new
water use permitted by the District shall install a separate water meter to
each User.
b. All
Non-Residential New Structures receiving a Water Permit after January 1, 2009
that include irrigated areas beyond ten (10) feet of any building shall utilize
a separate water meter to measure all exterior water uses.
c. All
New Structures receiving a Water Permit after January 1, 2009 shall have
separate water meters for fire suppression systems.
Section Twenty-One: Publication and Application
The provisions of this ordinance shall cause the republication and
amendment of the permanent Rules and Regulations of the Monterey Peninsula
Water Management District.
This ordinance shall take effect at 12:01 a.m. on the 31st day
of December 2008.
This Ordinance shall not have a sunset date.
Section Twenty-Three: Severability
If any subdivision, paragraph, sentence, clause or phrase of this
ordinance is, for any reason, held to be invalid or unenforceable by a court of
competent jurisdiction, such invalidity shall not affect the validity or
enforcement of the remaining portions of this ordinance, or of any other
provisions of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District Rules and
Regulations. It is the District's
express intent that each remaining portion would have been adopted irrespective
of the fact that one or more subdivisions, paragraphs, sentences, clauses, or
phrases be declared invalid or unenforceable.
On motion by Director __________, and
second by Director ____________, the foregoing ordinance is adopted upon this
______ day of ________________, 2008, by the following vote:
AYES:
NAYS:
ABSENT:
I, ____________________, Secretary to the Board of
Directors of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District, hereby certify
the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of an ordinance duly adopted on
the ________ day of _____________ 2008.
Witness my hand and seal of the Board of Directors
this ________ day of ____________ 2008.
U:\staff\word\boardpacket\2008\2008boardpackets\20081208\PubHrgs\13\item13_exh13a.doc
[1] Water Requirement calculations, for the purpose of
establishing the Landscape Water Budget, shall not include a variable for
Effective Rainfall. Property
owners/irrigators will need to adjust their actual watering schedules based on
actual rainfall, as this will help them stay within their Landscape Water
Budgets. One of the top recommendations
given to all audited properties must be the installation of a Rain Shut-Off
Switch.
[2] Historic ETo data for specific properties shall be provided
to consultant(s), by MPWMD, as requested.
[3] Due to the unique and critical water supply situation in the
Monterey Peninsula Water Resource System, a higher standard of Management
Efficiency (Ewm) will be required, especially for properties identified as
needing Landscape Water Audits and Budgets.
Therefore, Ewm shall not be less than 0.90 for the purpose of
establishing a Landscape Water Budget.