march 7, 2006
DESCRIPTION
Oakdale Irrigation District Water Resources Plan A Community Plan. A Successful Future. Discussion of Annexation/Expansion Issues. March 7, 2006. Public. Involvement. Technical. Institutional. Analyses. Activities. The Water Resources Plan Goals. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Slide 1March 7, 2006
Oakdale Irrigation DistrictWater Resources Plan
A Community Plan. A Successful Future.
Discussion of Annexation/Expansion Issues
Oakdale Irrigation DistrictWater Resources Plan
A Community Plan. A Successful Future.
Discussion of Annexation/Expansion Issues
2
The Water Resources Plan Goals
Technical Analyses
Institutional Activities
PublicInvolvement
• Provide long-term protection to OID’s water rights.
• Address federal, state, and local water challenges.
• Rebuild/modernize an out-of-date system to meet changing customer needs.
• Develop affordable ways to finance improvements.
• Involve the public in the planning process.
3
The Project Team will need Board Input Throughout the PEIR Preparation
Technical Analyses
Institutional Activities
PublicInvolvement
• Numerous issues from Phase 1 need continued Board input.
• Some items specifically relate to PEIR activities
• Other items, while not strictly tied to PEIR, need continued Board discussion
4
Schedule of Board Involvement
Water Supply Reliability and prelude to Transfer/Annexation issues (Informational Presentation)
5
Schedule of Board Involvement
CEQAScoping Meeting
6
Schedule of Board Involvement
Expansion of Service Issues (Informational Presentation) and development of Annexation Policy Guiding Principles (Board Action)
7
PresentationExpansion of Service Issues
OID’s ability to expand water service is directly linked to “reliability”
“Water Reliability”- dependent on:– Basin Hydrology – Contractual obligations
“Customer Reliability”- dependent on water reliability plus:– Annual water management decisions– Groundwater pumping capacity– Amount of land served
Stanislaus River Reliability–Independent of Acres Irrigated
9
The WRP’s Best Apparent Alternative- Improves Level of Reliability
Developed conservative plan to meet worst case drought needs.
“Worst case” is defined as a maximum water demand (max ET) occurring simultaneous with an extreme (5% probability) Stanislaus River curtailment
Level of reliability dependent on upcoming OID policy decisions; drought response, annexation, and water transfers
10
Existing Customer Reliability
From an in-District grower perspective, assuming the following:– Max ET (299 TAF)– 30 TAF minimum transfer obligation– No annexations– 15 TAF of emergency pumping capability– Reduced rotations resulting in 10-14TAF
in delivery curtailments Customer reliability is 79%
Current Customer Reliability
11
Implementing the WRP Improves Future Customer Reliability
From an in-District growers perspective in 2025, assuming the following:– Demands (233 – 265 TAF)– 50 TAF Minimum transfer obligation– Over 4,000 acres of annexations– 20 TAF of emergency pumping capability and
increased drainwater reuse – Reduced rotations resulting in 10-14TAF in
delivery curtailments Customer reliability exceeds 95%
Future Customer Reliability with WRP
12
WRP Can’t Improve Stanislaus River Reliability, Just Customer Reliability
Customer Reliability is also affected by board policies, facilities (gw and reuse), and land use
The WRP is structured to be implemented over time
Reliability improves steadily over the course of implementation
Additional water transfers and annexations need to be carefully phased
13
Significant Expansion Opportunities Exist in the SOI
14
15
Four alternatives were developed to address what to do with conserved water
Alternative 3 moderately expands service within OID’s Sphere of Influence.
ALTERNATIVE 4ALTERNATIVE 4
67,000 ac-ft
Supports OID
expansion into SOI, approx.
16,750 acres
Transfers to willing buyers
(9,000 ac-ft more than current)
Variable transfers to willing buyers
ALTERNATIVE 2
50,0
00 a
c-ft 17,000 ac-ft
Transfers to willing buyers
(9,000 ac-ft more than current)
ALTERNATIVE 3
50,0
00 a
c-ft 17,000 ac-ft
Supports OID
expansion into SOI, approx.
4,250 acres
16
The WRP Recommends Expansion into the SOI
The WRP goals need to be consistent with OID policies
A review of the current OID Annexation Policy is necessary
Recommend a 2 step process– Develop “Guiding Principles”– Revise Annexation Policy as
necessary
Provide long-term protection to OID’s water rights
Address federal, state and local water challenges
Rebuild/modernize an out-of-date system to meet changing customer needs
Develop affordable ways to finance improvements
Involve the public inthe planning process
17
Schedule of Board Involvement
Water Resources Planning Committee Discussion of Annexation Policy Guiding Principles
18
Schedule of Board Involvement
Annexation Policy Guiding Principles Board (Board Action) and Drought Response Plan (Informational Presentation)
19
Policy Direction Regarding Expansion of Service - Critical Path Activity
The purpose of today is to create a list of the issues that the Guiding Principles should address
The list of issues will be consolidated and addressed by Board policy direction
For example...
20
Some Issues Can be Grouped into a “Principle” Related to Water Supply Reliability
What level of customer reliability does OID want for its existing users?
Should new lands be assured the same level of reliability?
OID water to new lands. . . is it a supplemental supply or a sole supply (ability to pump groundwater)?
Should water be provide to new lands with a maximum allowable usage (e.g. 4 af/ac)?
“Expansion into SOI won’t negatively impact water supply reliability to existing OID users”?
21
Other Issues that Need to be Addressed by Guiding Principles
Costs – buy-in fee?, water charge?, responsibility for cost of necessary infrastructure?, O&M costs?
Customer service/service equity? Preservation of commitment to Cities of Oakdale
and Riverbank? Preservation of OID’s flexibility and control of its
water supplies? Establish water use efficiency criteria?
22
Issues Cont.
Service to non-developed lands (increased CEQA issues)?
ROW Issues? Operational impacts to existing customers and
delivery system? System of prioritization (e.g. big vs. small,
contiguous vs. non-contiguous, low water demand vs. high water demand, etc.)?
What else?
23
Costs – buy-in fee?, water charge?, responsibility for cost of necessary infrastructure?, O&M costs?
Customer service/service equity? Preservation of commitment to Cities
of Oakdale and Riverbank? Preservation of OID’s flexibility and
control of its water supplies? Establish water use efficiency criteria?
Service to non-developed lands (increased CEQA issues)?
ROW Issues? Operational impacts to existing
customers and delivery system? System of prioritization (e.g. big
vs. small, contiguous vs. non-contiguous, low water demand vs. high water demand, etc.)?
What else?
Expansion of Service Issues
24
Schedule of Board Involvement
Water Resources Planning Committee Discussion of Annexation Policy Guiding Principles
25
Schedule of Board Involvement
Annexation Policy Guiding Principles Board (Board Action) and Drought Response Plan (Informational Presentation)
26
Schedule of Board Involvement
1) Water Transfer Discussion to include Extension of Existing Contracts, and Potential New Recipients.
2) Confirmation of “Preferred Alternative”.
3) Infrastructure Projects and Details (Informational Presentations)
Slide 27March 7, 2006
Oakdale Irrigation DistrictWater Resources Plan
A Community Plan. A Successful Future.
Discussion of Annexation/Expansion Issues
Oakdale Irrigation DistrictWater Resources Plan
A Community Plan. A Successful Future.
Discussion of Annexation/Expansion Issues