Laserfiche WebLink
41" AND CABRILLO <br />WATER SUPPLY ASSESSMENT AUGUST 21, 2020 <br />expansion of the treatment system is being designed to have a capacity of 130 million gallons <br />per day. Expansion projects to the GWRS increase local water supply reliability and ensure low- <br />cost water supplies throughout northern Orange County, including the City of Santa Ana. <br />Metropolitan Imported Water <br />The City of Santa Ana is one of only three retail member agencies of Metropolitan in Orange <br />County. As a member agency, pursuant to the Metropolitan Act, the City has preferential rights <br />to a certain percentage of water delivered to Metropolitan each year primarily from the State <br />Water Project and/or the Colorado River Aqueduct as well as other Metropolitan storage <br />programs. Being a member agency of Metropolitan puts the City in a better position relative to <br />receiving water directly from Metropolitan, as opposed to other agencies in Orange County <br />which obtain their imported Metropolitan water through Municipal Water District of Orange <br />County (MWDOC). The main sources of water Metropolitan provides to the City include water <br />from northern California delivered via the State Water Project (SWP) and water from the <br />Colorado River Basin delivered via the Colorado River Aqueduct. More details on these sources <br />of imported water are explained below. <br />Colorado River <br />The Colorado River was Metropolitan's original source of water after Metropolitan's <br />establishment in 1928. Lake Mead and Lake Powell, the two largest reservoirs in the United <br />States, can store 4 times the annual flow of the Colorado River. River flows are primarily <br />generated from snowpack in the Rocky Mountains. Colorado River water is allocated and <br />delivered to seven states in the US including Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, New Mexico, Arizona, <br />Nevada and California. Mexico also has an allocation of 1 .5 million acre-feet (MAF) along the <br />Colorado River each year. <br />California's urban water allocation is managed by Metropolitan and imported from the <br />Colorado River via the Colorado River Aqueduct (CRA) which is stored at Diamond Valley Lake <br />and Lake Mathews in Riverside County. The CRA includes supplies from the implementation of <br />the Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA) and related agreements to transfer water from <br />agricultural agencies in Imperial County to urban uses throughout Southern California including <br />Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego. The 2003 QSA enabled California to implement <br />major Colorado River water conservation and transfer programs, stabilizing water supplies for <br />75 years and reducing the state's demand on the river to its 4.4 MAF entitlement. Colorado <br />River transactions are potentially available to supply additional water up to the CRA capacity of <br />1.25 MAF on an as -needed basis. <br />California is apportioned the largest allocation on the River of 4.4 MAF of water from the <br />Colorado River each year plus one-half of any surplus that may be available for use collectively <br />in Arizona, California, and Nevada. In addition, California has historically been allowed to use <br />Colorado River water apportioned to but not used by Arizona or Nevada. Metropolitan has a <br />basic entitlement of 550,000 AFY of Colorado River water, plus surplus water up to an <br />additional 662,000 AFY if certain conditions exist. The remainder of California's allocation <br />goes to Imperial County, primarily to the Imperial Irrigation District, and is used mainly for <br />agriculture production. <br />FUSCOE ENGINEERING, INC. 55D-24 16 <br />