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Basin 8-1 Overview <br />As the City of La Habra currently depends on local groundwater to meet approximately 40 <br />percent of its water consumption; preserving the sustainability of the La Habra -Brea <br />Management Area is essential. Currently (and historically), the City of La Habra manages (and <br />has managed) the La Habra -Brea Management Area through management plans and programs <br />for groundwater levels, basin storage, and water quality. By January 2020, the City will manage <br />the La Habra -Brea Management Area through a Groundwater Sustainability Plan under SGMA, <br />which will describe the monitoring program and ensure that no undesirable results occur in the <br />future. <br />2. OCWD MANAGEMENT AREA <br />The OCWD Management Area covers an area of approximately 260 square miles within Basin <br />8-1, which represents approximately 89 percent of the land area of Basin 8-1. Ninety-eight <br />percent of the groundwater production within Basin 8-1 occurs in the OCWD Management Area. <br />Groundwater produced within the OCWD Management Area provides approximately 70 percent <br />of the total water supply for a population of around 2.4 million residents. <br />Since its formation by the California Legislature in 1933, OCWD has been the managing agency <br />for the majority of Basin 8-1, also referred to as the Coastal Plain of Orange County <br />Groundwater Basin. As a special act district listed in Water Code § 1072(c)(1), OCWD is the <br />exclusive local agency within its jurisdictional boundaries with powers to comply with SGMA. <br />Water demands within the OCWD Management Area have grown from approximately 150,000 <br />acre-feet per year (afy) in the mid-1950s to a high of approximately 366,000 afy in water year <br />2007-08. OCWD operates an extensive network of recharge basins to increase recharge of <br />surface water into the groundwater basin to support groundwater production. OCWD monitors <br />the basin by collecting groundwater elevation and quality data from nearly 700 wells, including <br />over 400 OCWD-owned monitoring wells, manages an electronic database that stores water <br />elevation, water quality, production, recharge and other data on over 2,000 wells and facilities <br />within and outside OCWD boundaries. <br />An OCWD-operated water recycling plant provides up to 100 million gallons per day of <br />advanced tertiary -treated wastewater that supplies recharge operations and a seawater <br />intrusion barrier operated to protect the basin's water quality. OCWD manages groundwater <br />storage and water levels within an established operating range which has resulted in <br />sustainable conditions with no unreasonable and significant undesirable results. <br />The Sustainability Goal for the OCWD Management Area is to continue to sustainably manage <br />the groundwater basin to prevent conditions that would lead to significant and unreasonable (1) <br />lowering of groundwater levels, (2) reduction in storage, (3) water quality degradation, (4) <br />seawater intrusion, (5) inelastic land subsidence and (6) adverse impacts on hydrologically <br />connected surface water. <br />2017 BASIN 8-1 ALTERNATIVE Overview 6 <br />55D-51 <br />