Laserfiche WebLink
41H AND CABRILLO <br />WATER SUPPLY ASSESSMENT AUGUST 21, 2020 <br />4. REGIONAL WATER SUPPLY RELIABILITY <br />The City of Santo Ana currently depends on Metropolitan and local groundwater resources to <br />provide the majority of its water supply. This section provides a description of the ability of <br />Metropolitan, OCWD and the City to ensure that adequate water supplies will be available to <br />satisfy the City's growing water demands including the proposed Project through 2040 during <br />normal, single dry year and multiply dry year scenarios. <br />4.1 METROPOLITAN WATER DISTRICT REGIONAL WATER SUPPLY RELIABILITY <br />Metropolitan's 2015 Urban Water Management Plan (UWMP) was finalized in June 2016 and <br />has been prepared in compliance with Water Code Sections 10608.36 of SB X7-7 and Sections <br />10610 through 10656 of the Urban Water Management Planning Act (Act). The information <br />included in the 2015 UWMP represents the most current and available planning projections of <br />supply capability and demand developed through a collaborative process with the member <br />agencies, including the City of Sana Ana. The Act requires reporting agencies to describe their <br />water reliability under a single dry -year, multiple dry -year, and average year conditions, with <br />projected information in five-year increments for 20 years. <br />Metropolitan updates its retail municipal and industrial (M&I) projection periodically based on <br />the release of official regional demographic and economic projections. The projections of retail <br />M&I water demands used in the 2015 UWMP are based on data from the Southern California <br />Association of Governments (SCAG) 2012 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable <br />Community Strategy (April 2012) and the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) <br />Series 13: 2050 Regional Growth Forecast (October 2013). The projected regional water <br />demand is adjusted to account for water conserved by Best Management Practices from active, <br />code -based, and price -effect conservation. <br />Supply analysis includes Colorado River supplies, SWP supplies and existing and proposed <br />storage programs through Metropolitan's service area. Colorado River Aqueduct (CRA) <br />supplies include supplies that would result from existing and committed programs and from <br />implementation of the Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA) and related agreements. <br />State Water Project (SWP) supplies are estimated using the 2015 SWP Delivery Capability Report <br />distributed by DWR in July 2015. In regard to storage, Metropolitan assumed 2015 storage <br />levels at the start of simulation and used the median storage levels going into each of the five- <br />year increments based on the balances of supplies and demands. See Table 7 below showing <br />Metropolitan's ability to meet growing demands in normal, single -dry and multiple -dry year <br />climate scenarios. <br />FUSCOE ENGINEERING, INC. 20 <br />