PROPOSITION November Water Bond Act

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Presentation transcript:

PROPOSITION 3 2018 November Water Bond Act Presentation to Southern California Water Dialogue

Of remaining $4.8 billion, funds will be largely exhausted by 2019. Status of Prop. 1 funds $2.7 billion in storage funds were allocated by California Water Commission in July. Of remaining $4.8 billion, funds will be largely exhausted by 2019.

Proposition 68 (June 2018) Legislative bond: SB 5 (DeLeon) Primarily urban park bond June vs November Small overlap between measures (18%)

HOW MUCH WATER AND FLOOD CONTROL INVESTMENT DOES CALIFORNIA NEED? San Francisco Baylands flood protection. $1.43 billion Flood Control in Central Valley $17 billion State Flood control: $50 billion Wastewater recycling: $15 billion Water conservation: 2,000,000 AF: $800 million Salton Sea stabilization: Up to $3 billion Safe Drinking Water: $45 million per year for many years Stormwater: $20 billion in Los Angeles Region alone Stormwater, safe drinking water, flood management, water for endangered species, and integrated water management: $2-3 billion per year for foreseeable future

KEY FUNDING CATEGORIES Safe Drinking Water $500 million Wastewater for DACs $250 million Urban Water Conservation $300 million Agricultural Water Conservation $50 million Wastewater Recycling $400 million Desalting (inland) $400 million SGMA Compliance $675 million Flood Management $500 million Oroville Dam Repair $200 million Repair Friant Kern Canal $750 million Salton Sea $200 million Stormwater $550 million Fish Habitat & Waterfowl Habitat $1450 million Watershed restoration $2400 million

Southern California Environmental Programs Los Angeles River: $150 million Rivers and Mountains CCY: $100 million Santa Monica Mntns CCY: $100 million Santa Ana River: $30 million San Diego River: $40 million Tijuana River: $10 million San Diego Bay: $15 million Santa Clara River: $10 million Santa Margarita River: $15 million Salton Sea: $200 million Coachella Valley CCY: $25 million Baldwin Hill CCY: $30 million Matilija Dam Removal: $80 million Borrego Valley: $35 million

Statewide Environmental Programs NCCP: $60 million Coastal CCY $130 million State Parks: $150 million Wildlife Conservation Board: $240 million Ocean Protection Council: $100 million Urban streams: $50 million Urban forestry: $20 million Cal Fire Watershed improvement: $50 million Sustainable GW Mgt Act: $640 million

SOFT PATH WATER SUPPLY BENEFITS OF Proposition 3, THE WATER SUPPLY AND CLEAN WATER BOND Act BASED ON INVESTMENT AND REQUIRED MATCHING FUNDS DROUGHT YEAR SUPPLIES SOURCE SUPPLY IN ACRE FEET /YEAR WASTEWATER RECYCLING 124,000 DESALTING 70,000 STORMWATER CAPTURE 101,000 URBAN WATER CONSERVATION 589,000 WATERSHED MANAGEMENT AND TREATMENT 661,000 REPAIR OF FLOOD CONTROL DAMS 20,000 REPAIR OF FRIANT KERN CANAL 200,000 TOTAL 1,765,000 An urban family in California uses .5 acre feet per year.

Year 1960 burns porter act. Bond. Established state water project. 1970 recreation at state water project; fish and wildlife enhancement clean water bond act 1974 1976 safe drinking water bond act 1978 clean water and water conservation bond 1980 amend safe drinking water bond act of 1976 1984 1986 water conservation and water quality bond 1988 water conservation bond act clean water and water reclamation bond act   1990 water resources bond act 1996 safe reliable water supply bond act 2000 parks, water, air coast bond act water bond act 2002 parks, water, air, coast bond act water quality supply safe drinking water initiative 2006 water bond act initiative Disaster preparedness and flood prevention 2014 water Quality, Supply, Treatment, Storage 2018 parks, water, climate change

Prop. 1 water bond statewide (2014: 67%) Measure AA SF Bay Restoration (2016: 70%) Proposition 68 (Park and water bond (2018: 57%) Sen. Feinstein Strong inter-sector support National Wildlife Federation, Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, Save the Bay, Ca Native Plant Soc., Sustainable Conservation, Planning and Conservation League; Tree People, Climate Resolve, Orange County Coastkeeper, Madres de la Tierra, Friends of the Los Angeles River, 90 more Association of California Water Agencies, No. Calif. Water Assoc., So. Cal. Water Coalition Rice, Fresh Fruit, Cotton, Pistachio, Dairy, Ag Council, Farm Bureau, Western Growers EJ: Community Water Center, 10 others California Labor Federation Major business support