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TABLE OF CONTENTS
About the Cover Art Just Logged"
Dear Friends
Sonoma Seeks Millions to Export More Water
Internet Link to PVP Flow Data
Just How is the Eel River Water Used?
Biological Effects of pvp Dams
Does the New County General Plan Hold Water?
Eel River Clean-Up Efforts: John Casali
The Itsy-Bitsy Spider Climbed Up a Heap of Trash
Dos Rios Water Grab on Eel River
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act
Largest Dam Removal Ever
Water is the New Oil
The River Center in Fortuna
River Center Kayaking Tour in Estuary
Saving the Ancients in Nanning Creek
Salmon Trees
I Pledge To
Business Directory
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Does the New County General Plan Hold Water?
by Veronica Jacobi and
Stephen Fuller-Rowell
Sonoma County Water Coalition
Co-Founders
Editors Note: This article applies to all county general plans currently under way.
A 32+ membership organizations
Sonoma County residents want a General Plan that protects our quality of life, which depends on a reliable supply of clean water.
Water was a high priority for many who spoke at packed General Plan scoping meetings six years ago. If we want sound water management, its time to get active again. The upcoming Board of Supervisors hearings will be the last chance to demand a stronger Water Resources Element before the General Plan Update is approved.
What are the big issues?
Sonoma County needs a comprehensive water management plan. We cannot continue making decisions about the use of surface water from our rivers, or the groundwater from beneath our land, or on wastewater disposal and reuse, without considering the connections between all water.?
Sonoma Countys groundwater recharge areas must be protected. Protection should extend to all land use polices and also be incorporated into building codes. Our aquifers are the biggest and least expensive place to store winter rainfall. We cannot continue paving over the groundwater recharge areas that fill our aquifers.
Groundwater levels are dropping in every area in Sonoma County that has been studied. Its time to seriously examine the combined impacts of Sonoma Countys 40,000 wells and stop wasting our money deepening wells, using more and more energy to pump water up from deeper and deeper levels.
We need policies to correct groundwater overdrafts. We cannot keep doing studies and writing reports. We must address the problem and limit groundwater withdrawals.
Threats to our water resources also come from outside the County, and the General Plan needs stronger language to control water exports. We cannot depend upon our State representatives to rescue us from every scheme to ship our water south or east.
We need to give higher priority to water conservation, efficiency and reuse, than to developing new water sources. Ratepayers will save money. More public education on water issues is needed to obtain water user buy-in on conservation programs. Nearly every day, another letter to the editor indicates that water conservation will be a hard sell if all the water we save is used for new construction, and not to benefit the environment. We must find ways to leave most of the water we save in the ground, rivers and streams.
We must also pay more attention to water quality, and no longer assume that someone else will take care of our wastes. Too many drugs, household chemicals and pesticides pass right through our wastewater treatment plants. Solutions such as modular package treatment plants will require costly removal or replacement when they reach the end of their intended service life, often at ratepayer expense.? We need to establish a Citizens Advisory Committee to review wastewater issues, and publish periodic reports.
To protect our fresh water supplies and health, we must protect the land beside our rivers and creeks, which also support fish and wildlife. Our riparian corridors are an important source of groundwater recharge, especially where they support healthy native vegetation. We must realize that our habitat is just as fragile as that of the other creatures with whom we share this planet.
Most crucially, water use and global climate change are interconnected. Water pumping and sewage treatment are among the largest energy users, and thus increase the levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Continued groundwater declines and ever-increasing water consumption will significantly increase energy consumption and these greenhouse gas emissions. We must therefore protect groundwater levels and conserve water to achieve our local and global greenhouse gas emission reduction goals.
We will not have another chance to update the Countys General Plan for fifteen to twenty years. In the meantime, we will have to live with what the Board of Supervisors approves. Its up to all of us to?attend these hearings and let the Supervisors know we want sound water management.
Member organizations
Atascadero/Green Valley Creek Watershed Council
Community Clean Water Institute
Friends of Mark West Watershed
O.W.L. Foundation
SWiG (Sebastopol Water information Group)
Russian River Watershed Protection Committee
Valley of the Moon Alliance
Supporting Organizations
Bellevue Township
Blucher Creek Watershed Council
California Native Plants Society:
Milo Baker Chapter
Coalition for a Better Sonoma County
Coast Action Group
Coastal Forest Alliance
Community Alliance with Family Farmers
Earth Elders of Sonoma County
Forest Unlimited
Forestville Citizens for Sensible Growth
Friends of the Eel River
Friends of the Gualala River
Graton Community Projects
Laguna Lovers
League of Women Voters of Sonoma County
Madrone Audubon Society
Mark West Watershed Alliance
Occidental Arts and Ecology Center
Petaluma River Council
Russian River Advocates
Russian River Chamber of Commerce
Sierra Club (Sonoma County Group)
Sonoma County Conservation Action
Town Hall Coalition
Western Sonoma County Rural Alliance
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