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April 18
1945 - Actors Harry & Olive Carey sell Saugus ranch after 29 years; now Tesoro del Valle [story]
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sprinkler2[KHTS] Santa Clarita Valley water agency officials gathered Tuesday to discuss conservation measures facing Santa Clarita Valley water ratepayers.

The measures, expected to be passed by local water agencies this week, are in response to Gov. Jerry Brown’s call for a 20 percent reduction in water usage due to near historic lows in rainfall levels over the last few years, and the driest year on record in 2013.

“Education is our goal, not fines,” said Dirk Marks, water resource manager for the Castaic Lake Water Agency, which wholesales the Santa Clarita Valley’s water supply from the State Water Project to local retailers.

The idea is to raise awareness about the need to conserve, and to hit the state’s goal of 20 percent reduction in water usage, said Dan Masnada, general manager for the CLWA.

The suggested measures created by the Santa Clarita Valley Water Committee, which has met several times in recent months to create clear and consistent guidelines for ratepayers, are not meant to be punitive, he said.

The restrictions include no lawn-watering on Saturdays, and from April to October, there are three assigned days when one can water the lawn, and two days during the rest of the year.

Irrigation typically accounts for about 60 percent of water usage in the Santa Clarita Valley, Marks said.

There are also certain exemptions to some of the water restrictions, depending on whether the ratepayer takes part in lawn-replacement programs. For information on any possible exemptions or programs, a ratepayer should contact their water retailer.

Residents also are expected to be prohibited from hosing down driveways and sidewalks, prompted to turn off any decorative water fountains that don’t recycle water and banned from washing their cars unless the hose is fitted with a nozzle that allows it to stop running when not in use, according to the proposals.

The suggested systems being voted on this week — the Valencia Water Co. and the Santa Clarita Water Division are expected to adopt restrictions at their respective meetings Wednesday, and the Newhall County Water District on Thursday — would require at least three violations before fines occur. Los Angeles Water Works District, which includes part of unincorporated Los Angeles County, adopted the measures in July.

Furthermore, the notices of violation are expected to be followed up by contact with water officials at the respective water retailer, said Steve Cole, general manager for the Newhall County Water District.

If there’s no resolution after three violations, then the third violation could earn a $50 fine, and subsequent violations could result in fines of up to $50 per day after a fourth violation.

The restrictions have a 270-day trigger, Cole said, meaning the restrictions would be evaluated again at that time based on the rainfall levels.

The revenues from fines are up to the discretion of the respective water retailer, Cole said, but NCWD intended to put the money back into conservation programs.

The proposed restrictions are part of a Water Action Plan drafted by Santa Clarita Valley Water Committee officials in an effort to comply with the state’s mandatory water restriction requirements issued as a result of prolonged drought conditions.

The drought was declared by Brown on Jan. 17 in response to the driest year on record, water officials said.

Results from the drought can be seen in the Santa Clarita Valley, especially in Castaic Lake, a reservoir created as part of the State Water Project. The lake has seen its water levels reduced by more than 40 percent — from about 230,078 acre feet to about 147,390 acre feet, and officials have put restrictions in place there, as well.

The Santa Clarita Valley only has rights to about 2 percent of that water, according to officials, due to resource sharing with the state.

Many residents expressed concern that the new watering schedule could affect their lawns, and they could subsequently be punished by their HOAs.

However, the state passed a law that prohibits homeowner associations from punishing a resident for scaling back on landscaping under an executive order signed by Gov. Jerry Brown in April.

Santa Clarita Valley ratepayers can report suspected violations, i.e. watering on days where it’s not allowed, using a hose or sprayer without a shut-off valve, etc., to the applicable water retailer. They can also use a water agency’s Facebook page, the retailer’s website or email, but local retailers do not have any new reporting methods developed.

There’s also a website ratepayers can visit if they’re interested in more information about local programs, Marks said.

Water officials are doing their best, Marks said, to make sure Santa Clarita Valley residents and agencies aren’t “watering the concrete where nothing grows.”

 

The following is a News Release issued by the SCV Water Committee on August 12, 2014

SCV Water Committee Approves Action Plan to Promote Valleywide Conservation

New Watering Limits and Restrictions Designed to Comply with State Mandate In Effect

Santa Clarita Valley Water Committee members are taking steps to implement mandatory restrictions on outdoor water use for local customers — including a system of odd-even irrigation days — to comply with state mandates as the impacts of the multi-year statewide drought deepen.  To facilitate compliance, the Committee voted Tuesday to approve an Action Plan for individual water suppliers to adopt and promote greater conservation.

“This drought is serious, and we’re all in this together,” said Steve Cole, SCV Water Committee Chair and General Manager of the Newhall County Water District. “We firmly believe residents and businesses are willing to do their part. Our job is to make sure all Valley water users have the tools and information to act. That’s the crux of this Action Plan.”

Cole added that the plan is rooted in education and facilitation, but that fines – starting at $50 per day per violation enforced by local water retailers – are a possibility for repeat offenders. However, the objective, Cole said, is to conserve water, not fine customers. Multiple violations could result in penalties of up to $500 per account per day.

“The bottom line is that we’re here for our residents and businesses,” said Cole. “We want to facilitate conservation and are continuing to proactively engage our customers to achieve this shared objective.”

Local water leaders said the Action Plan is intended to help the SCV continue to do its part to address the broader drought crisis.

“Many SCV water customers have done a pretty good job of conserving,” said Dan Masnada, General Manager of the Castaic Lake Water Agency, the Valley’s wholesaler of water from the State Water Project, “and we remain proud of how well our diversified water supply portfolio and the sharing of groundwater supplies among water retailers has insulated the Valley against the impacts of drought thus far. However, this problem is much bigger than our community, and we have to do our part to conserve water and help California emerge from this crisis.”

State Regulations Are in Effect

Unlike the voluntary Action Plan approved by the Committee in February, this Action Plan implements mandatory, state-mandated restrictions on certain types of outdoor water use that are already in effect. In the upcoming days, the SCV’s water retailers will be adopting rules and procedures to manage and promote these measures. The Action Plan recommends a process where two warnings are issued before fines are levied.  Each of the first two steps will focus on information and education.  Only if these efforts fail would state-mandated fines be imposed.

“This drought is serious, and we’re all in this together,” said Steve Cole, SCV Water Committee Chair and General Manager of the Newhall County Water District. “We firmly believe residents and businesses are willing to do their part. Our job is to make sure all Valley water users have the tools and information to act. That’s the crux of this Action Plan.”

The principal elements of the new local water restrictions are:

  • No outdoor use of potable water on landscapes in such a manner that it causes runoff to non-landscaped areas.
  • No washing of vehicles unless the hose is fitted with a shut-off nozzle or device.
  • No hosing down of driveways and sidewalks.
  • No use of potable water in fountains or decorative water features unless it’s part of a recirculating system.

And, most notably, a new system of odd-even landscape watering days will be in effect. From April through October, odd-numbered addresses can water on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, while even-numbered addresses get Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. During the colder months of November through March, odd addresses can water on Mondays and Thursdays, while even addresses can water on Tuesdays and Fridays.

Unlike the voluntary water conservation measures triggered by the SCV Water Committee’s water supply alert issued in February, these new restrictions are mandatory and enforceable.

“That’s a pretty big mental adjustment,” said Keith Abercrombie, General Manager of Valencia Water Co. “We think local residents do a pretty good job of monitoring their water use and generally refraining from wasteful actions, but with these new state mandates, people are required, not requested, to alter their landscape watering schedules and other activities.”

“It may seem like a pretty big inconvenience at first glance, but honestly most people overwater their landscapes, and a lot of the restrictions like refraining from hosing down a sidewalk are simple things we’ve already been asking people to do to avoid wasting an ever-increasingly valuable resource,” said Dirk Marks, CLWA’s Water Resource Manager.

The emergency regulations are in response to the July 15 decision by the State Water Resources Control Board to enact an emergency regulation for statewide urban water conservation. The emergency regulation remains in effect for 270 days and may be extended if drought conditions continue.

“Although the Valley’s water suppliers have done a great job in meeting local water demands, this drought is one of the worst we’ve experienced in California,” said Mauricio Guardado, Retail Manager of the Santa Clarita Water Division.

“We’re in this together with everyone throughout the state and, although we are hoping this coming winter will bring some relief, the Valley’s water suppliers have to plan for the worst. In the meantime, by proactively and vigorously complying with these water conservation mandates, Valley customers can help the local water suppliers stretch our water supplies, help themselves save money and help California weather this severe drought.”

A full copy of the action plan and water agencies’ plans to implement the State-mandated regulations, along with water-saving tips, can be found online at:

• Castaic Lake Water Agency: www.clwa.org

• Newhall County Water District: www.ncwd.org

• Santa Clarita Water Division: www.santaclaritawater.com

• Valencia Water Company: www.valenciawater.com

About the SCV Water Committee:
The Santa Clarita Valley Water Committee, formerly known as the SCV Drought Committee, was formed in 2008 to bring multiple agencies together to jointly respond to drought conditions in the Santa Clarita Valley. The committee meets regularly to monitor water supply conditions and prepare actions that may need to be taken in the event of drought. Its members include Castaic Lake Water Agency, the City of Santa Clarita, Los Angeles County and the four local water purveyors: Los Angeles County Waterworks District No. 36, Newhall County Water District, Santa Clarita Water Division and Valencia Water Company.

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63 Comments

  1. Jesse Roach Jesse Roach says:

    Craig Roach Joann Siracusa Roach

  2. Jesse Roach Jesse Roach says:

    Craig Roach Joann Siracusa Roach

  3. Jason Allen Jason Allen says:

    two years too late :-p

  4. Stop wasting water on lawns in the first place

  5. will this apply to the city and business

  6. Yet Scv continues to “beautify” our road medians with plants that get over watered daily…..that’s ok though right

  7. Stop. Adding plants between the roads. So we save water .i.

  8. Tim Bonino Tim Bonino says:

    We have to have mandatory restrictions but the city of LA can have a 1,000 foot water slide. That makes a lot of sense!

  9. Paul Mahone Paul Mahone says:

    They water the field at Placerita everyday…

  10. So, does this put the yard beautification officer/police out of a job?

  11. Curious about that automatic water thing that was given out last year. Mine, inspected and cleared as being programmed correctly, waters almost every day right now. Will those $600 units become moot, having to change to manual watering?

  12. Brian Schulz Brian Schulz says:

    So no lawn watering… Doesn’t say anything about not watering your garden, bushes, flowers, trees. If your going to make this law then be more broad stead of just saying lawn.. And when people water they water with sprinklers and hoses.. Doesn’t say anything about filling a bucket up with sink or shower water to water…

  13. Maybe we should be asking Valencia Water Company to provide reports on how many new water service meters they install each week and a forecast of what they expect to install over the next year. Perhaps a moratorium should be mandated on the quantity new service connections… personally I’m not in favor of lesser water for existing customers to satisfy the needs of new development.

  14. The plants in the mediums around SCV will be getting recycled water from CLWA. Not sure if that makes it ok but just letting ya all know.

  15. All the HOA lawn police are going to have aneurysms.

  16. Scott Evans Scott Evans says:

    Just create a very top-heavy rate tier system and the problem will fix itself.

  17. I guess gardeners will go out of business too as there won’t be any lawn to mow. ..

  18. Stop building new houses.

  19. Really? Does this apply to the hundreds of trees the city just planted in the medians and sidewalks?!?!?!

  20. Thanks Delta Smelt bait fish and damn environmentalist Democrats!

  21. Mike Ostrom Mike Ostrom says:

    Not easy to take this seriously if they won’t stop the huge project off hwy 126 behind Magic Mountain.

  22. Butch Hampton has it right. Building stop. No more new housing tracts.

  23. Tina White Tina White says:

    It’s about time!

  24. Julie Mair Julie Mair says:

    How about starting with cutting water on golf courses, park and medians then re-evaluate the trickle down to homeowners.

  25. So everyone that invested thousands on their landscaping should just let all the grass and plants dry up? I cut down my water and my grass is yellow, in about a week it will be dead.

  26. The fact that people have front lawns out here in the first place is stupid. One of the most beautiful front lawns in Canyon Country is xeriscaped with gravel, cactus & succulents. Kids aren’t playing on them, so save the grass patch for the back yard. Phoenix, also a desert, has some great water-saving advice: http://phoenix.about.com/od/desertplantsandflowers/a/waterlawn.htm

  27. Tyler Roth Tyler Roth says:

    How “Californian”… Oh well let’s wait till April to save water. Waste all you want now. The drought has been obvious for quite some time and now, oh let wait a few more months to do something about it. LOL!

  28. Tyler Roth Tyler Roth says:

    How “Californian”… Oh well let’s wait till April to save water. Waste all you want now. The drought has been obvious for quite some time and now, oh let wait a few more months to do something about it. LOL!

  29. I can water my lawn 3 days a week for how long. I figure 20 minutes a day should keep my lawn green and vegetable garden in good shape. Time to stop building houses.

  30. I can water my lawn 3 days a week for how long. I figure 20 minutes a day should keep my lawn green and vegetable garden in good shape. Time to stop building houses.

  31. Javier Garay Javier Garay says:

    When can I wash my car?? I pay my water bill so I should be entitle to wash my car if I please. How about stop building more apartments were 8 people live inside and only pay 750.00 a month with utilities included for one bedroom.

  32. Same up here in Sacramento and San Joaquin county. Drought season.

  33. Sharon Auman Sharon Auman says:

    I live in Frazier Park and we have a mandatory3 day a week watering schedule. I am covering what could be a lawn area with brick (I hope my septic isn’t under it). I moved in March and most of my landscaping is in pots Plus my washing machine water is piped out to the front, my son in law is trying to route it to use it for the plants. So far a sump hose is working but getting the correct fall is tricky.

  34. Sharon Auman Sharon Auman says:

    I feel your pain guys. The little town just west of me is completely out of water and have been trucking it in for a year. Poor management. Frazier Park is completely surrounded by national forest so no new development for us. I have an extra empty lot that I have no hope of ever getting a water meter.

  35. I’ll just take a shower on my lawn while it’s being watered..

  36. Good thing I live in Castaic lol

  37. Richard Trimble says:

    The water companies are responsible to provide water. They have a monopoly. They keep giving the O.K. to build new homes. They have said they can provide water for the 26,000 new homes in Newhall Ranch. Let’s hold these companies accountable!!!!

  38. Ruben Pous Ruben Pous says:

    good, and city sprinklers continues to water the cement and not the grass on soledad cyn towards canyon country

  39. Omgosh I have never heard so much whining coming from so many adults. Always pointing the finger at everyone else and not think “what more can I do to help during this drought” Yes, let’s keep complaining about how bad and wrong they are with waste. That’s the great problem solving ideas of the residence in SCV.

  40. People should not allow this to happen- it’s just about fines & $$$.

  41. Jim Lewis Jim Lewis says:

    We are already on water restrictions in Nor Cal! I have 3 lakes within 10 miles from my house! The lake we get our water from is so low it’s scary! The other lake that feeds part of the San Joaquin valley is scary low. Yet the lake that feeds the Bay Area is at full capacity and they keep it full year round, maybe they should put water restrictions in the Bay Area as well!! Why are our 2 lakes being sucked dry and the Bay Area gets their lake full yr round. You can swim and enjoy the 2 low lakes, yet you are forbidden to go into the Bay Area lake. Why are they so special! I’m sure it’s all about $$$$

  42. Mike VaVerka says:

    The water saving proposal indicates you will be exempt from lawn watering restrictions if you are presently using 20% less water than last year. What happens next year? Should we be comparing this month’s use to a rolling average of the past 12 months consumption or to the same month last year? Sounds too complicated to enforce. Just have everyone conserve on the appointed days and recommend to the folks that we fix leaks and eliminate excessive runoff.

  43. Alana Smith Alana Smith says:

    The city needs to make modifications before they complain about their citizens.

  44. Don’t talk about too many houses being built,they say that doesn’t matter,guess people won’t be taking showers or doing laundry!

  45. As long as everything stays green as it is!!!!

Leave a Comment


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