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DRAFT <br />stated that a lot of people commute to work, and the traffic pattern in the morning from <br />First Street to 1 -680 it takes about six to seven minutes, and the trip through the <br />Downtown is along a high - traffic road as well. She indicated that the City cannot <br />accommodate this kind of huge development and urged the Commission to take a good <br />look at this situation and stop this growing pattern in the City. <br />Matt Morrison stated that he tried to educate himself since 1998 on water issues as a <br />citizen concerned about the environment. He indicated that he was invited to a drop <br />panel at U.C. Berkeley last March, and there was a presenter there, Dr. Lynn Ingram, a <br />Paleo- Climatologist, who wrote a book that came out this year from U.C. Berkeley <br />Press. He noted that Dr. Ingram looked back over the water issue in California and <br />stated that over the last 2,000 years, droughts lasting decades or even centuries are <br />common, and in the 20th century when all water rights were established in California, it <br />was a wetter than normal century. He added that water users and water agencies are <br />coming to grips with the fact that apart from climate change or any other reason that <br />could be affecting our water supply, California may not have its allocated amount of <br />water based on how all the rights have been given out during the 20th century. <br />Mr. Morrison stated that he is bringing this up because using the 2010 Urban Water <br />Management Plan is totally inadequate to address the infrastructure needs for water as <br />the Plan is not accurate and presumes that the area has the ability to get the banked <br />water stored down in Kern County; but this is a serious drought and this area cannot get <br />that water, so they . are now looking at extreme measures like pumping it back up. <br />Mr. Morrison stated that that is what he wants to address in the staff report which says <br />that what the City needs to do is more effectively manage its water, and "effectively <br />manage" means current users of water will end up paying more for less. He cited, as an <br />example, reverse osmosis water, which is being branded as being a replacement to <br />increase potable water supply; but reverse osmosis can cost up to ten times the amount <br />of the today's cost of water. He continued that to address the fact of lower per capita <br />use of increased development, President John Greci of Zone 7, at the water committee <br />meeting yesterday, brought up the fact of how Zone 7 can put the retailers on notice <br />about growth, because Zone 7 is concerned about how it will continue to supply water if <br />the drought extends for another year or two and end up in an emergency situation. He <br />indicated that emergency planning is not planning at all, and the way to plan is to <br />understand ahead of time what the impacts are going to be. He stated that President <br />Greci directed staff to have a conversation because if residents are already reducing <br />their water use by 25 percent, additional development, even if that development is using <br />less per capita, would still be tapping into the water that existing users who have <br />already reduced their water use are getting to. <br />Mr. Morrison stated that what is coming out with the water agencies he talks to now is <br />regional sustainability and how to manage the water that the City has locally. He <br />indicated that the City cannot rely on the State water project; it has to rely on what it has <br />banked beneath the City. He added that what the City needs to look at is the <br />sustainable amount the City can maintain in its groundwater table and how it can best <br />DRAFT EXCERPT: PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, 8/13/2014 Page 12 of 18 <br />