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25
City of Pleasanton
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CITY CLERK
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AGENDA PACKETS
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2015
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060215
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25
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8/18/2015 12:05:12 PM
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
AGENDA REPORT
DOCUMENT DATE
6/2/2015
DESTRUCT DATE
15Y
DOCUMENT NO
25
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BACKGROUND <br /> Since January 2014, the State of California declared a drought emergency, as did the <br /> Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District Zone 7 (Zone 7). <br /> Shortly thereafter, in February 2014, the City adopted Stage 1 of the City's Water <br /> Conservation Plan. Stage 1 sought a 20% voluntarily reduction in water use. In April <br /> 2014, all Californians were asked to reduce water usage by 20%; and Zone 7 asked all <br /> water retailers, including Pleasanton, to reduce water usage by 25%. <br /> As voluntary reductions were not achieved and water supplies continued to dwindle, in <br /> May 2014, the City adopted the Stage 3 mandatory 25% water reduction, and <br /> proclaimed a Local Drought Emergency. In August 2014, statewide mandatory <br /> reductions and prohibitions (generally less strict than Pleasanton's Stage 3) were also <br /> adopted. <br /> Since the summer of 2014, most Pleasanton residents and businesses have achieved <br /> 25% water use reductions. City staff has provided educational outreach, home and <br /> office visits (to program irrigation systems & detect leaks), enforced prohibitions on <br /> water waste (e.g. no washing car on driveway, no irrigation mid-day), provided free <br /> water-efficient sink aerators and shower heads, processed appeals for excess use <br /> penalties, and reduced water used at City facilities by 45.2%. <br /> Based on successful water use reduction, in January 2015, the City suspended for 90 <br /> days the excess use penalties (but left in place restrictions against water waste and <br /> other water use restrictions). <br /> On April 1, 2015, the Governor declared statewide emergency requiring mandatory <br /> water reductions of 25% for all Municipal and Industrial water users. Pleasanton's <br /> current Stage 3 restrictions generally meet or exceed these latest State provisions (e.g. <br /> no hosing down sidewalks; restaurants only offer water when requested; etc.). City staff <br /> will work with local businesses regarding the State restriction on hotel and motel <br /> operators that now "must provide guests with the option of choosing not to have towels <br /> and linens laundered daily", as that was not part of the City's Stage 3 restrictions.' <br /> Similarly, City staff will also assist residents and property owners to take advantage of <br /> the Executive Order's directive for State-sponsored programs for partial funding for <br /> replacing lawns with drought tolerant landscapes, rebates for replacing inefficient <br /> household devices, and other State and local programs. <br /> DISCUSSION <br /> Drought Update — Projected Water Allocations. A chart summarizing a comparison <br /> between 2013 and 2015 water usage to date is provided as Attachment 1. The City has <br /> realized a 28.9% reduction in potable water consumption so far in 2015 as of May 20. <br /> On March 2nd, the State Water Project released its most recent allocation for 2015 <br /> supplies at 20% of normal. Zone 7 has requested 80,619 acre/ft for the Tri-Valley. The <br /> allocation now stands at 16,124 acre/ft for 2015 or 20% of the requested amount. <br /> While these State regulations allow local jurisdictions to fine violators up to $500 per violation, the City will <br /> continue to warn and provide courtesy citations, and thereafter administrative fines (starting at$100) for continuing <br /> violations. <br />
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