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City of Pleasanton Recycled Water Project <br />CEQA Addendum <br />Chapter 2 Description of Proposed Project Changes <br />This chapter provides a summary of the background, project goals and objectives, original Proposed <br />Project description, and a detailed description of the proposed changes to the City's Proposed Recycled <br />Water Project (Proposed Project). <br />2.1 Background <br />As described in the IS/MND, the City is located in Alameda County approximately 35 miles southeast of <br />San Francisco, situated at the junction of 1-580 and 1-680. As shown on Figure 1, the City's water service <br />area encompasses an area of approximately 22 square miles; servicing city residents, commercial <br />customers, and approximately 250 customers in unincorporated Alameda County along Kilkare Road just <br />north of the town of Sunol. <br />As of 2010, Pleasanton supports a residential population of 69,300. By 2030 Pleasanton's population is <br />projected to grow by another 19 percent to 82,300. The residential sector accounts for the City's largest <br />water consuming sector (61percent), followed by landscape irrigation (27 percent), commercial (12 <br />percent), and lastly industrial sector (<1 percent). The importance of efficient and purposeful use of water <br />in California has come under legislative focus through the passage of the Water Conservation Bill of <br />2009. Under this law, Pleasanton has set the goal of achieving a twenty percent reduction in water <br />consumption by 2020. This equates to a "target" of 195 gallons per capita per day (gpcd), a twenty <br />percent reduction from a baseline of 244 gpcd. <br />Two sources of water supply Pleasanton's service area: 1) local groundwater from three wells owned and <br />operated by the City (approximately 20% of the annual demand), and 2) the purchase of water from Zone <br />7 (approximately 80% of the annual demand). According to the City's agreement with Zone 7, Pleasanton <br />pumps a maximum of 3,500 acre-feet per year (afy) from its wells, with a carryover of 700 Acre Feet of <br />unused pumping quota from one year to another. <br />The City's distribution system currently consists of 22 storage reservoirs with a maximum capacity of 37 <br />million gallons. One of the City's existing storage reservoirs, Tassajara Reservoir, is being considered for <br />conversion to a recycled water storage facility for this Proposed Project/Action. It also includes 14 <br />pressure zones, 14 pump stations, 2,500 fire hydrants and 306 miles of pipelines. This system services <br />approximately 21,700 connections; of which 90 percent are residential customers, 5.5 percent are <br />commercial/institutional customers, 4.5 percent are irrigation customers (for commercial and multi -family <br />residential landscape meters), and less than 1 percent are industrial customers. <br />2.2 Project Goals and Objectives <br />The purpose of the Proposed Project is to construct and operate a new recycled water system to <br />replace/augment existing irrigation supplies in the City's service area. The development of recycled water <br />service within the City will lessen the demand for Zone 7 Water Agency (Zone 7) potable water supplies <br />and help the City meet the State of California's Water Conservation Act of 2009, which requires a <br />20 percent reduction in urban per capita water use by the year 2020. Furthermore, the addition of recycled <br />water to the City's water supply portfolio will increase its water system's reliability since recycled water <br />is a local supply within the City's control and is drought -resistant. <br />April 2018 2-1 <br />