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Quota, is limited as part of our Municipal and Industrial water supply contract with each retailer. <br />The balance of the safe yield is pumped for other municipal, agricultural and gravel mining area <br />uses. Zone 7's pumpage for our treated water system does not use the baseline safe yield from the <br />basin; instead we pump only water that has been recharged as a part of our artificial recharge <br />program. <br />Recycled water is tertiary-treated recycled water used for irrigation at the Livermore Municipal <br />Golf Course, along Isabel Avenue, the Dublin Sports Ground and for other irrigation needs <br />within the Valley. The City of Livermore has been using recycled water since the mid-1960's <br />and DSRSD started recycled water irrigation in 1999. Recycled water is a very reliable supply, <br />however, the use of recycled water was historically discouraged due to the potential of salt <br />buildup in our groundwater basin. <br />The Salt Management Plan, which has been incorporated into the Groundwater Management <br />Plan, provides tools and strategies for preventing the general salt buildup which has been slowly <br />degrading the quality of our potable wells for decades. The current salt management strategy <br />calls for increased groundwater recharge and use coupled with pumping of high TDS <br />groundwater that is flowing into the Main Basin. The high TDS groundwater would be <br />demineralized and delivered for potable water use. The concentrate from the demineralization <br />facility would be exported via the LAVWMA pipeline that currently transports all municipal <br />wastewater out of the watershed and directly to the San Francisco Bay. This allows for an <br />expanded use of recycled water, the "uninterruptible" water supply. <br />The current sustainable supply of 1,900 acre-feet is simply the current estimated amount used for <br />irrigation. This amount is expected to increase. <br />TOTAL SUSTAINABLE WATER SUPPLY is the sum of the previously discussed sources: <br />The State Water Project future average delivery, 60,900 acre-feet per year; the Lake Del Valle <br />future average yield, 9,300 acre-feet per year, the 2,000 acre-feet of BBID water per year, the <br />safe groundwater yield, 13,400 acre-feet per year; and the recycled water use 1,900 acre-feet per <br />year, for a total of 85,500 acre-feet per year. <br />These sustainable water supply quantities are long-term average quantities and in dry years the <br />supply from surface water sources will be greatly reduced. Zone 7 Water Agency stores water <br />from our surface water sources in wet years when the SWP and LDV supplies are above average. <br />Then in dry years, Zone 7 pumps more of the stored water out of the Main Basin or transfers <br />water back from our Semitropic and Cawelo Water Storage District accounts. <br />Zone 7 currently will be able to meet full deliveries even in the worst credible drought including <br />the worst historic single-year drought and any multi-year drought of record. <br />RECOMMENDED ACTION: <br />Information item. <br />4 <br />