Laserfiche WebLink
City of Pleasanton <br />Final Water Supply Assessment <br />Stoneridge Drive Specific Plan Amendment and Staples Ranch Project <br />4.0 Water Agency Background <br />Semitropic Water Storage District and Cawelo Water Storage District to sustain demands throughout <br />Zone 7's service area through the worst credible drought." <br />As part of the Plan, Zone 7 established a safe yield for annual groundwater extractions by the Tri- <br />Valley retailers. The safe yield or long -term sustainable yield is defined as the average amount of <br />water that can be pumped annually from the Main Groundwater Basin and replenished by natural <br />recharge. Safe yield is 13,400 AFA for the cities of Pleasanton and Livermore, DSRSD and other <br />local pumpers, which is about 6 percent of the total estimated groundwater storage and is based on <br />over a century of hydrologic records and projections of future recharge conditions." <br />5.3.4.3. Surface Water Supplies <br />5.3.4.3.1. State Water Project Supplies <br />In November 1961, Zone 7 entered into a 75 -year agreement with DWR and in 1962, received its <br />first delivery from the SWP. Zone 7 was the first wholesaler to receive SWP water. SWP water <br />originates within the Feather River watershed above Lake Oroville, and flows via the Sacramento- <br />San Joaquin Delta to the Califomia and SBA's into Zone 7's two current water treatment facilities, <br />the Del Valle Water Treatment Plant and the Patterson Pass Water Treatment Plant. <br />Imported surface water forms the majority of Zone 7's water supply portfolio; this equates to about <br />75 percent of the total treated water supplied to its four retail water customers. SWP water meets all <br />Municipal and Industrial (M&I) demands, agricultural and other raw water demands, and is also used <br />to artificially recharge the groundwater basin. Zone 7 reached its initial SWP contract maximum of <br />46,000 AFY in 1997. DWR and Zone 7 developed a delivery schedule commonly referred to as <br />Table A Amount Schedule. Since then Zone 7 has obtained additional SWP allocations through <br />water transfers with other SWP wholesalers, and now has long -term SWP contracts for delivery of <br />up to 80,619 AFA. Table 5-2 presents sources and quantities along with contract terms. <br />For long -term water supply planning purposes, due to annual hydrologic conditions, requests by <br />other SWP contractors, facility limits within SWP facilities, along with environmental/ State regulatory <br />requirements, DWR will not be able to supply Zone 7's full Table A Amount of 80,619 AF in any <br />given year. To compound the situation, as Metropolitan Water District in Southem Califomia takes <br />more of its SWP allotment each year, the annual SWP yield to other contractors is likely to decline. <br />Furthermore, the average yield of the SWP will continue to decline as demands on the system <br />continues to increase from 3.8 to 4.1 million acre -feet per year. Zone 7 staff reviewed DWR's State <br />Water Project Delivery Reliability Report (December 2002) that presented the results of the CALSIM <br />II modeling for SWP systems; DWR's operational studies indicate an average future yield of just less <br />than 76 percent of Zone 7's full allocation, or 60,900 AFA based on the current SWP Table A <br />amount of 80,619 AFA.'s <br />13 2005 Zone 7 Water Agency, Urban Water Management Plan, page 19. <br />14 2005 Zone 7 Water Agency Urban Water Management Plan, page 20. <br />15 Zone 7 Water Agency, Sustainable Water Supply Report, April 2007 page 3. <br />PA Pro }Ns -vrP OW41162.01 srgM Ranch MAIRnalfinsl IMAeoe <br />5-13 <br />