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BAIRWMP Update 6/4/2010. Prop 50 Supplemental funding Prop 1-E Flood Management Prop 84 Planning IRWMP Implementation. Supplemental Prop 50 schedule 10 % match Maximum Grant -$3.7 million. Final PSP- May 5, 2010 Application due June 1, 2010 Applicant interviews June 20-July 2
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BAIRWMP Update6/4/2010 Prop 50 Supplemental funding Prop 1-E Flood Management Prop 84 Planning IRWMP Implementation
Supplemental Prop 50 schedule10 % matchMaximum Grant -$3.7 million • Final PSP- May 5, 2010 • Application due June 1, 2010 • Applicant interviews June 20-July 2 • DWR Draft recommendations- late July • Public comments due early August • DWR announces awards Mid August
Original April Proposal • Regional Green Infrastructure $800,000 • SCVWD Recycling $1,100,000 • Bay Area DAC/ Watershed $ 650,000 • Mercury and PCB Risk Reduction $300,000 BACWA • Regional Steelhead Monitoring $ 370,000 CEMAR • NMWD Phase 2 Recycling $ 280,000 • Grant Administration $ 200,000 • TOTAL $3,700,000
Latest Proposal • SCVWD Recycling $ 1,500,000 • Regional Green Infrastructure $ 850,000 SFEP/ABAG • NMWD Phase 2 Recycling $ 850,000 • Mercury and PCB Risk Reduction $ 300,000 BACWA • Grant Admin. BACWA $ 200,000 • TOTAL$3,700,000
Prop 1 EStormwater Flood Management Grant program Draft PSP= March 2010 -$212 million statewide -Minimum local match-50 % -Maximum Grant Award-$30 million
Requirements • Consistent with adopted IRWMP • Designed to manage storm water runoff to reduce flooding • Yield multiple benefits may include one of the following elements: • Groundwater recharge • Water quality improvement • Ecosystem restoration and benefits • Reduction of instream erosion and sedimentation
BAIRWMP Process • Complete an IRWMP Project Template • Submit Template-projects@bairwmp.org • Subcommittee will screen • BAIRWMP Coordinating Committee will vote on acceptance and adding project
Outreach • BAFPAA distributing flyer • Sub-regions supporting outreach • North Bay • -Highlight today • June 15 Joint technical Committee meeting • June 22-Watershed Council
Prop 84 • Planning Guidelines • Implementation Guidelines • Bay Area Process
Planning Guidelines • $20 million statewide • $ 1 million max per grant • 50 % match (??) • New Plan elements • Land use • Climate Change • Must commit to update plan if you get Implementatyion funds
Approved Regions • 46 total • 3 cover entire funding area • North Coast $37 m • Bay Area $138 m • SAWPA $114 m • Other 8 funding regions average 5+ approvals
Implementation- Proposal Solicitation Package–March 2010http://www.water.ca.gov/irwm/docs/prop84/guidelinepsp/DraftImppsp.pdf • $ 100 Million Total for state-Round 1 Funding targets -$ 20 m for Conservation Projects to meet 2020 target of 20% reduction -$10 m for DAC projects • Bay Area- 1/9 of Total allocation ($138 m) $ 15.3 m to $30.6 m(??) • 25% match • Projects must be consistent with adopted IRWM Plan
Economic (Benefits) Analysis • Water supply benefits • Water Quality and Other benefits • Flood damage reduction benefits -Under Other for prop 50
Program Preferences Prop 50 • Include integrated projects with multiple benefits; • Support and improve local and regional water supply reliability; • Contribute expeditiously and measurably to the long-term attainment and maintenance of water quality standards; • Eliminate or significantly reduce pollution in impaired waters and sensitive habitat areas, including ASBSs; or • Include safe drinking water and water quality projects that serve disadvantaged communities.
Program Preferences-Prop 84http://www.water.ca.gov/irwm/docs/prop84/guidelinepsp/GL_drtf_FINAL.pdf • Include regional projects or programs (CWC §10544) • Effectively integrate water management programs and projects within a hydrologic region identified in the California Water Plan; the Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB) region or subdivision; or other region or sub-region specifically identified by DWR (50) • Effectively resolve significant water-related conflicts within or between regions • Contribute to attainment of one or more of the objectives of the CALFED Bay-Delta Program • Address critical water supply or water quality needs of disadvantaged communities within the region (50) • Effectively integrate water management with land use planning • For eligible SWFM funding, projects which: a) are not receiving state funding for flood control or flood prevention projects pursuant to PRC §5096.824 or §75034 or b) provide multiple benefits, including, but not limited to, water quality improvements, ecosystem benefits, reduction of instream erosion and sedimentation, and groundwater recharge. • Address statewide priorities
Regional Projects or Programs Identified In an IRWM Plan that accomplish any of the following: (a) Reduce water demand through agricultural and urban water use efficiency. (b) Increase water supplies for any beneficial use through the use of any of the following, or other, means: • (1) Groundwater storage and conjunctive water management. • (2) Desalination. • (3) Precipitation enhancement. • (4) Water recycling. • (5) Regional and local surface storage. • (6) Water-use efficiency. • (7) Stormwater management. (c) Improve operational efficiency and water supply reliability, including conveyance facilities, system reoperation, and water transfers. (d) Improve water quality, including drinking water treatment and distribution, groundwater and aquifer remediation, matching water quality to water use, wastewater treatment, water pollution prevention, and management of urban and agricultural runoff. (e) Improve resource stewardship, including agricultural lands stewardship, ecosystem restoration, flood plain management, recharge area protection, urban land use management, groundwater management, water-dependent recreation, fishery restoration, including fish passage improvement, and watershed management. (f) Improve flood management through structural and nonstructural means, or by any other means.
Statewide Priorities • Drought Preparedness • Use and Reuse water more efficiently • Climate Change Response Actions • Expand Environmental Stewardship • Practice Integrated Flood Management • Protect Surface and Ground water Quality • Improve Tribal Water and Natural Resources • Ensure Equitable Distribution of Benefits • DAC or tribes
Bay Area Process • Prop 84 • Emphasize “Regional” projects • Update 2009 list -Through Functional areas - Through Sub-regions
2009 “Regional” ListExisting -in Plan • 11-Landscape Irrigation Calculator (2009 update) 2009-$250k- • 11-Drought Relief and Water Conservation Innovation Project ( 2009 update) 2009-$11 million • 26-Developing/Implementing Options for Mitigating Public Health Impacts of Eating Fish (2010 update) Prop 50-$300k
2009 Regional Projects -New Projects Added to the IRWM Plan-Appendix G • 128 FP-SM Regional Green Infrastructure Capacity Building Project (SFEP/ABAG) $7.5 m • 129 WW-RW Regional Water Recycling Outreach Project (SCVWD) -$225k • 130 WM-HP&R Disadvantaged Communities Watershed Program (SFEP/ABAG) $ 1.195 m • 131 WM-HP&R Evaluating Regional Ecosystem Restoration Using Steelhead Trout (CEMAR) $562.5 k • 132 FP-SM Flood and Waterways Infrastructure Analysis and Communication Tool (SFEI) -$750k
NBWA Projects • SSCRCD – Rainwater Harvesting Guidebook ($25k) • FOCMC – Multimedia Educational Short Subject ($5k) • City of Sonoma – Community Center Rainwater Harvesting ($5k)
Rainwater Harvesting Guidebook$25k • SSCRCD-$20k • Development, Production, Distribution • Marin, Napa- $2500 each • Editing and customization • Matching funds- $38k
Multimedia Educational Short Subject $5k • Friends of Corte Madera Creek - 3 minute multi-media piece-pod cast - animation - student interviews • Match- $10,975
Sonoma Community Center Rainwater Harvesting • City of Sonoma- $5k -5,800-8,000 gallon capacity using roof water -Complements water wise garden • Match- ~ $35k ( still need ~ $9k)