California Water Plan eNews – 1/25/17

This week’s California Water Plan eNews includes:

  • SWAP adds nine companion reports on significant state ecosystem influences
  • Affordable, safe drinking water on the agenda for SWRCB workshop
  • New strategy provides a framework for restoring Sierra meadowlands
  • Abstracts being accepted for the Sierra Fund’s headwater resiliency conference
  • Short course on groundwater and watershed hydrology being offered next month
  • Drought-related legal developments to be discussed during March conference
  • Dallas conference designed to help create more public-private partnerships

California Water Plan eNews – 1/18/17

This week’s California Water Plan eNews includes:

  • Report examines the action required to sustainably balance groundwater basins
  • The California Climate Change Symposium 2017 is one week away
  • GSA formation to be discussed during next week’s DWR webinar
  • Funding applications being accepted for agricultural water efficiency projects
  • Discussing how water efficiency issues may play out in the new Congress
  • EPA’s monthly webinar series features project benefit assessment
  • Water 101 provides new water district directors with California water lessons

EPA Water Infrastructure Loan Opportunities

EPA SOLICITING LETTERS OF INTEREST FOR $1 BILLION IN LOANS AVAILABLE FOR WATER INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS THROUGH THE WATER INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE AND INNOVATION ACT

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the availability of approximately $1 billion in credit assistance for water infrastructure projects under the new Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) program. The WIFIA program is a federal credit program administered by EPA for eligible water and wastewater infrastructure projects.

The WIFIA program can fund development and implementation activities for eligible projects:

  • Drinking water treatment and distribution projects that are eligible for the Drinking Water SRF
  • Drought prevention, reduction, or mitigation projects
  • Enhanced energy efficiency projects at drinking water and wastewater facilities
  • Brackish or seawater desalination, aquifer recharge, alternative water supply, and water recycling projects
  • Acquisition of property if it is integral to the project or will mitigate the environmental impact of a project
  • Wastewater conveyance and treatment projects that are eligible for the Clean Water SRF
  • A combination of projects secured by a common security pledge or submitted under one application by an SRF program

Eligible borrowers are:

  • Local, state, tribal, and federal government entities
  • Partnerships and joint ventures
  • Corporations and trusts

WIFIA application process is three phases:

  • Phase 1: Project Selection: EPA announces the amount of funding it will have available and solicits letters of interest from prospective borrowers. In the letter of interest, prospective borrowers demonstrate their projects eligibility, financial creditworthiness, engineering feasibility, and alignment with EPA’s policy priorities. Based on this information, EPA selects projects which it intends to fund and invites them to continue to the application process.
  • Phase 2: Project Approval: Each invitee submits an application for WIFIA credit assistance. Using this information, the WIFIA program conducts a detailed financial and engineering review of the project. Based on that review, the WIFIA program proposes terms and conditions for the project and negotiates them with the prospective borrower until they develop a mutually agreeable term sheet. The Administrator demonstrates project approval by executing the project’s term sheet.
  • Phase 3: Negotiation and Closing: Based on the term sheet, the WIFIA program finalizes the terms of credit assistance to a prospective borrower.  At closing, the Administrator and the prospective borrower execute the credit agreement, which is the binding legal document that allows the borrower to receive WIFIA funds.

For more details please visit the EPA/WIFIA website here. or sign up for the WIFIA information sessions.

The CA-NV Section, AWWA is documenting our members’ interest and participation in the WIFIA program by compiling copies of intent letters from the Phase 1 application process. To participate in this documentation, simply email a copy of your intent letter to info@ca-nv-awwa.org. We appreciate your participation with this project.

California Water Plan eNews – 1/11/17

This week’s California Water Plan eNews includes:

  • 2016 achievements for Governor’s Water Action Plan detailed in multi-agency report
  • Public invited to take survey on Update 2018 policies and priorities
  • $3.25 million in loans awarded to two urban water use efficiency projects
  • Draft valley flood protection plan available for public comment
  • Approval of State Water Project Review to be discussed at water commission meeting
  • EPA provides outline for evaluating the benefits of water supply projects
  • Free drinking water workshops available for small rural systems

California Water Plan eNews – 1/10/17

DWR opens California Water Management Effectiveness Survey to gain input for California Water Plan Update 2018

Today’s SPECIAL EDITION  of the California Water Plan eNews provides details on a survey for California Water Plan Update 2018.  Your input will help inform and influence the policies and investment priorities that will be part of Update 2018. The special edition also has details on webinars that will provide more information on the survey questions.

Funding Opportunity for Watershed Groups – 1/5/17

Funding opportunity for watershed groups

Watershed groups that are grassroots, non-regulatory entities are eligible for the Bureau of Reclamation WaterSMART Phase II Grants. These grants provide up to $100,000 for 2-year programs ($50,000/year) to address critical water supply needs, water quality, and ecological resilience. The purpose of this program is to support established watershed groups in implementing on-the-ground watershed management projects. Funding will support the following types of primary projects:

  • Improving stream channel structure and complexity: activities that improve channel structure and complexity to improve or maintain habitat and restore conditions supporting a healthy river channel, protect and stabilize stream or river banks, decrease sediment, and improve water quality and temperature
  • Restoring or enhancing floodplains: activities that reconnect floodplains to the current channel to provide floodplain habitat, reduce flood risk downstream, and improve water quality and temperature
  • Restoring or enhancing vegetation: activities that restore vegetation to improve the health of water sources and riparian ecosystems, reduce erosion, reduce flood risk, increase drought resilience, improve water quality and temperature, and restore habitat
  • Controlling invasive species: activities to prevent or mitigate the impacts of invasive species likely to negatively impact the river, stream, or riparian ecosystem
  • Improving ecological resilience through water conservation activities: activities that conserve water through small-scale water delivery system improvements to improve ecological resilience
  • Improving ecological resilience through water management activities: water management activities that benefit aquatic and riparian ecosystems within the watershed
  • Addressing water quality through mitigation: activities that prevent or remediate downstream contamination from agriculture, forestry operations, wildfires, and mining

Applicants must provide 50% of the project costs via non-federal cash or in-kind contributions. The deadline for the application is February 15.

California Water Plan eNews – 1/4/17

This week’s California Water Plan eNews includes:

  • California groundwater report provides interim update to Bulletin 118
  • DWR publishes best management practices for groundwater management
  • Webinar will explain improvements to water rights allocation tool
  • Water board delivers report on using recycled water for drinking water
  • Compilation of direct potable reuse research will be discussed during webinar
  • A facts sheet to help local governments implement SGMA
  • Watershed research looks for the combination to produce the best drinking water

California Water Plan eNews – 12/21/16

This week’s California Water Plan eNews includes:

  • DWR Magazine details effort to return reliable water to East Porterville
  • Workshop and webinar for water conservation plan set for after the New Year
  • $29.8 million in funding awarded to 38 water use efficiency projects
  • Annual conference will feature new irrigation technologies and innovative projects
  • San Diego conference aims unite water utilities with new technology
  • Draft strategy posted as part of the Central Valley Flood Protection Plan Update

SNC awards funding for two projects in Plumas County – 12/8/16

Sierra Nevada Conservancy awards $3.1 million for projects that reduce tree mortality and protect watershed health

(AUBURN, Calif.) – Today the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) Governing Board approved $3.1 million in grants for ten projects that will decrease wildfire risk, lessen tree mortality, and restore forest and watershed health in the Sierra Nevada region. Funding for these projects comes from Proposition 1, The Water Quality, Supply, and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014. This is the fifth set of awards made under the SNC’s Proposition 1 grant program.

In addition to meeting the requirements of Proposition 1, the projects awarded support the goals and objectives of the Sierra Nevada Watershed Improvement Program, a large‑scale restoration program designed to address ecosystem health in the Sierra Nevada. This program is being coordinated by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy and the U.S. Forest Service, and is working to increase the pace and scale of restoration across the Sierra by increasing funding, addressing policy barriers, and increasing infrastructure needed to support restoration.

Sierra Nevada forests are facing a variety of challenges, and the need to increase the pace and scale of restoration across the Sierra Nevada region is more urgent than ever. According to the U.S. Forest Service, 102 million trees have died statewide since 2010. Ninety-five percent of those dead trees are in the Sierra Nevada region.

“Sierra forests are the source of more than sixty percent of California’s developed water supply, but these forests have experienced rapid and significant change,” says Jim Branham, Executive Officer for the Sierra Nevada Conservancy. “The grants that were awarded by our board today are great examples of the kind of work we need to be encouraging across the entire Sierra to protect the source of California’s water.”

“It is important that we invest in projects like these through the Sierra Nevada Watershed Improvement Program because they help make our forests more resilient to insects, drought, large, damaging wildfires, and disease,” says Randy Moore, U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Regional Forester.

Upper Feather River watershed projects approved for funding include:

 

 

Plumas County – Genesee Valley Watershed Improvement Project, $74,576

This grant to the Plumas Audubon Society will complete wildlife and botanical surveys, a cultural resource inventory, and soils and hydrological analyses that will support the completion of environmental documentation on 618 acres on the Plumas National Forest and 221 acres on the privately owned Heart K Ranch. The work completed under this grant will support the next phase of forest thinning and underburning, which will incorporate Traditional Ecological Knowledge recommendations from the local Maidu people. Both properties are identified as priority project areas in the recently completed Genesee Valley Wildfire Restoration Plan. The project location is within Genesee Valley on Indian Creek, a significant tributary to the north fork of the Feather River.

Plumas County – Tásmam Kojóm Restoration Management Plan, $73,312

This grant to the Maidu Summit Consortium and Conservancy will help complete an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) to support future implementation of the Tásmam Kojóm Land Management Plan on Tásmam Kojóm, a 2,326-acre parcel that includes a meadow, streams, springs, and overstocked mixed conifer forest, and is a culturally important place to the Mountain Maidu.

 

 

To date, the Sierra Nevada Conservancy has funded 32 Proposition 1 projects totaling $9,881,830 that support the restoration goals of the Sierra Nevada Watershed Improvement Program.