California Department of Water Resources

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California Department of Water Resources
Seal of the state Department of Water Resources
Seal of the state Department of Water Resources
Agency overview
Formed 1956
Preceding Agencies Water Project Authority
 
Department of Public Works
Headquarters 1416 9th Street, Sacramento, California
Agency Executive Lester A. Snow, Director
Parent agency California Resources Agency
Website
http://www.water.ca.gov/

The California Department of Water Resources, also known as the DWR, is a department within the California Resources Agency. The Department of Water Resources is responsible for the State of California's management and regulation of water usage. The department was created in 1956 by Governor Goodwin Knight following severe flooding across Northern California in 1955, combining the Division of Water Resources of the Department of Public Works with the State Engineer's Office, the Water Project Authority, and the State Water Resources Board.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] 1850-1875

California recognizes many types of water rights. These rights have developed with the State over time. Prior to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed in 1848, California was part of Mexico. Riparian rights were the most prevalent type of water right. Under riparian rights, which have their origins in Roman law, a landowner can use water flowing by his property for use on his property. However, the Mexican Government also provided for agricultural pueblos, by granting water on the public domain for these pueblos. When California became part of the United States, the United States agreed to recognize existing law. Pueblo rights were the only vested water rights at the time. Pueblo rights provided that Spanish and Mexican Pueblos were entitled to the paramount beneficial use of all needed naturally occurring water from the entire watershed of a stream flowing through the pueblo.

When gold was discovered in 1848, immigrants from all over the world came to California. During the California Gold Rush, gold miners, who were not generally land owners, would divert large quantities of water from rivers and streams for hydraulic mining. Local custom dictated how water was shared in mining camps, but in general, the miners followed the same practice in allocating water as they did in staking their mineral claims. In its earliest form, an appropriative water right was created simply by taking water and putting it to beneficial use. However, to "state a claim" miners would often post a notice to others that they were taking and using water. Soon after California became a U.S. state in 1850, the first session of the California State Legislature immediately adopted laws to deal with the State's water. This included the adoption of the English common law system, which also included the doctrine of riparian rights, although this system was better suited to the water rich eastern United States. Shortly thereafter, the California courts recognized appropriative water rights.

Because of these plural systems of water allocation, disputes soon ensued; these differences were resolved by the state courts. In 1872, the Legislature adopted a procedure in the Civil Code to provide a method for those claiming an appropriative water right to record their claims with the County Recorder of each county. In 1886, the courts addressed competing claims between "riparians and appropriators in the case of "Lux v. Haggin." However, within 25 years, excessive claims to water rights threatened to affect economic development in the State. In response, the Governor formed a Water Commission to make recommendations regarding California's water law. In 1913, the California voters adopted by referendum the Water Commission Act, which created the state Water Commission and set forth an administrative procedure for acquiring an appropriative right.

In 1926, the courts held that a riparian water user was entitled to the full flow of a stream, without regard to the reasonableness of the use. In response, in 1928, the California Constitution was amended to require that all water use in California be reasonable and beneficial. (Article X, Section 2).

[edit] 1875-1900

In 1878, William Hammond Hall of the Office of State Engineer conducted a series of investigations in California's Central Valley and drafted a series of plans calling for various publicly funded and owned irrigation projects. Hall's study was accomplished on a budget of $100,000.[1]. The Central Valley continued to grow in the absence of a state-run project, yet Central Valley land owners and coastal cities (including San Francisco) managed to acquire water rights in the Sierra Nevada mountain range for use in the valley. Under Hall's tenure, a series of permanent flow gauging stations were established on several California rivers.

[edit] 1900-1925

In response to growing political and legal contests for limited water resources, the Water Commission Act of 1913 established the Water Commission to oversee permits associated with the rights to use surface water. The Water Commission Act became effective on December 19, 1914. Landowners or water users that had established water usage prior to 1914 became senior water rights users in many of the more accessible watersheds in the state. Appropriative water rights were processed by the Division of Water Rights, originally under the State Engineer, and subsequently under the Department of Water Resources, the State Water Rights Board, and finally, the State Water Resources Control Board.

In 1919, Col. Robert B. Marshall, Chief Surveyor for the U.S. Geological Survey, purposed a plan for the federal government to build a series of diversion dams, and two grand canals along the sides of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys, consequently irrigating California's Central Valley. Though national interest in Marshall's plan was limited, there was an interest in California for pursuing the proposed project.

[edit] 1925-1950

In 1927, the California State Legislature passed a law authorizing the Department of Finance to file applications with the Division of Water Rights to reserve any unappropriated surface water for future development. A number of claims were filed on July 30, 1927. The Department subsequently acquired water rights permits that resulted from some of these filings. In 1933, the California State Legislature and Governor Sunny Rolphy approved the construction of the Central Valley Project, with initial plans to build a 420 foot dam at Kennett. This would provide regular flows out to the San Francisco Estuary, reducing salinity intrusion into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Unable to finance the construction of Kennett Dam, the state applied to the Federal government for aid. After the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Rivers and Harbors reviewed the state plans, Congress enacted the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1935, giving the U.S. federal government control over the Central Valley Project (CVP).

[edit] 1950-1975

In the mid-1950s, California was experiencing substantial growth. San Francisco's Caspar W. Weinberger, Chairman of the California Assembly Government Organization Committee, held a series of state-wide hearings in 1954 and 1955 focused on creating a State Water Project that could supply the growing municipal and agricultural demands of the dtate. On July 5, 1956 in a special session of the California Assembly, Governor Goodwin J. Knight signed Weinberger's bill to combine the then Division of Water Resources of the Department of Public Works with the State Engineer's Office, the Water Project Authority, and the State Water Resources Board into a new department: the Department of Water Resources. Consulting engineer Harvey O. Banks was appointed by Governor Knight as the Department's first Director and given the task of developing a plan for the proposed State Water Project.

In 1959, the Legislature enacted the Burns-Porter Act which authorized $1.75 billion for the construction of the proposed State Water Project. The Burns-Porter Act was approved by California voters in 1960 and in the same year the Whale Rock Dam, DWR's first major water project located near San Luis Obispo, was completed.

In 1961, William Warne was appointed Director of the Department and oversaw the construction of a key facility in the operation of the State Water Project: Oroville Dam. DWR and the United States Bureau of Reclamation also signed an agreement to design a joint reservoir in San Luis. Because water from the Oroville and Shasta dams (from the existing Central Valley Project) would be moved down the existing Sacramento River channel into the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, excess flows would roll through the Delta and then be stored in the Central Valley until needed. Construction of the Harvey O. Banks Pumping Plant, located near Tracy, California, also began in 1963.

[edit] DWR Timeline

Year Event(s)
1850 California becomes the 31st state in the United States of America
1878 Office of State Engineer established with appointment of civil engineer William Hammond Hall
1887 California Legislature approves the Wright Act which enables citizens to create local irrigation districts
1919 US Geological Survey Lt. Colonel Robert Marshall publishes a plan to transfer water from the Sacramento River to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California
1929 First California Snow Survey conducted

In response to the St. Francis Dam disaster, California Legislature creates a dam safety program

1933 Bond act approved for Central Valley Project (CVP), but due to dwingling state coffers from the Great Depression, funding was not enough for the state government to build the project, thus the CVP was turned over to the U.S. federal hovernment
1951 Bulletin 1, an inventory of California water resources, is published by the State Water Resources Board

State Engineer A.D. Edmonston proposed the Feather River Project (which later becomes the State Water Project)

1955 Bulletin 2, which updates the information from Bulletin 1 and forecasts future water needs, is published by the State Water Resources Board
1956 Governor Goodwin Knight calls a special session of the Legislature to create a Department of Water Resources

Harvey O. Banks is appointed as the first director

1957 Work begins in the city of Oroville for construction of a dam on the Feather River

Bulletin 3, now named the California Water Plan Update, is published by DWR

1959 Burns-Porter Act passes the Legislature, authoring construction of a State Water Project
1960 Voters approve bond to finance the State Water Project

Metropolitan Water District of Southern California signs up as first contractor for SWP water US Congress authorizes construction of the San Luis Unit of the CVP

1961 Frenchman Dam is completed

Davis-Dolwig Act passes the Legislature, allowing for recreation, fish, and wildlife enhancement
William Warne appointed as second DWR Director

1962 Work begins on Oroville Dam

Patterson Dam completed
State and Federal governments agree to construct San Luis Joint-Use Complex

1963 California Supreme Court rules that DWR can sell additional revenue bonds to finance SWP construction
1964 Antelope Dam is completed

Oroville Fish Barrier Dam is completed

1965 Santa Clara Terminal Reservoir is completed
1966 Dos Amigos Pumping Plant is completed
1967 Grizzly Dam (Lake Davis) is completed

Oroville Dam is completed
Hyatt Pumping / Generating Plant is completed
Feather River Fish Hatchery is completed and begins operation
O'Neill Dam, San Luis Dam, and Gianelli Pumping / Generating Plant are completed
William Gianelli is appointed as third Director

1968 Oroville Diversion Dam is completed

Thermalito Afterbay Dam is completed
North Bay Aqueduct & Napa Turnout Reservoir are completed
Del Valle Dam is completed
California Aqueduct from Banks Pumping Plant to San Luis Reservoir is completed
California Aqueduct - San Luis Canal completed
Los Perillas and Badger Hill Pumping Plants are completed
Governor Ronald Reagan dedicates Lake Oroville and Oroville Dam, initiating beginning of operations of the SWP
State Water Resources Control Board Decision 1379 is adopted, setting water quality standards for the SWP and CVP

1969 Thermalito Pumping / Generating Plant is completed

South Bay Pumping Plant is completed
Del Valle Pumping Plant is completed
Banks Pumping Plant is completed (4 additional pumps are added in 1986)
Clifton Court Forebay is completed

1970 John E. Skinner Delta Fish Protection Facility is completed
1971 California Aqueduct constructed to Tehachapi Crossing

Cedar Springs Dam (Silverwood Lake) is completed

1972 Buena Vista and Terrink Pumping Plants are completed

Oso Pumping Plant is completed
Clean Water Act is enacted by both houses of the U.S. Congress

1973 Chrisman Pumping Plant is completed

Pyramid Dam and Castaic Power Plant are completed
Pearblossom Pumping Plant is completed
Santa Anna Pipeline is completed
John R. Teerink is appointed fourth Director

1974 Castaic Dam is completed

Devil Canyon Power Plant completed
Perris Dam is completed

1975 Ronald Robie appointed fifth Director
1982 California Aqueduct West Branch completed

Warne Power Plant completed
Irrigation management weather stations provided to farmers

1983 DWR is classified as a "bulk entity" and begins entering its own electricity contracts

David N. Kennedy is appointed sixth Director

2007 Judge orders DWR to cease its export operations through the Delta, citing that it does not have a valid permit to operate the California State Water Project pumps per the California Environmental Quality Act.

[edit] Legal and Political Authorization

Though DWR was formed in 1956 with the purpose to build and operate the State Water Project, as a State organization responsible for the development and protection of water resources, the Department has since been subject to numerous legislative, judicial, and administrative orders that dictate how the Department should protect the public trust. Like any other water user, DWR must apply for water rights permits from the State Water Resources Control Board. The water rights decisions of the Control Board limit the amount of water that the Department can provide to communities and also are responsible for many of the legal, administrative, and environmental projects that the Department has adopted. Unlike most other users, the Department also must answer to the Governor's Office and State Legislature. Flood control and local assistance programs often have a basis in DWR's role as a resource trustee, while water supply, environmental mitigation, and electricity generation are often related to DWR's role as a water permittee.

[edit] List of DWR Projects

[edit] Conveyence and Storage Facilities

[edit] Flood Control Projects

  • Sutter Bypass
  • Tisdale Weir
  • Tisdale Bypass
  • Sacramento Weir
  • Yolo Bypass

[edit] Mitigation / Restoration Projects

The following is a list of projects that DWR oversees or contributes to that are designed to mitigate the impacts of the operation of the State Water Project.

  • Feather River Salmon and Steelhead Hatchery (1967)
  • Thermalito Afterbay (1968)
  • Yolo Bypass Wildlife Recreation Area
  • Suisun Marsh
  • Skinner Fish Facility
  • South Delta Improvements Program [2]
  • South Delta Temporary Barriers Program

[edit] List of DWR Directors

Director Term Notes
Harvey Oren Banks July 5, 1956December 12, 1960
William E. Warne January 1, 1961December 30, 1966
Wiliam R. Gianelli January 1, 1967April 31, 1973
John R. Terrink September 1, 1973March 3, 1975
Ronald B. Robie March 6, 1975December 31, 1982
Howard Eastin January 3, 1983June 21, 1983 Interim Director
David N. Kennedy June 22, 1983December 31, 1998
Thomas M. Hannigan March 1, 1999June 1, 2003
Michael J. Spear June 9, 2003November 16, 2003 Interim Director
Linda S. Adams November 17, 2003February 23, 2004
Lester A. Snow February 24, 2004–present

[edit] See also

[edit] External links