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of San Bruno CA Events and of Interest to San Bruno Residents
CA SB 72 - Water Bill
Article Source: CA Governor Newsom
Governor Newsom launches most ambitious water plan in California history
What you need to know: For the first time in state history, California
has a statewide water supply target: 9 million acre-feet by 2040. The
California Water Plan 2028 is an action-oriented blueprint that will be
built by voices from across the state and designed to close the water
gaps that climate change, including extreme swings between drought and
floods, is widening every year.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the formal launch of
the California Water Plan 2028, marking the start of a multi-year
effort to modernize statewide water planning in response to
climate-driven extremes and long-term water reliability
challenges.
California is committed to protecting the water that families, farmers, and communities depend on for generations to come.
“Climate change is reshaping life in California through historic
droughts and record storms that threaten the farms that feed the
nation, communities that depend on reliable water, and the environment
we all share. The 2028 Water Plan is a commitment to every Californian
that we will capture, store, and conserve the water our state—the 4th
largest economy in the world—needs to thrive, no matter what climate
change throws at us.”
Governor Gavin Newsom
“California’s hydrology is changing,” said DWR Director Karla Nemeth.
“We’re living that now. Extreme wet swings to intensely dry within the
same season. The work of crafting the next California Water Plan will
help us plan smarter to deal with the way climate change is testing our
water systems.”
Planning for California’s water future
The launch initiates the first phase of work under Senate Bill 72 (SB
72), which mandates modernization of the California Water Plan by
improving data and setting measurable water supply targets. It also
creates a more coordinated, transparent planning framework that aligns
state, regional, and local actions, which includes close collaboration
with the California Water Commission.
"I authored Senate Bill 72 to modernize the California Water Plan so it
meets the challenges we face today,” said Senator Anna Caballero.
“California’s water system is under real strain from longer droughts,
stronger storms, and growing demand across our communities and
agricultural regions. For the first time, we are setting a clear
statewide target of 9 million acre-feet of additional water supply and
establishing measurable benchmarks that hold us accountable. California
must plan with discipline and act with urgency to secure a reliable
water future for every part of our state. I applaud Governor Newsom for
signing this landmark bill into law and reaffirming his commitment to
securing California’s water future."
At the center of SB 72 is an interim statewide planning target of 9
million acre-feet by 2040, which is the amount of water supply
California could lose as climate change reduces snowpack and
intensifies drought. Roughly equal to two Shasta Reservoirs, or enough
for 18 million homes, the target is a shared benchmark that includes
supply, conservation, recharge, and storage strategies to close
projected water supply gaps and strengthen long-term water
reliability.
A plan shaped by Californians
To fulfill the SB 72 mandate, the Department of Water Resources (DWR)
is convening an Advisory Committee that will immediately get to work in
shaping the workplan for both the 2028 and 2033 Water Plan updates and
providing input about approaches to effectively engage regional
communities.
The advisory committee will reflect the diversity of California’s water
system, including representation from urban and agricultural water
suppliers, tribal, labor, environmental justice and environmental
interests, local government, business and other interested
parties.
The committee will hold its inaugural meeting in April, and the public is encouraged to attend.
The California Water Commission will play a formal advisory role in the
California Water Plan. The commission will receive regular briefings in
a public setting and provide input as DWR refines the advisory
committee structure, engagement approach, and major milestones leading
up to release of the 2028 plan.
“We applaud the launch of the California Water Plan 2028 and the
collaborative framework envisioned under SB 72,” said Fern Steiner,
Chair of the California Water Commission. “The Commission looks forward
to continuing its work with the Department of Water Resources and
interested parties across the state to support a plan that reflects
diverse regional needs and advances sustainable water solutions for all
Californians.”
“The new California Water Plan is where vision meets accountability,”
said Joel Metzger, DWR Deputy Director for Statewide Water Resources
Planning and Enterprise Project Management. “We’ll set measurable
targets, improve our data, and align planning efforts in ways that
deliver real results on the ground. I’m inspired by the partnerships
forming around this work and the shared commitment to long-term water
resilience. Relationships, trust building, and compelling storytelling
will be essential to moving this work forward successfully.”
Work on the California Water Plan 2028 will focus on three main workstreams:
Data for water use and supply balances:
collecting statewide, watershed-scale datasets, leveraging new data and
advanced technologies, and bringing in statewide planning models.
Targets for long-term water supply:
creating credible, localized targets; expanding coverage of hydrologic
regions, and aligning with Governor Newsom’s 2022 Water Supply Strategy
and the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act.
Actions for adaptation and implementation: creating
place-specific strategies, including nature-based solutions, to close
supply-demand gaps; creating cost-benefit analyses; and tracking
progress and integration across state, federal, and local
planning.
To support transparency and public access, DWR has launched a new project website at CaliforniaWaterPlan.com,
to serve as the central hub for information on all future water plan
updates, advisory committee participation, meeting materials,
timelines, and opportunities for engagement.