Upper San Gabriel Valley Municipal Water District v. City of Alhambra et al
Maureen Duffy-Lewis | June 21st, 2012
Background note from An Evaluation of California’s Adjudicated Groundwater Basins by Langridge et al, (UC Davis) 2016
The Main San Gabriel Basin is one of the largest groundwater basins in southern California, providing residents of the greater San Gabriel Valley with about 240,000 AF per year. It is geographically situated in the south-easterly portion of Los Angeles County and bounded on the north by the San Gabriel Mountains, on the northwest by Raymond Basin, on the
southeast by Puente Basin, and on the south by the Central Basin. The adjudication of the basin was deemed necessary by water producers to streamline administration, reduce overdraft, and adhere to the Long Beach Judgment and Puente Narrows Agreements, and the adjudication was relatively amenable. One of the most significant concerns in the basin is water quality, with four areas of the valley containing Superfund sites. The 1973 Judgment included water quality as one of the Watermaster’s responsibilities, and since the mid-1980s the Watermaster has coordinated with regulatory agencies to have groundwater remediation facilities constructed, permitted and operated to protect and enhance the groundwater supplies. The 1992 Judgment amendment explicitly required coordination with EPA for a federal cleanup of the Superfund sites.
Keywords
adaptive management, adjudicated basins, Groundwater Exchange, groundwater pumping impacts, groundwater recharge, interbasin flow, water rights