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GSP Resources

GSP Documents

GSP Workshop Presentations
English
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4

Español
Sesión 1
Sesión 2
Sesión 3
Sesión 4

GSP Workshop Videos
VIDEO – Session 1
– SGMA Overview
– GSP Purpose
– Subbasin Coordination

VIDEO – Session 2
– Historic and current groundwater conditions
– Water budget

VIDEO – Session 3
– Sustainable Management Criteria
– Measurable Objectives and Minimum Thresholds

VIDEO – Session 4
– Projects and Management Actions

Workshop Handouts
English
Speaker Bios
Key Terms and Acronyms
Kings Subbasin Map
Sustainability Indicator Infographics
Commenting on the GSP

Español
BIOGRAFÍAS DE ALTAVOCES
TÉRMINOS CLAVE
Mapa de Kings Subbasin
INDICADORES DE SOSTENIBILIDAD
Revisa y Commentario

Direct Mail Pieces
English
Sustainability Solutions Postcard
August GSP Newsletter and Workshops

Español
Sustainability Solutions Postcard
Community Workshop Promotional Postcard
August GSP Newsletter and Workshops

Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)

CA DWR Groundwater Sustainability Plan Outline

State Intervention Fact Sheet

Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP) Emergency Regulations Guide

Best Management Practices

Best Management Practices, or BMPs, are defined by DWR as “the practice, or combination of practices, that are designed to achieve sustainable groundwater management and have been determined to be technologically and economically effective, practicable, and based on best available science.” The documents are a source of guidance for GSAs to develop GSPs that in their implementation, succeed in reaching sustainability.

BMP Framework

BMP 1 Monitoring Protocol, Standards, and Sites 

BMP 2 Monitoring Networks and Identification of Data Gaps 

BMP 3 Hydrogeologic Conceptual Model

BMP 4 Water Budget 

BMP 5 Modeling

BMP 6 Sustainable Management Criteria DRAFT

SGMA Made Simple

SGMA is complex. We’ve broken down concepts into video segments, infographics, and key terms. View the content below. 

GSP Video Series

Water Budget

Water Budget (Spanish Subtitles)

Sustainability Indicators

Hydrogeologic Conceptual Model

Hydrogeologic Conceptual Model (Spanish Subtitles)

Sustainability Indicator Infographics

Achieving sustainability under SGMA is measured using six “sustainability indicators”. When groundwater conditions cause an undesirable result on any or all of the sustainability indicators, you are not sustainable. Achieving sustainability under SGMA requires avoiding undesirable results. 

View the infographics below to learn how sustainability indicators guide SGMA implementation. Click images to view full size.

English

Spanish

Basin Setting

information about the physical setting, characteristics, and current conditions of the basin as described by the Agency in the hydrogeological conceptual model, the groundwater conditions, and the water budget

Best Management Practice (BMP)

practice, or combination of practices, that are designed to achieve sustainable groundwater management and have been determined to be technologically and economically effective, practicable, and based on best available science

Coordination Agreement

a legal agreement adopted between two or more groundwater sustainability agencies that provides the basis for coordinating multiple agencies or GSPs within a basin

De minimis user

a well owner who extracts two acre-feet or less per year from a parcel for domestic purposes

Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP)

A roadmap that specifies how the GSA will reach subbasin-wide sustainability. The Plan requires, among additional elements, a description of the Plan area, a hydrogeologic conceptual model, sustainability goals and objectives, a monitoring network, and projects and management actions to achieve the sustainability goal. In high- to medium-priority with critical overdraft conditions, GSPs must be submitted to the CA DWR by January 2020.

Hydrogeologic Conceptual Model

a model that utilizes current and historical data to forecast future groundwater conditions

 

Watch a video explanation of the concept here: click here

Interim Plan

If deemed “probationary” due to failure to develop an adequate GSP, or failure to implement the GSP successfully, the State Board will allow the local GSAs time to fix the issue that led to probation. If the GSAs are unable to fix the issues, an interim plan will be implemented by the State. The interim plan will contain corrective actions, a timeline to reach sustainability, and a monitoring plan to ensure corrective actions are working. This kind of plan would include a fee structure and blunt corrective actions such as reduced pumping.

Measurable Objectives

refers to specific, quantifiable goals for the maintenance or improvement of specified groundwater conditions that have been included in an adopted Plan to achieve the sustainability goal for the basin

Minimum Thresholds

a numeric value for each sustainability indicator used to define undesirable results

Probationary Basin

If GSAs are unable to develop an adequate GSP, or fail to implement the GSP successfully, the Board may designate the entire basin probationary. Anyone who extracts groundwater from a probationary basin must file an extraction report with the State Water Board. The State Board may require use of meters to measure extractions and reporting of additional information.

Sustainability Goal

existence and implementation of one or more GSPs that achieve sustainable groundwater management by identifying and causing the implementation of measures targeted to ensure operation within sustainable yield

Sustainability Indicator

any of the effects caused by groundwater conditions occurring throughout the basin that, when significant and unreasonable, cause undesirable results

Sustainability Yield

maximum quantity of water, calculated over a base period representative of long-term conditions in the basin and including any temporary surplus, that can be withdrawn annually from a groundwater supply without causing an undesirable result

Sustainable Groundwater Management

defined by SGMA as management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results

Undesirable Results

chronic lowering of groundwater levels and supply, significant and unreasonable reduction of groundwater storage, significant and unreasonable seawater intrusion, significant and unreasonable degraded water quality, significant and unreasonable land subsidence, depletion of interconnected surface water that have adverse impacts on beneficial uses of surface water

Unmanaged Area

part of a subbasin not within the management area of a GSA before July 1, 2017. There are 7 GSAs that cover the entire geography of the Kings Subbasin; there are no areas of the Subbasin considered and unmanaged area.

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