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The Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board gave a huge fine for water quality violations against a property owner in rural California. The owners failed to get the necessary permits prior to developing the land, and their growing resulted in discharges of highly erodible sediment and the unauthorized placement of filling a tributary.
1983 Oct 2 - Republicans moves away from conservation on Central Valley water [472] 1984 May 5 - National Wildlife Federation says USBR under collected water fees by $10 billion [473] Nov 16 - Federal plan to dump Central Valley waste water into Pacific attacked [474] 1985 Mar 30 - Interior Dept plan to stop dumping Central Valley toxics into ...
The referendum failed 46–54. Consequent proposals for a Tahoe County or High Sierra County in El Dorado, Placer County, Nevada County, and Sierra County have occasionally resurfaced when issues in the Central Valley basin conflict with issues in the more mountainous Lake Tahoe region. [11]
The Regional Water Boards develop basin plans for their natural geographic characteristics that affect the overland flow of water in their area, govern requirements for and issue waste discharge permits, take enforcement action against dischargers who violate permits or otherwise harm water quality in surface waters, and monitor water quality.
The Delta-Mendota Canal and Chowchilla Basin are evidence of this in the Central Valley. [16] With California introducing the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act in 2014, new estimations of subsidence based on water usage plans have revealed that stretches of the California Aqueduct are still at a substantially high risk of subsidence.
River Basin Management Plans are a requirement of the Water Framework Directive [1] and a means of achieving the protection, improvement and sustainable use of the water environment across Europe. This includes surface freshwaters (including lakes, streams and rivers), groundwater, ecosystems such as some wetlands that depend on groundwater ...
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The Central Valley, where a large portion of the California Aqueduct runs through, has been affected by the pumping of groundwater and subsequent land subsidence. [25] Farmers in and near the Central Valley have become reliant on groundwater especially with recent droughts impacting the amount of readily accessible surface water. [ 20 ]