November-December 2007

Drought Defense

The Walnut Valley Water District in southern California uses recycled water as a way to “drought-proof” the area’s potable supply.

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By Penelope B. Grenoble

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“The one really big benefit to recycled water for large landscaped areas,” says Zimmerman, “is the relative drought-proofing of our potable supply. If there’s an allocation on imported water, customers using recycled water to irrigate parks or schoolyards wouldn’t be impacted to anywhere near the extent of someone using imported water.” At the Sanitation Districts, Hartling suggests another scenario—commercial customers who are impatient with elaborate potable conservation strategies. “If large industrial users have to spend too much effort on conserving water,” says Hartling, “they’re likely to relocate—and there goes your tax base.”

The WVWD estimates its service area is almost 90% built-out and future development will primarily be in-fill and redevelopment. “We’re currently putting in a distribution system for a 268-home subdivision,” says Hitchman, “which will probably be the service area’s last large housing development.” This means the district’s future drought-proofing plans call for attracting more commercial and institutional irrigation customers. The target is to expand from 1,600 to 2,000 acre-feet of recycled water annually to 4,500 acre-feet. According to Hitchman, if the district is able to generate 2,500 feet of recycled water system expansion and simultaneously save 1,000 acre-feet a year of potable water with conservation measures, it will be able to accommodate the service area’s projected growth without adding to its current imported potable supply. 

The WVWD’s goals are in concert with those of the county Sanitation Districts, which targeted expanded sale of recycled water for irrigation and industrial use during the same two decades the WVWD has been slowly expanding its recycled water market. “Our whole system really grew up to provide recycled water,” says Heil, “and the Sanitation Districts’ goal is to maximize its use.” In 1962 the districts began building plants to produce tertiary treated effluent and discharge solids back in the sewer system to be treated at a central plant near the coast. Although recycled water use varies with precipitation, Heil estimates approximately 40% of the 145 million gallons a day of effluent the Pomona Water Reclamation Plant produces goes to direct uses such as irrigation. The rest is discharged into a tributary of the San Gabriel River for indirect (permitted) or incidental groundwater recharge.

The county’s six reclamation plants operate under individual permits from the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board, which functions as the local arm of the state’s Water Quality Control Board. The regional board issues separate permits to each plant, one each to cover discharge to receiving waters and distribution of recycled water. “As the provider of this water, we have certain obligations to make sure it’s used properly,” says Heil. “In lieu of each individual water user having its own permit, we’re the permit holder, and it’s our job to make sure users such as the Walnut Valley Water District do their job properly.” The Sanitation Districts are currently in the process of consolidating recycled water use regulations with the county Department of Public Health, and the joint regulations will be issued in conjunction with a user’s handbook. The idea is to make it easier for customers to comply and for the Sanitation Districts to enforce regulations.

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Although the tertiary treated effluent produced by Los Angeles County’s plants meets strict state Title 22 requirements, making it safe for full-body contact, recycled water users must abide by state regulations designed to minimize the chance the public will ingest recycled water. Hours of irrigation in parks are limited, for example, so picnic tables that might inadvertently be sprayed can dry before normal hours of public use. These state restrictions are passed through to recycled water users by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health as the agency charged with enforcing the Title 22 regulations. (Only Long Beach, Pasadena, and Vernon have their own health departments). The county reviews and approves customers’ plans for their recycled systems and must inspect the systems before they can be operated. According to Paul Wong, chief environmental health specialist for the Department of Public Health, the department also checks for violations of other county codes such as plumbing and public health and safety.      

California law makes it a crime to use potable water for non-potable uses, which means that individual water districts can require commercial and institutional users to use recycled water for irrigation when it’s available. “If we bring a recycled main down a street, we put a meter in up the property line and inform customers along that main they are required to hook up,” says Zimmerman. “We work with them to design the system and to secure permitting. We review all their plans. The county health department issues a permit, and we issue an annual permit as well. This is another regulation passed through from the Sanitation Districts. Other requirements include users to notify us if they have any onsite breaks. If it’s larger than a specified size, we have to notify the Sanitation Districts. If there’s a pipeline failure in which more than 50,000 gallons of water are discharged, we also have to notify the districts.” Next Page >

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