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EE_
17th April 2015, 08:24 PM
Sounds pretty bad for the 458,000 residents in Tulare County. They may have to migrate out of CA...water refugees.

Dry Wells Plague California as Drought Has Water Tables Plunging
by Alison Vekshin
5:00 AM EDT April 17, 2015

Near California’s Success Lake, more than 1,000 water wells have failed. Farmers are spending $750,000 to drill 1,800 feet down to keep fields from going fallow. Makeshift showers have sprouted near the church parking lot.

“The conditions are like a third-world country,” said Andrew Lockman, a manager at the Office of Emergency Services in Tulare County, in the heart of the state’s agricultural Central Valley about 175 miles (282 kilometers) north of Los Angeles.

As California enters the fourth year of a record drought, its residents and $43 billion agriculture industry have drawn groundwater so low that it’s beyond the reach of existing wells. That’s left thousands with dry taps and pushed farmers to dig deeper as Governor Jerry Brown, a 77-year-old Democrat, orders the first mandatory water rationing in state history.

“The demand we’re placing on the aquifer and the deep bedrock drilling, which is going on at an alarmingly fast pace, is really scary,” said Tricia Blattler, executive director of the Tulare County Farm Bureau. “Folks are really concerned we’re not going to be able find water in the groundwater system much longer. We are tapping it way too quickly.”

Nowhere has lack of rain been felt more than in Tulare County, in a valley dotted with dairy farms and walnut orchards at the foot of the Sierra Nevada mountains. With 458,000 residents, it’s home to 1,013 dry wells, accounting for more than half of those that have failed in the state since January 2014.

Tulare Dust

Outside Porterville, in a dusty, unincorporated hamlet populated by many Latino citrus-farm workers, some residents use donated bottled water to drink and cook. About 40 people a day wash in the 26 showers set up in trailers next to the parking lot of Iglesia Emmanuel church. They lug nonpotable water home from county tanks for their toilets.

Annette Clonts began bathing at friends’ homes or sneaking middle-of-the-night showers at Lake Success’s recreation area after the well near her trailer ran low two years ago. When the lake showers started sputtering in November, she turned to those at the church.

“When you’re 400 yards from the lake and you have no water, you’re in trouble,” said Clonts, a 57-year-old retired cook.

The family of Angelica Gallegos, a 39-year-old Porterville resident, loads two barrels in a truck and drives to a fire station twice a week to stock up on water from a county tank. That keeps the toilet running at her mobile home.

Her expenses are up from buying paper plates, cups, wipes and napkins, said Gallegos, a supervisor at an orange-packing facility.

“We’ve got to find a way to survive, to hold on,” said Gallegos, who lives with her husband and two daughters. “Right now, we don’t have the money to drill a deeper well. You’re talking about $15,000.”

Digging Deeper

That’s the starting price for residential wells, which range from 30 to 150 feet (9 to 46 meters) and can cost as much as $45,000, said Blattler, the official with the county’s farm bureau. Agricultural wells, which are about 1,000 to 1,800 feet, run $250,000 to $750,000, she said. There are so many customers, they’ll have to wait as long as two years.

On top of the failed wells, for the second year in a row the federal government isn’t supplying Tulare and Fresno counties with their typical share from the network of dams, reservoirs and canals spanning the state. That usually covers more than 50 percent of the water used by small towns and farmers, Blattler said.

Buying water from farmers who have rights to tap rivers is becoming more expensive as supplies run low, making wells the only source for many farms.

Tulare County issued 1,400 construction permits for wells last year, almost triple the 501 issued in 2013, according to county data. Permits doubled last year in neighboring Fresno County.

Local drillers and pump installers are being inundated with calls, creating lengthy wait lists. Business has doubled since 2012 at Kaweah Pump Inc., a well-drilling company in the Tulare County city of Visalia, said owner Bill Gargan, who’s had to hire 12 more people to keep up with demand. The company has a list with 42 drilling and about 200 pump jobs, he said. Gargan said his business has been operating 12 to 18-hour days, sometimes seven days a week.

“It will probably take us six months to get all those finished,” Gargan said. “They keep coming every day.”
Eric Borba, a 53-year-old dairy farmer in Porterville, said he’s been waiting since November to have a pump installed in a well he put in last year. Six of about 30 wells on his property aren’t pumping.

He said he may have to close the farm, which his grandfather started almost a century ago.

“At some point we don’t have an option,” Borba said. “With no water, you can’t do anything.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-17/california-plagued-by-dry-wells-as-drought-makes-water-elusive

Cebu_4_2
17th April 2015, 10:47 PM
"Drill Baby Drill!"

Ponce
18th April 2015, 08:28 AM
Soon they will sabotage my source of water and make holes into my water tanks because I have what they don't......setting up two more driveway alert to protect my tanks.

V

Dogman
18th April 2015, 08:50 AM
Soon they will sabotage my source of water and make holes into my water tanks because I have what they don't......setting up two more driveway alert to protect my tanks.

V

Adding another tank or so to ur system may not hurt!

Capacity is always a good thing, and having more than needed is always better!

Spectrism
18th April 2015, 11:15 AM
Soon they will sabotage my source of water and make holes into my water tanks because I have what they don't......setting up two more driveway alert to protect my tanks.

V

Are you anywhere near this drought area? I thought you were north of this.

Dogman
18th April 2015, 11:21 AM
Are you anywhere near this drought area? I thought you were north of this. He is about 500 miles north by north west as the buzzard fly's!


;D

mick silver
18th April 2015, 11:54 AM
http://i2.wp.com/www.americansorghum.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/thebeverlyhillbillies.jpg?resize=400%2C300
"Drill Baby Drill!"

Cebu_4_2
18th April 2015, 12:17 PM
http://i2.wp.com/www.americansorghum.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/thebeverlyhillbillies.jpg?resize=400%2C300

Wouldn't get a second look down here...

Spectrism
18th April 2015, 02:44 PM
He is about 500 miles north by north west as the buzzard fly's!
;D

i guess the old buzzard couldn't get far enough away from his homeland of Puerto Rico.

Dogman
18th April 2015, 02:57 PM
i guess the old buzzard couldn't get far enough away from his homeland of Puerto Rico.

He is nearly 4000 miles from home then, abt 3700 of them.

;)

Ponce
18th April 2015, 03:01 PM
I only worry about MY area.....last year there was a lot of problems because of the water, and even thou I do have TWO water permits I was told that I could use water for four months because someone down river (creek) had an older grandfather's permit......this year is going to be a lot worse, but I am ready for it.

In the creek and pointing in the direction of my water line I have now a game camera that takes a picture when someone is near it, last year it did take the picture of someone but he never did anything to my line.

I am about 36 miles from a town by the name of "Grants Pass".... is the place that I call "THE BIG TOWN"

V

Cebu_4_2
18th April 2015, 04:38 PM
I only worry about MY area.....last year there was a lot of problems because of the water, and even thou I do have TWO water permits I was told that I could use water for four months because someone down river (creek) had an older grandfather's permit......this year is going to be a lot worse, but I am ready for it.

In the creek and pointing in the direction of my water line I have now a game camera that takes a picture when someone is near it, last year it did take the picture of someone but he never did anything to my line.

I am about 36 miles from a town by the name of "Grants Pass".... is the place that I call "THE BIG TOWN"

V

How can they regulate your water since you have a land patent? A land patent covers all on your property.

monty
18th April 2015, 06:25 PM
How can they regulate your water since you have a land patent? A land patent covers all on your property.
In Nevada water rights come from the state. If you wish to drill a well you file an application with the state engineer. Some of the very old water rights may have been attached to the land patents. Nevada claims ownership of the water.

Water Law 101


Overview

Nevada’s first water law was passed in 1866 and has been amended many times since then. Today, the law serves the people of Nevada by providing the rules for applying for and holding onto a water right, as well as guidelines for the state engineer in managing the state’s valuable water resources.
Nevada water law has the flexibility to accommodate new and growing uses of water in Nevada while protecting those who have used the water in the past. All water within the boundaries of the state, whether above or beneath the surface of the ground, belongs to the public and is subject to appropriation for beneficial uses.
Nevada water law is based on two basic principles: prior appropriation and beneficial use. Prior appropriation – also known as “first in time, first in right” – allows for the orderly use of the state’s water resources by granting priority to senior water rights in times of shortage. This concept ensures senior water users are protected, even as new uses for water are allocated. A water right permit may only be granted for beneficial uses as provided in Chapters 533 (http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-533.html) and 534 (http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-534.html) of the Nevada Revised Statutes.
Examples of beneficial uses include irrigation, mining, stock watering, recreation, commercial, industrial, and municipal uses. Beneficial use also includes the underlying principle of the appropriative rights system of water allocation, known as “use it or lose it.” In the West, where water resources are scarce, water users must demonstrate an actual beneficial use of water. They cannot speculate in water rights or hold on to water rights they do not actually intend to place to a beneficial use in a timely manner. If they stop using the water, they will lose the water right.
Role of the State Engineer

The State Engineer is the head of the Nevada Division of Water Resources (http://water.nv.gov/), a division within the Nevada Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. The State Engineer is responsible for administering and enforcing Nevada water law, which includes the appropriation of surface and ground water in the state, and the adjudication of pre-statutory vested water rights, dam safety, and other duties.
The Office of the State Engineer was created by the Nevada Legislature in 1903. Another purpose of the 1903 legislation was to account for existing water use (otherwise known as pre-statutory vested water rights) and to get those rights identified, quantified, and formally recognized in light of the growth that was going to take place; in particular the nation’s first reclamation project. The 1903 act was amended in 1905 to create a process for the appropriation of water not already being put to a beneficial use by the filing of an application with the State Engineer.
It was not until the passage of the Nevada General Water Law Act of 1913 that the State Engineer was granted jurisdiction over wells tapping artesian water or water in definable underground aquifers. The 1939 Nevada Underground Water Act granted the State Engineer jurisdiction over all groundwater in the state. The 1913 and 1939 acts have been amended many times, and Nevada’s water law is considered one of the most comprehensive water laws in the West.
The Appropriation Process

All mannersof use of water in Nevada require a permit from the State Engineer with two exceptions – domestic use and those uses that pre-date water law requirements. Two main chapters in the Nevada statutes govern the appropriation and regulation of water in Nevada. Nevada Revised Statute Chapter 533 is the general water law that provides for the appropriation process and is specifically applicable to surface water. Nevada Revised Statute Chapter 534 is specific to groundwater and works in conjunction with Chapter 533.
Domestic Water Wells

A water-right application or permit is not required in order to drill a domestic well. Domestic purposes as defined by law extends to culinary and household purposes, in a single family dwelling, the watering of a family garden, lawns, and the watering of domestic animals. The maximum amount of water that may be pumped from a domestic well is limited to two acre-feet per year.
Water Right Applications and Protests

To acquire permission to use water, a person must file an application with the State Engineer. The application must be supported by a map prepared in a prescribed form by a water rights surveyor. The map must show the point of diversion and place of use of the water within proper legal subdivisions. No application shall be for the water of more than one source to be used for more than one purpose.
When the application and map are properly completed, a notice is sent to a newspaper of general circulation in the area where the water is to be diverted. This notice is published for four (4) consecutive weeks and any interested person may file a formal protest, but the protest must be filed within 30 days after the last day of publication. There are no exceptions to the protest period. The protest must explain the objections with reasonable certainty or may suggest other appropriate action by the State Engineer.
After the expiration of the protest period, the application is ready for action by the State Engineer. If a protest is filed, the State Engineer may conduct either a field investigation or an administrative hearing or both. If the State Engineer has sufficient information, he may act on the application without either, or he may request additional information from the applicant. The State Engineer by statute is given the discretion as to whether or not to hold an administrative hearing. More: http://dcnr.nv.gov/documents/documents/nevada-water-law-101/

Cebu_4_2
18th April 2015, 06:32 PM
Thanks for the info... That's fukt!

monty
18th April 2015, 06:37 PM
You are welcome. If you have a water right to irrigate x number of acres and don't use it for more than five years it reverts back to the state.

monty
18th April 2015, 06:50 PM
Thanks for the info... That's fukt!


In a way in Nevada it has been a good thing because the Feds claim ownership of 87% of the land in Nevada. Some of the old livestock water rights date back before Nevada became a state. At times the Forest Service and the BLM have tried to keep the stockmen off the land, but because they had a deeded water right the govt. had to back down. On one occasion the U.S. Forest Service even fenced in a private water right. I don't know all the details, but they met much resistance.