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SCV Water Board Votes to Ramp Up Water Restrictions as Severe Drought Intensifies

SCV Water Board Votes to Ramp Up Water Restrictions as Severe Drought Intensifies
29 Apr 2022 by SCV Water

Agency moves to Stage 2 of its Water Shortage Contingency Plan to eliminate water waste

SANTA CLARITA – SCV Water’s Board of Directors voted Tuesday to move the Agency into Stage 2 of its Water Shortage Contingency Plan. The move comes as California and the Santa Clarita Valley continue to face a severe drought with no end in sight.

"Despite planning for dry times, this drought has become so severe that we are having to dip into our banked water supplies," said SCV Water’s General Manager Matt Stone. “Moving to Stage 2 will place new water restrictions in place to eliminate water waste and ensure we have enough water to meet the needs of our community.”

Stage 2 Explained

Stage 2 includes the same restrictions as Stage 1 and adds additional water savings measures. Customers are requested to voluntarily reduce their water by up to 20%. This information is available at www.DroughtReadySCV.com.

New watering requirements effective with Stage 2 include:

  • Limits watering to three days per week
    • Odd addresses (Monday, Wednesday and Friday)
    • Even addresses. (Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday)
    • No watering on Saturdays
  • Limits watering station run times
    • Maximum of two five-minute cycles per station per watering day (10 minutes max.)
  • Watering times of day (morning and evening watering)

o May to October: 12 midnight to 9 a.m. and/or 8 p.m. to 12 a.m.

o November to April: 12 midnight to 10 a.m. and/or 6 p.m. to 12 a.m.

The following actions are also prohibited, as established in Phase 1, declared in November 2021.

  • Allowing runoff onto non-irrigated areas when irrigating with potable (drinking) water
  • Using hoses with no shutoff nozzles to wash cars
  • Using potable water to wash sidewalks, driveways and hardscapes
  • Irrigating outdoors during and within 48 hours following precipitation of a quarter inch or more
  • The irrigation with potable water of ornamental turf on public street medians

Rebates and resources available

SCV Water offers many financial rebates and other incentives to help customers increase water- use efficiency, including:

  • Turf conversion rebates
  • Irrigation system efficiency upgrade rebates (smart irrigation controllers, high-efficiency sprinkler nozzles, pressure regulating devices, drip irrigation and more)
  • Free Home Drought-Ready Check-Ups
  • Online WaterSMART Workshop, gardening classes and other resources

A quick 10-minute inspection of the sprinkler system can save considerable water. For homes businesses, and landscapes, set timers to meet the new watering days and duration and repair any leaks or overspray. Then inside, check for leaks in toilets and other fixtures.

Learn more about rebates at https://yourscvwater.com/save-water-money/#_rebates.

Learn more

SCV Water is hosting a Virtual Drought Forum on May 10 at 6 p.m., where attendees will hear from the experts about drought status, water supply, and conservation measures, as well as be able to ask us questions. Customers can register for the Virtual Drought Forum at bit.ly/2022VirtualDroughtForum.

Customers can also report suspected water waste at www.DroughtReadySCV.com.

Neighboring agencies announce more stringent measures

Also, this week, Metropolitan Water District announced a Water Shortage Emergency for 6 million customers, cutting watering to one day a week. This does not affect SCV Water customers. Those affected customers are served by a higher proportion of imported state water, which has been drastically impacted by three consecutive years of drought conditions.

SCV Water also relies on this source for a portion of its supply, but in addition has local groundwater and banked water supply stored underground in Kern County in wet years. Still, as the drought enters its third year, we are also asking our customers to conserve so we will have flexibility to meet demand should the drought continue. Every drop saved this year is one we can use next year.

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About SCV Water:

The Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency (SCV Water) is a full-service regional water agency located in the Santa Clarita Valley. SCV Water provides water service to approximately 75,000 business and residential customers. It was formed on January 1, 2018, when local water suppliers combined into one integrated, regional water provider. More information can be found at www.yourSCVwater.com.

 

For more information, please contact: Kathie Martin

Communications Manager SCV Water kmartin@scvwa.org