The
Greater Monterey County region includes
all of the Salinas River watershed north of the San Luis Obispo County line
(encompassing a small portion of San Benito County where the Salinas River
watershed extends outside of Monterey County), and includes the entirety of
Monterey County exclusive of the Pajaro River Watershed IRWM region (which
covers the Pajaro River watershed) and Monterey Peninsula, Carmel Bay, and South
Monterey Bay IRWM region (which covers all of the Monterey Peninsula Water
Management District jurisdiction, plus all of the Carmel River and San Jose
Creek watersheds, plus all of the Seaside Groundwater Basin) established under
Proposition 50.
Members of the Regional Water Management Group have
been chosen to ensure balanced representation of the various
resource areas, interests, and geographic areas in the
Greater
Monterey County region, and include the following:
·
·
California
Water Service Company
·
Castroville
Community Services District
·
City
of
·
Environmental
Justice Coalition for Water
·
Garrapata
Creek Watershed Council
·
Marina
Coast Water District
·
·
Monterey
County Agricultural Commissioner’s Office
·
Monterey
County Water Resources Agency
·
Monterey
Regional Water Pollution Control Agency
·
Moss
Landing Marine Laboratories
·
Resource
Conservation District (RCD) of
In
addition, to ensure that the needs and priorities of the diverse array of water
management interests within the planning region are included in the Greater
Monterey County IRWMP, a list of potential stakeholders has been compiled
encompassing all known agencies, organizations, groups, and individuals with
interest or active involvement in water resource management, environmental
resources, flood protection, land use planning, or related areas. Stakeholders
will be invited to attend meetings of the Regional Water Management Group,
participate in workshops, and provide comment on drafts of the IRWMP.
The
main purpose of the Regional Water Management Group is to develop a plan for the
region (the IRWMP) that outlines the region’s priorities in terms of water
resource management, and that contains a prioritized list of projects which the
Group will submit to the California Department of Water Resources for possible
funding through the IRWM Grant Program (i.e., Proposition 84 and Proposition 1E
grant funds). The Regional Water Management Group will not necessarily create
project proposals themselves, but will identify projects in the region and
develop those projects in such a way as to make them stronger and more
attractive to the State for grant funding. The Regional Water Management Group
as a group has no special legal authority or regulatory power; it is simply a
group of local agencies and organizations that have volunteered to identify
water resource management projects in our region and submit grant applications
to the State on behalf of the region.