GrokSurf's San Diego

Local observations on water, environment, technology, law & politics

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    GrokSurf's San Diego by George J. Janczyn is produced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. Anything on this blog copied and used elsewhere online must include attribution and a link to the original on this blog, or a citation with the URL if reprinted on hard copy.

     

     

Archive for January, 2010

California drought: report from Congressional Research Service

Posted by George J. Janczyn on January 6, 2010

Here’s a link to the Congressional Research Service report, “California Drought: Hydrological and Regulatory Water Supply Issues” issued in December.

Interestingly, in analyzing State Water Project and Central Valley Project water exports during previous droughts, the report found that “more water is being exported in 2009 than during the worst years of the previous major drought, even accounting for reductions due to the new Delta smelt BiOp … and post-1992 regulatory restrictions” (pg. 18). The increase in water shipments, however, went to municipal and industrial contractors, while certain agricultural water service contractors saw reduced allocations. Lowered groundwater levels are likely due both to drought conditions and increased pumping.

The report concluded that “In the absence of the current three-year hydrological drought, it is unlikely that the existing regulatory water delivery restrictions would have created controversy of a similar magnitude. Rather, the current drought has created a fundamental shortage of supply.”

 

Posted in Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

San Diego Bay polluters get a caution flag

Posted by George J. Janczyn on January 6, 2010

Last October 14 the city of San Diego filed a lawsuit against numerous parties that it considered responsible for payment of cleanup costs for extensive contamination of San Diego Bay. At the time, San Diego CityBeat noted that the city had been in the midst of mediated settlement discussions, asking why would a lawsuit be filed if a settlement was in the works?

That was a good question. Today’s U-T news that the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board is proposing to let the polluters off the hook for 86% of the contamination originally targeted certainly marginalizes the lawsuit. Inexplicably, the Union-Tribune article about this says “Critics contend that the new approach reflects a common tactic by industry: threatening litigation and stalling costly environmental projects until new, more business-friendly regulators take office. “

A new approach by industry? On the contrary, this proposal seems to be a capitulation to industrial polluters and it would render the nearly-bankrupt city’s lawsuit against the polluters, um, bankrupt.

(Click here for links to additional background information)

 

Posted in Environment, Land use, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Water prices in San Diego: at least there’s water to pay for

Posted by George J. Janczyn on January 5, 2010

Colorado River Aqueduct

We’ve known it was coming and now that January is here, the next water rate increase is taking effect. Every time we get an incremental water rate increase, the news media jumps on the story and before long the comments threads are alive with people complaining about being ripped off for using water or for conserving water. Sigh.

My 3-member family lives in a 2600 sq. ft home on a 14,700 sq. ft. landscaped lot near Lake Murray and we used 12 HCF in the last two-month period (to me it still seems too much but I think it compares well with sparing consumers). The water used fee was $35.72 for those two months. There’s also a base fee for another $35.18 regardless how much water was used, but that’s money for fixed operating expenses. Compare that with our nonessential Cox Cable bill which is $108.67 per month for TV alone. From that perspective, even a doubling of the water used fee would not be a big deal, especially knowing it’s for a necessity of life.

One water-related fee that I expect to show dramatic increases in the future is the sewer fee, which for our home right now stands at $100.21 per billing period. That’s also a fixed fee, charged regardless of amount of water used. It’s very expensive to treat sewage and the price reflects that. Still, San Diego is not yet treating sewage at the Point Loma facility to secondary standards as required by the Clean Water Act, so when the city is finally forced to take that step we will certainly see the sewer fee rise, and not just a little. Further, if our city is going to succeed in further reducing its reliance on imported water, it’s going to have to expand its water recycling program. Water recycling is part of the wastewater treatment system and additional investment in that will also mean higher sewer fees.

Iron Mountain Pump Station

I’m certainly concerned about paying more for water and related infrastructure expense, but I just don’t see widespread administrative fraud or negligence there. My big concern is how precarious our existence here is because we rely so heavily on imported water. There’s a huge water delivery infrastructure bringing us water from northern California and the Colorado River, but it’s very fragile at many points. A major disruption to the delivery system could be devastating. That’s what really scares me, and it’s why I recently wrote this opinion on water reuse last month. When it comes to its water, increased self-sufficiency should be San Diego’s number-one priority.

 

(Photo of Iron Mountain Pump Station courtesy of Ron Gilbert from http://www.ipernity.com/doc/ronslog/1350447. Photo of California Aqueduct found widely reprinted online without attribution, possibly originated from the State Department of Water Resources)

Posted in Water | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Sunday visit to Big Rock

Posted by George J. Janczyn on January 3, 2010

One more day to savor the sun and waves before the first work-week of the year arrives. Big Rock is my favorite San Diego break for lefts. Waves here come out of deep water quickly on to a shallow (sharp!) reef and then break along a rock shelf which makes for hollow tubes and catapults from the backwash. The transition from deep water to reef is so abrupt that the takeoff zone is narrow and tricky. If the wave doesn’t look like it’s about to break on you, you’re probably too far out to catch it. I really liked this Jeff Alexander 6’1″ board that belonged to a local resident named Rand:

 

So, here are the waves:

 

Posted in Surfing, Videos | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Friday spot check: Ocean Beach

Posted by George J. Janczyn on January 1, 2010

It was a pleasant New Year’s Day for the morning patrol at Ocean Beach. I started shooting at about 8:30am between the little jetties. There was one unfortunate kick-out contact at about 4:09 after which a few words were exchanged, but everyone seemed mellow and happy to be catching waves.

Click here to see the entire Friday Spot Check series.

 

Posted in Friday spot check, Surfing, Videos | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

 
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