1 / 44

East San Joaquin Water Quality Coalition Parry Klassen Executive Director Merced River

East San Joaquin Water Quality Coalition Parry Klassen Executive Director Merced River. In operation since 2003 2,297 Landowner / operators 540,782 irrigated acres Madera, Merced, Stanislaus, Tuolumne, Mariposa counties We manage group permit for our members. Coalition Overview.

Download Presentation

East San Joaquin Water Quality Coalition Parry Klassen Executive Director Merced River

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. East San Joaquin Water Quality Coalition Parry Klassen Executive Director Merced River

  2. In operation since 2003 2,297 Landowner / operators 540,782 irrigated acres Madera, Merced, Stanislaus, Tuolumne, Mariposa counties We manage group permit for our members Coalition Overview

  3. Board of Directors Board Officers Parry Klassen, Board Chairman Coalition for Urban Rural Executive Director Environmental Stewardship; fruit grower Wayne Zipser, Vice-Chairman Stanislaus Co. Farm Bureau Bill McKinney, Treasurer almond grower Board Members Amanda Carvajal Merced Co. Farm Bureau John Eisenhut Hilltop Ranch, almond grower Brian Franzia West Coast Vineyards Richard Gemperle Gemperle Enterprises, almond grower Anja K. Raudabaugh Madera Co. Farm Bureau Alan Reynolds Gallo Vineyards, Inc. Albert Rossini Rossini Ag, grape grower Jim Wagner Wilbur Ellis Co. Mike Neimi Turlock Irrigation District Non-voting Gary Caseri Stanislaus County Agricultural Commissioner David Robinson Merced County Agricultural Commissioner Bob Rolan Madera County Agricultural Commissioner Dianna Waller Natural Resources Conservation Service Dennis Wescot San Joaquin River Group Authority

  4. How many acres are you farming? • Under 100 • Over 100

  5. Are you a Coalition member? • Yes • No

  6. Would you be willing to stay an extra ½ hour if needed? • Yes • No

  7. RWB Slide Presentation

  8. 1984-2004

  9. 2005-2010

  10. Waste Discharge RequirementsIrrigated Lands Regulatory Program ESJWQC Approach • Classification of vulnerable areas • Well head protection program • Nitrogen management plans

  11. Waste Discharge RequirementsIrrigated Lands Regulatory Program Assessment Report (due January 2014) • Rank land vulnerability based on Assessment Report • High Vulnerability Areas ID’d using DPR pesticide groundwater protection areas, State Water Board vulnerable areas • 2014: Farm assessment requirement starts • 2014: Nitrogen budget requirement starts • 2014 Well head protection • Low Vulnerability • Keep farm assessment/nitrogen budgets on farm

  12. ILRP Draft Vulnerable Areas

  13. VulnerableAreas Stanislaus County

  14. Wellhead Protection BMPs Wellhead house keeping Prevent ponding for extended periods Waste can enter if wellhead/casing is cracked or improperly sealed Grade away from wellhead to prevent storm runoff ponding Open discharge well Air gap between well discharge and receiving device Pressurized systems: Back flow preventers In case of power failures and/or pump malfunction Back siphoning can directly contaminate groundwater Abandoned wells Develop plan to manage

  15. Nitrogen Management Plan Components • Apply N at crop removal rates • Dairies regulated to 140% of crop use (N applications) • Test well water for nitrogen levels (then adjust N applications accordingly) • Leaf / tissue testing • Soil testing • Irrigation management

  16. Proposed reporting of nitrogen budget sheet information: • Submit form to Coalition • Coalition compiles ratios; separates into crops, “reporting areas” • “Reporting area” depends on aquifer, basin, sub basins, soil types etc.

  17. Field Reporting Map Completed by Grower

  18. Potentially applying too much N (outliers) Most growers (UC recommended rates)

  19. What the area report should show: • Where most growers are with nitrogen ratios • The “Outliners:” those who apply too much or too little • Focus of outreach with commodity specific information/references

  20. Waste Discharge RequirementsIrrigated Lands Regulatory Program Representative Monitoring Confirm that management practices implemented to improve groundwater quality are working • Are agricultural management practices protective of groundwater in high vulnerability areas • Assess effectiveness of any newly implemented management practices. Coalition to rank/prioritize high vulnerability areas and commodities and present phased approach Coordinated effort by coalitions/commodity groups to complete

  21. Waste Discharge RequirementsIrrigated Lands Regulatory ProgramRegional Water Board process • Next steps • Public review of draft WDR • Comment deadline July 31, 2012 • October 4, 2012 Regional Water Board ILRP meeting • Approve or delay? • After passage, ESJ has 30 days to apply to be Third Party • 120 day “holiday” to join coalition directly • Holiday ends February 1, 2013 (approximate)

  22. Would you be willing to work with a CCA to complete a nitrogen balance sheet? • Yes • No

  23. Do you sample your supply for nitrate levels? • Yes • No

  24. Do you adjust your fertilizer applications based on the nitrate levels? • Yes • No

  25. What is the most important factor in determining your nitrogen application rate for each field? • Field history of nitrogen applications • Soil nitrogen test • Leaf/Peliole test • Nitrate level in supply water • Other

  26. What is the second most important factor in determining your nitrogen application rate for each field? • Field history of nitrogen applications • Soil nitrogen test • Leaf/Peliole test • Nitrate level in supply water • Other

  27. Would you log on to a secure internet site to fill out Coalition forms? • No, not interested • I’d need lots of assistance • I’d need some assistance • Yes, without assistance

  28. Is land around your well head graded to drain stormwater away? • Yes • No

  29. Do you have non operating wells on your property? • Yes • No

  30. If using pressurized system, do you have a backflow prevention device on the wellhead? • Yes • No

  31. Should ESJ add a member service that seeks quantity discounts for member needs? (ala farmer cooperative seeking quantity discount) • Yes • No • Not Sure

  32. Identify company(s) to perform well water testing for N levels? (Deliver own sample) • Yes • No • Not Sure

  33. Identify company(s) that performs well sampling/analysis/applied N calculation? (Full service) • Yes • No • Not Sure

  34. Identify company(s) for well destruct/sealing? • Yes • No • Not Sure

  35. How long should we wait until our next update meeting? • August (after comment period) • October (after Board vote) • December (ESJ annual meetings)

  36. What is the best way to reach non-members about the sign up holiday? • Mailings • Farm Bureau Newspapers • Local Newspapers • Letter From Water Board to Non-Member

  37. Should we hold an early evening meeting in August (5-7pm)? • Yes • No • Better to have it midday

  38. Was this meeting: • Too long • Not long enough • About right

  39. Parry Klassen 559-288-8125 www.esjcoalition.org

More Related