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Code · BILL · 116th Congress · H.R. 2473 (Introduced in House) — To promote water supply reliability and improved water management for rural communities, the State of California, and... · Sec. 3

Sec. 3. Ground water recharge planning

365 words·~2 min read·/bill/116/hr/2473/ih/section-3

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The Congress finds that— there is a lack of information regarding local ground water storage and recharge opportunities in the Western United States; additional information regarding local ground water storage and recharge opportunities can help inform future Federal and State funding activities and assist State government initiatives such as implementation of part 2.74 of the California Water Code (commonly known as the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act ); and challenges associated with drought and extreme aridity from changing weather patterns will require additional investment in ground water storage and recharge.
The purpose of this section is to help inform future Federal, State, local, and other investment in ground water recharge projects. In this section: The term Critically Overdrafted Basins means those basins identified by the California Department of Water Resources pursuant to part 2.74 of the California Water Code (commonly known as the California’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act ). The term Reclamation State means any Reclamation State (as defined in section 4014 of the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act ( 43 U.S.C. 390b note;
Public Law 114–322 )). The term Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Director of the United States Geological Survey. Not later than 4 years after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall complete an evaluation and report to Congress that identifies potential ground water storage and recharge opportunities in each Reclamation State including recharge opportunities in critically overdrafted basins. The report to Congress shall include— an assessment of potentially beneficial storage and recharge locations based on the Secretary’s assessment of— hydrologic attributes; geologic attributes; engineering attributes; water supply benefits; environmental benefits; infrastructure benefits related to mitigation of subsidence-related infrastructure damage; and sustainability benefits for critically overdrafted basins; and an assessment of potential conveyance infrastructure needs to move excess runoff to the recharge locations identified by the Secretary under this section.
To the maximum extent practicable, the Secretary shall coordinate research activities with Reclamation State agencies, ground water sustainability agencies, universities and non-profit organizations in a manner designed to assist with implementation of State-led initiatives such as part 2.74 of the California Water Code (commonly known as the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act ).
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Sec. 3
Ground water recharge planning
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