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upaloopa

(11,417 posts)
7. We voted for that in November
Tue Dec 16, 2014, 05:00 PM
Dec 2014

California Proposition 1, the Water Bond (Assembly Bill 1471), was on the November 4, 2014 ballot in California as a legislatively-referred bond act. This measure was approved. This measure replaced a previous measure known as Proposition 43.[1]

The measure will enact the Water Quality, Supply, and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014. Proposition 1 will:[2]
Authorize $7.12 billion in general obligation bonds for state water supply infrastructure projects, such as public water system improvements, surface and groundwater storage, drinking water protection, water recycling and advanced water treatment technology, water supply management and conveyance, wastewater treatment, drought relief, emergency water supplies, and ecosystem and watershed protection and restoration.
Appropriate money from the General Fund to pay off bonds.
Require certain projects to provide matching funds from non-state sources in order to receive bond funds.

Specific spending proposals in the proposition include:[2]
$520 million to improve water quality for “beneficial use,” for reducing and preventing drinking water contaminants, disadvantaged communities, and the State Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund Small Community Grant Fund.
$1.495 billion for competitive grants for multibenefit ecosystem and watershed protection and restoration projects.
$810 million for expenditures on, and competitive grants and loans to, integrated regional water management plan projects.
$2.7 billion for water storage projects, dams and reservoirs.
$725 million for water recycling and advanced water treatment technology projects.
$900 million for competitive grants and loans for projects to prevent or clean up the contamination of groundwater that serves as a source of drinking water.
$395 million for statewide flood management projects and activities.

Gov. Jerry Brown (D) called on the legislature to replace the previous $11.14 billion bond (Proposition 43) with a cheaper $6 billion bond on June 25, 2014.[3] Brown called the previous water bond "a pork-laden water bond… with a price tag beyond what’s reasonable or affordable."[4] The legislature passed the new $7.12 billion bond on August 13, 2014.

The original water bond was moved twice. Originally certified to be on the state's 2010 ballot, it was removed and placed on the 2012 ballot. On July 5, 2012, the state legislature approved a bill to take the measure off the 2012 ballot and put it on the 2014 ballot.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Time to invent solar powered desalinization and humidity recovery MrScorpio Dec 2014 #1
I never got that S. California had much humidity. TexasProgresive Dec 2014 #2
How about bringing these to Cali? MrScorpio Dec 2014 #4
We'd need thousands upon thousands of them KamaAina Dec 2014 #8
Seriously, no humidity. LeftyMom Dec 2014 #14
Close to the ocean we do Auggie Dec 2014 #5
It's near a big ocean CreekDog Dec 2014 #11
How about fog collectors in areas like around San Francisco? NutmegYankee Dec 2014 #40
places around San Francisco already have fog collectors CreekDog Dec 2014 #47
You folks had a wicked heat dome this summer. NutmegYankee Dec 2014 #53
California is a big state nichomachus Dec 2014 #18
The coast is somewhat humid shanti Dec 2014 #27
I grew up in New Orleans and Houston TexasProgresive Dec 2014 #29
One reason I don't live in the south! shanti Dec 2014 #30
both coastal and interior areas have roughly equal amounts of moisture in the air CreekDog Dec 2014 #51
im not a meterologist shanti Dec 2014 #58
California needs more reservoirs -- big ones -- to retain more runoff and snow melt Auggie Dec 2014 #3
We voted for that in November upaloopa Dec 2014 #7
Yes, I voted for it ... Auggie Dec 2014 #25
Where? CreekDog Dec 2014 #12
I don't know Auggie Dec 2014 #24
You just decreed an answer and now you say you don't have any? CreekDog Dec 2014 #31
Yes Auggie Dec 2014 #55
To wit: The Sites Reservoir Brother Buzz Dec 2014 #15
you want to take more water out of the Delta? CreekDog Dec 2014 #32
Yes, capturing some of the winter flood water that shoots down the Sacramento river and.... Brother Buzz Dec 2014 #33
what about the people who get their drinking water from the Delta? CreekDog Dec 2014 #48
The salinity isn't going to change Brother Buzz Dec 2014 #52
We need more small water catchment. roody Dec 2014 #66
Time to shut down the frackers, and the for-profit water bottlers. Dont call me Shirley Dec 2014 #6
That tops my list too! Tell it to Governor Brown, who isn't listening. n/t CaliforniaPeggy Dec 2014 #17
+1 eom roody Dec 2014 #22
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2014 #9
Canada can keep their tar sands too! Dont call me Shirley Dec 2014 #19
Americans shower too much wasting lots of water and energy ErikJ Dec 2014 #10
most of our water is used for agriculture and urban landscaping CreekDog Dec 2014 #13
Here's the graphic-77% ag, only 8% residential ErikJ Dec 2014 #16
The water doesn't go away in many places. I have an apartment in Minneapolis and a log home in the truthisfreedom Dec 2014 #36
Calif water comes mostly from mountain reservoirs ErikJ Dec 2014 #38
All my shower water goes underground to 8 spots in my orchard. roody Dec 2014 #23
Fuck that, my job is very physcial. MicaelS Dec 2014 #41
Just applies to sedentary Americans ErikJ Dec 2014 #42
You don't need it? former9thward Dec 2014 #43
I spent 5 months in Europe when I still showered every day ErikJ Dec 2014 #46
Well you obviously haven't been to Europe in a few decades CreekDog Dec 2014 #49
Been to 41 countries so far. former9thward Dec 2014 #56
you visited 41 countries in Europe? CreekDog Dec 2014 #59
I said 41 countries. former9thward Dec 2014 #61
you observed Europeans not showering? CreekDog Dec 2014 #62
Thailand, Dominican Republic, etc. tabasco Dec 2014 #70
Never been to the DR. former9thward Dec 2014 #71
Then stay out tabasco Dec 2014 #68
And I will be happy not to see you. former9thward Dec 2014 #69
Pics from an old thread Trillo Dec 2014 #20
What became of the 220 tons of snow that fell in Buffalo NY? rocktivity Dec 2014 #21
it doesn't matter here CreekDog Dec 2014 #50
where is Wilhelm Reich when we need him ? olddots Dec 2014 #26
And probably does not count the water used in fracking. oldandhappy Dec 2014 #28
Hmm MFrohike Dec 2014 #34
Your food prices would sky rocket. former9thward Dec 2014 #44
Ok MFrohike Dec 2014 #45
Most of the greens grown "off season" come from California. NutmegYankee Dec 2014 #54
State's estimated rainfall in last 10 days: 10 trillion gallons Ward Dec 2014 #35
at 11 tril x 8lbs /2000 that 44 billion tons- do those kinds of weight changes certainot Dec 2014 #37
ROFLMFAO snooper2 Dec 2014 #57
recovering from the drought and the drought coming to an end are two different things. olddad56 Dec 2014 #39
a lucky coastal state with an ocean of water right there Sunlei Dec 2014 #60
how much energy do you want the state to desalinate water? CreekDog Dec 2014 #63
we've never made a tunnel under, through mountians before or dug a ditch or used a syphon Sunlei Dec 2014 #64
you're telling us to spend money flooding CreekDog Dec 2014 #65
The shipment and storage issues have already been worked out for much of CA. Xithras Dec 2014 #67
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