UNDER THE LOCAL GROUNDWATER MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE ACT OF 2000 THIS GRANT AGREEMENT, entered into by -2025

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The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) was enacted in order to halt overdraft and bring basins into balanced levels of pumping and recharge. SGMA requires local agencies to adopt groundwater sustainability plans for high- and medium-priority groundwater basins.
The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) defines sustainable groundwater management as managing and using groundwater without causing undesirable results such as: chronic groundwater level declines, groundwater storage reductions, seawater intrusion, water quality degradation, land subsidence, and surface
Overreliance on groundwater has caused these issues in in many of Californias groundwater basins. The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) was enacted in order to halt overdraft and bring basins into balanced levels of pumping and recharge.
The Groundwater Management Act, when it passed in 1980, mandated conservation from all sectors (agricultural, industrial, and municipal) leading to a trend that continues today: declining per person water use.
Sustainable groundwater resources development refers to the efficient management of existing groundwater resources as a source of water supply to meet the needs of the present, on a long term basis in an equitable manner sustaining its quality, without negotiating the risks associated with damage to aquifer physical

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The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act of 2014 (SGMA), consists of three legislative bills, Senate Bill SB 1168 (Pavley), Assembly Bill AB 1739 (Dickinson), and Senate Bill SB 1319 (Pavley). The legislation provides a framework for long-term sustainable groundwater management across California.
Groundwater sustainability is the development and use of groundwater resources to meet current and future beneficial uses without causing unacceptable environmental or socioeconomic consequences. (USGS Circular 1186.)

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