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Chapter 1. Short Title And Findings And Declarations of California Water Code >> Division 24. >> Chapter 1.

This division shall be known and may be cited as the Safe, Clean, Reliable Water Supply Act.
In placing this measure before the voters, the Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:
  (a) The state faces a water crisis that threatens our economy and environment.
  (b) The state's growing population has increasing needs for safe water supplies which are essential to the public health, safety, and welfare.
  (c) It is of paramount importance that the limited water resources of the state be protected from pollution, and conserved and recycled whenever economically, environmentally, and technically feasible.
  (d) The state should plan to meet the water supply needs of all beneficial uses of water, including urban, agricultural, and environmental, utilizing a wide range of strategies including water conservation and recycling, conjunctive use of surface and groundwater supplies, water transfers, and improvements in the state' s water storage and delivery systems to meet the growing water needs of the state.
  (e) This measure is a necessary first step toward providing for the state's long-term water supply requirements through a number of water management strategies.
  (f) The San Francisco Bay/Sacramento San Joaquin Delta Estuary (the Bay-Delta) is of statewide and national importance. The Bay-Delta provides habitat for more than 120 species of fish and wildlife and serves as a major link in our water delivery system for businesses and farms statewide and more than 22 million residents.
  (g) The state has signed an historic accord with federal officials and statewide water interests that calls for the development of a comprehensive and long-term solution for the water supply reliability, water quality, and environmental problems of the Bay-Delta.
  (h) Federal and state representatives have initiated a program known as CALFED, to develop a comprehensive and long-term solution to the problems associated with the Bay-Delta, including an equitable allocation of program costs among beneficiary groups. The success of the CALFED program is vital to the environmental and economic well-being of the state.
In enacting this measure, the people of California declare all of the following to be the objectives of this act:
  (a) To provide a safe, clean, affordable, and sufficient water supply to meet the needs of California residents, farms, and businesses.
  (b) To develop lasting water solutions that balance the needs of the state's economy and its environment.
  (c) To restore ecological health for native fish and wildlife, and their natural habitats, including wetlands.
  (d) To protect the integrity of the state's water supply system from catastrophic failure due to earthquakes and flooding.
  (e) To protect drinking water quality.
  (f) To protect the quality of life in our communities by ensuring recreational opportunities and maintaining parks, trees, and plants.