13578
. (a) In order to achieve the statewide goal for recycled
water use established in Section 13577 and to implement the Governor'
s Advisory Drought Planning Panel Critical Water Shortage Contingency
Plan recommendations, Section F2, as submitted December 29, 2000,
the department shall identify and report to the Legislature on
opportunities for increasing the use of recycled water, as defined in
paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 13575, and identify
constraints and impediments, including the level of state financial
assistance available for project construction, to increasing the use
of recycled water.
(b) The department shall convene a task force, to be known as the
2002 Recycled Water Task Force, to advise the department in
implementation of subdivision (a), including making recommendations
to the Legislature regarding the following:
(1) How to further the use of recycled water in industrial and
commercial applications, including, but not limited to, those
applications set forth in Section 13552.8. The task force shall
evaluate the current regulatory framework of state and local rules,
regulations, ordinances, and permits to identify the obstacles and
disincentives to industrial and commercial reuse. Issues to be
investigated include, but are not limited to, applicability of visual
inspections instead of pressure tests for cross-connections between
potable and nonpotable water systems, dual piping trenching
restrictions, fire suppression system design, and backflow
protections.
(2) Changes in the Uniform Plumbing Code, published by the
International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, that
are appropriate to facilitate the use of recycled water in industrial
and commercial settings. The department shall make recommendations
to the California Building Standards Commission with regard to
suggested revisions to the California Plumbing Code necessary to
incorporate the changes identified by the task force.
(3) Changes in state statutes or the current regulatory framework
of state and local rules, regulations, ordinances, and permits
appropriate to increase the use of recycled water for commercial
laundries and toilet and urinal flushing in structures including, but
not limited to, those defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13553.
The department shall identify financial incentives to help offset the
cost of retrofitting privately and publicly owned structures.
(4) The need to reconvene the California Potable Reuse Committee
established by the department in 1993 or convene a successor
committee to update the committee's finding that planned indirect
potable reuse of recycled water by augmentation of surface water
supplies would not adversely affect drinking water quality if certain
conditions were met.
(5) The need to augment state water supplies using water use
efficiency strategies identified in the CALFED Bay-Delta Program. In
its report pursuant to subdivision (a), the department shall identify
ways to coordinate with CALFED to assist local communities in
educating the public with regard to the statewide water supply
benefits of local recycling projects and the level of public health
protection ensured by compliance with the uniform statewide water
recycling criteria developed by the State Department of Public Health
in accordance with Section 13521.
(6) Impediments or constraints, other than water rights, related
to increasing the use of recycled water in applications for
agricultural, environmental, or irrigation uses, as determined by the
department.
(c) (1) The task force shall be convened by the department and be
comprised of one representative from each of the following state
agencies:
(A) The department.
(B) The State Department of Public Health.
(C) The state board.
(D) The California Environmental Protection Agency.
(E) The CALFED Bay-Delta Program.
(F) The Department of Food and Agriculture.
(G) The California Building Standards Commission.
(H) The University of California.
(I) The Natural Resources Agency.
(2) The task force shall also include one representative from a
recognized environmental advocacy group and one representative from a
consumer advocacy group, as determined by the department, and one
representative of local agency health officers, one representative of
urban water wholesalers, one representative from a groundwater
management entity, one representative of water districts, one
representative from a nonprofit association of public and private
members created to further the use of recycled water, one
representative of commercial real estate, one representative of land
development, one representative of industrial interests, and at least
two representatives from each of the following as defined in Section
13575:
(A) Recycled water producer.
(B) Recycled water wholesaler.
(C) Retail water supplier.
(d) The department and the task force shall report to the
Legislature not later than July 1, 2003.
(e) The department shall carry out the duties of this section only
to the extent that funds pursuant to Section 79145, enacted as part
of the Safe Drinking Water, Clean Water, Watershed Protection, and
Flood Protection Act (Division 26 (commencing with Section 79000)),
are made available for the purposes of this section.