San Joaquin Valley – Delta-Mendota

Statistics

At-A-Glance

Located in California’s San Joaquin River hydrologic region, the San Joaquin Valley – Delta-Mendota subbasin is 764,964.86 acres in size. This High priority basin is home to an estimated 117,012 people (2010 value). It has approximately 4206 wells, of which approximately 112 are water supply wells. Groundwater accounts for approximately 53 percent of the basin’s water supply.

Source: CA DWR
Source: CA DWR

Basin Notes

2003: Bulletin 118 basin description

2014: CASGEM basin prioritization – high

2016: Boundary modification approved a boundary change with Madera subbasin 5-022.06

Revised basin boundary description

2018: Draft basin priority – high. Groundwater level and subsidence comments:

  • CRITICAL OVERDRAFT. Source: DWR 1) CASGEM/WDL/GWIDS: Longterm hydrographs show groundwater level decline. Source: DWR 2) The change in groundwater levels in the northern part of the subbasin (Tracy to Westley) appears to show a consistent decline in groundwater levels. This decline could be indicative of a developing overdraft condition in that area. The change in groundwater levels in the southern part of the subbasin (West of Newman) also appears to show a consistent decline in groundwater levels. This decline could also be indicative of a developing overdraft condition in that area. Source: Groundwater Management Plan for the Northern Agencies in the Delta-Mendota Canal Service Area, Groundwater Management Plan UpdateSan Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority, July 2011

Sources : 1) Current Land Subsidence in the San Joaquin Valley, USGS; 2) 2014 – Land Subsidence from Groundwater Use in California, California Water Foundation / James W. Borchers / Michael Carpenter, Luhdorff & Salmanini, April 2014; 3) Progress Report: Subsidence in the Central Valley, California, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, NASA 2015-16

2019: Basin boundary modification. Per DWR: It “revised a portion of the shared boundary between the Chowchilla and Delta-Mendota subbasins to align with the jurisdictional boundaries of Triangle T Water District and Clayton Water District.” Phase 2 draft priority: high.

2020: January – Multiple GSPs submitted to the Department of Water Resources.

2022: January 21 – DWR determines combined GSPs are incomplete

July 20 – revised Farmers GSP submitted to DWR

July 20 – revised San Luis and Delta Water Authority GSP submitted to DWR 

July 20 – revised Grasslands GSP submitted to DWR

July 20 – revised Aliso Water District revised GSP submitted to DWR

2023: March 2 – DWR finds revised GSPs inadequate

July 31 – Twenty three GSAs of the Delta-Mendota sub basin publish a joint GSP. Press release here. Document here

US Fish and Wildlife Service releases the 15-year plan, the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge Complex Final Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment

GSA Information