Title: Groundwater Monitoring Washington State Department of Ecology
1Groundwater Monitoring- Washington State
Department of Ecology
- July 13, 2007
- Charles F. Pitz
- Washington State Department of Ecology
- Environmental Assessment Program (EAP)
2- Why should we devote resources to assessing
groundwater conditions? - Groundwater is a vital natural resource for our
state - provides drinking water for gt60 of state
residents often the sole source - a major source of industrial and irrigation water
supply - groundwater baseflow sustains streamflow during
biologically critical low flow periods - dependence on groundwater is rapidly increasing
3- Groundwater is an important, but often
overlooked, component of the hydrologic cycle - Groundwater and surface water are in reality an
interconnected resource - Groundwater routinely interacts with the surface
water we spend so much time and money trying to
rehabilitate - Groundwater can exert a significant influence on
surface water quality, quantity, and habitat
value - Water management decisions that ignore the
contributions of, or impacts to, groundwater are
not sustainable in the long run
4Groundwater Quality
- The cost of repairing groundwater problems is
very high and in certain cases is simply not
economically feasible or technically possible - Large portions of state aquifer systems are
already contaminated above drinking water health
criteria (e.g. Columbia Basin, Whatcom Co.) - There are gt1 million private well owners with
almost no knowledge about the quality of the
water they are drinking - Remember that quality is an important part of
determining new supply
5- Groundwater Quantity
- In drought years our dependence on groundwater
rapidly increases (emergency wells) - Already a number of areas in the state showing
significant water-level decline - Recharge patterns, and therefore aquifer storage,
may be changing (think climate change) - Growing interest in using state aquifers to store
and recover water (ASR) - Groundwater availability will be one of the most
important natural resource limits dictating the
future development of the states economy
6Theres clearly a high demand for groundwater in
Washington
Szymarek, 2006
Are we in the middle of a gold rush for more
water?
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9- As an agency, we have formal programs to monitor
and describe ambient conditions for - air
- fresh surface water quality/temp
- stream flows
- marine water and sediment quality
- fish habitat
- beach health
- toxics in fish tissue
- stream biological conditions
- invasive aquatic plants
- However, despite its high value, and the stress
on the resource, there is no formal state program
to monitor and assess larger-scale groundwater
conditions - The resources devoted to monitoring groundwater
conditions are not commensurate with the value of
the resource to the state
10- Why doesnt the state have a formal groundwater
monitoring program? - Out of sight, out of mind
- - groundwater monitoring is expensive work
- The US federal government does not dictate gw
management or monitoring requirements to states
like it does other environmental media state
responsibility - Currently no explicit state-level legislative
mandate or funding
What DO our state groundwater scientists work on??
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12 WA Dept. of Ecology Groundwater Monitoring
- EA Program (agency monitoring branch)
- Groundwater team historically focused on
client-driven, one-time studies of groundwater
conditions generally concentrated on water
quality issues, problem-focused studies - All data goes to web-based agency database (EIM)
- Over the past 5 years, weve been developing and
testing a proposal for a formal state Groundwater
Assessment Program (GAP) A more effective way
to deliver information about groundwater to those
who need it?
13Ecology Groundwater Monitoring (cont.)
- Water Resources Program Regional Water Level
Monitoring Efforts - Periodically measure water levels in approx. 620
wells mostly in eastern WA - Could be characterized as a spare-time effort
what success weve had is due to the dedication
of individual groundwater staff in the regions,
beyond their primary duties - Essentially 4 different state water-level
monitoring programs - Differing levels of sophistication and coverage
- 4 separate databases, not linked
- Difficult to access the information outside of
each region - Limited formal standardization and documentation
of procedures, QA of data - Starting to deploy automated recording devices on
a larger scale - Early discussions about bringing databases
together into a common format but will be a
labor intensive effort ()
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15- Who else is monitoring groundwater in Washington?
- USGS, private consultants, counties, larger
municipalities, tribes - 2002 survey of local monitoring programs
- WDOH Drinking Water Program
- Is the combined monitoring work adequate?
- Wide variety of sophistication, data quality
- Often poorly documented
- Often one-time or short duration event, not
sustained - For water quality, often limited list of
parameters tested - Not necessarily focused on the data needs of the
Department of Ecology - Getting all these organizations to cooperate
would be a major challenge () - GAP Proposal
- one of the reasons why we like this approach is
it synthesizes
162002 Survey of Locally-based Groundwater
Monitoring in Washington State
172002 Local Groundwater Monitoring Survey
18Washington State Department of Health Drinking
Water Program
Often polished water monitoring, not an adequate
substitute for a groundwater monitoring program
goal is focused on quality of water delivered to
the consumer
19- GAP Proposal and Pilot Study
- EAP has proposed a new state groundwater
monitoring program focused on field-based
measurement and characterization - Designed with the business needs of the agency in
mind, but beneficial for many stakeholders - Basic measurement and description, provides the
foundation for decision-making (not a magic
bullet just a requirement of informed water
management) - Comprehensive approach
- Hydrogeologic characterization
- Water quality
- Water levels
- GW/SW interactions
- Local-scale
- Augments, rather than replaces, existing efforts
(e.g. WR Program water-level monitoring)
20GAP Proposal (cont.)
- Pilot study of approach in Centralia/Chehalis
area (2003-2005) - Technical report posted to the web - serves as a
good example of the sort of product that would
be generated by a continuing program - (http//www.ecy.wa.gov/pubs/0503040.pdf)
- Lessons-learned report to management also on
web (with cost estimates of permanent program)
http//www.ecy.wa.gov/biblio/0703008.html
21If you only read one book about water this year