Title: Marion and Sumter Counties Stakeholders Workshop
1Marion and Sumter Counties Stakeholders Workshop
2Marion and Sumter CountiesHydrogeology and
Water Use Trends
3Marion and Sumter Counties
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5Land Surface Elevations
6Vertical Exaggeration 20x
7Vertical Exaggeration 20x
8Surface Water Basins
9Major Surface Water Drainage
10Location of Hydrogeologic Cross Section
11Generalized North-South Hydrogeologic Cross
Section
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16Areas of Confined/Unconfined UFA
17Recharge to Upper Floridan Aquifer
18Monitor Well Locations
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20Groundwater Basins
21Groundwater Basins and Flow
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242004 Estimated Water Use
25Environmental Resources
26Groundwater Basins and Contributing Areas to
Major Springs
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29Discharge of 1st Magnitude Springs in the SWFWMD
- Kings Bay 630 mgd
- Rainbow 450 mgd
- Homosassa 223 mgd
- Chassahowitzka 173 mgd
- Weeki Wachee 114 mgd
- Total 1,590 bgd
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312004 Estimated Water Use
32Demand Projections Northern Region of the SWFWMD
2000-2025 (mgd)
Note Public supply demands are updated from
published demands contained in the 2006
RWSP
33Demand Projections Marion and Sumter
Counties2000-2025 (mgd)
Note Public supply demands are updated from
published demands contained in the 2006
RWSP
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35Common Issue Increasing Public Supply
Growth, Water-Intensive Patterns of Development
36Water-Intensive Patterns of Development
37County-wide Public Supply Per Capita Use
Rates
- Central and Southern Counties
- 5yr Average 114 gpd/c
- Ranges from 86 to 145 gpd/c
- Northern Counties
- 5yr Average 167 gpd/c
- Ranges from 146 to 172 gpd/c
- Note Per capita usage rates are affected by
factors such as source substitution and the
number of residents per household.
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44Northern Planning AreaWater Resource Conditions
- Resources are generally in good condition from a
regional perspective - High growth area with pattern of development that
has trended toward high water demands - Areas of concern have emerged
- Opportunity exists to develop a strategy to
prevent local impacts from coalescing into a
regional problem
45WATER DEMAND
CONSERVATION
J.W.PARKER 15AUG2002
46Questions?
47What is a Water Use Caution Area (WUCA)?
48What is a Water Use Caution Area?
- A WUCA is a region of the District where the
Governing Board determines additional regulation
is necessary to address water resource concerns
49Declaring a WUCA
- ? A WUCA is based on a Governing Board
determination that - regional action is necessary to address
cumulative water withdrawals. - ? To address present or future
- adverse impacts to the water resources or the
public interest.
50Declaring a WUCA
- Purpose of a WUCA
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- - to impose special requirements for
existing water users and permit applicants. - - to prevent or remedy specific problems.
51Declaring a WUCA
- Considerations
- Water availability
- Water quality
- Impacts to wetlands
- Impacts to lake stages or surface water flows
- Impacts to land uses
52Regulatory Components
- Regulations are developed case-by-case to address
area-specific issues. - Regulations are augmented by non-regulatory
components. - Regulations and non-regulatory approaches
developed through a workgroup effort with
stakeholders and interested persons from the
affected area.
53Regulatory Components
- EXAMPLE Northern Tampa Bay WUCA
- Issue Ground water withdrawals causing
wetland and lake impacts. -
54Regulatory Components
EXAMPLE Northern Tampa Bay WUCA
55LEVY
MARION
CITRUS
SUMTER
LAKE
HERNANDO
PASCO
HILLSBOROUGH
POLK
PINELLAS
MANATEE
HARDEE
HIGHLANDS
Northern Tampa Bay WUCA
DESOTO
SARASOTA
CHARLOTTE
56Regulatory Components
- EXAMPLE Northern Tampa Bay WUCA
- Goal Reduce ground water pumpage
- Solutions
- ? Reduce water demand (conservation)
- ? Increase alternative sources
- - Reclaimed Water
- - Alternative Supplies (surface water,
desalination) -
57Regulatory Components
- EXAMPLE Northern Tampa Bay WUCA
- Regulations developed
- ? Enhanced public supply water
conservation requirements (e.g., rate
structures, water audits) - ? Enhanced irrigation efficiency
requirements (agriculture, golf courses) - ? Lowered threshold for metering of
Permits (100,000 gpd rather than 500,000
gpd) - ? Reclaimed water requirements
58Questions?
59Non-Regulatory Approaches
- Inclusion in Regional Water Supply Plan
- Increased monitoring research
- Increased assistance with conservation, use of
reclaimed water, water supply planning
alternative development
60Non-Regulatory Approaches(continued)
- Education
- Youth and Adult
- Indoor and Outdoor
- Messaging
- Watershed planning
- Assist local government water resource planning
61Non-Regulatory Approaches(continued)
- Cost-share projects
- Alternative Water Sources
- Conservation
- Reuse of Reclaimed Water
- Research
- Resource assessments
- Irrigation needs of grasses crops
- Water saving devices
62What do you think?
- Demands exceeding groundwater supplies
- Demands rapidly growing
- A need to be more efficient
- A need to develop alternative supplies
- A need to avoid impacts to the environment
- A need to prevent a recovery strategy
63Next Steps
- Continue taking input until April 23
- Next workshop April 23 Sumter County
Fairgrounds 6 p.m. - Report back to Governing Board April 24
- Please make sure we have your email address
64- PLANNING_at_WATERMATTERS.ORG
65Questions?