Title: Land Use
1Land Use Historic Trendsand Future Projections
- Oakdale Irrigation DistrictMay 17, 2005
2The Water Resources Plan must meet all five of
OIDs goals1
- Provide long-term protection to OIDs water
rights - Address federal, state and local water challenges
- Rebuild/modernize an out-of-date system to meet
changing customer needs - Develop affordable ways to finance improvements
- Involve the public in the planning process
1Board Workshop, Dec. 14, 2004
3Each Goal will be evaluated using comprehensive
studies and tools
- Provide long-term protection to OIDs water
rights - Address federal, state and local water challenges
- Rebuild/modernize an out-of-date system to meet
changing customer needs - Develop affordable ways to finance improvements
- Involve the public inthe planning process
4Frequent involvement ensures toolsand studies
meet OID needs
CEQAStrategy
- Provide long-term protection to OIDs water
rights - Address federal, state and local water challenges
- Rebuild/modernize an out-of-date system to meet
changing customer needs - Develop affordable ways to finance improvements
- Involve the public inthe planning process
Land Use Today Water Balance 6/05 Infrastructure
7/05
Infrastructure,Resources, LandUse and
WaterSources/Uses Tools
Finance and Rate Model
Strategic Communicationsand Outreach Plan
5Tools will enable identification of alternatives
that achieve goals
Alternatives will include
- Facilities
- Customer service policies
- Financing options
Goals
Tools
6CEQA Process Can Be Initiated When Best Apparent
Alternative is Identified
Goals
Tools
May-July 05
7Agenda
- Introduction
- Historic Land Use Trends
- Future Land Use Projections
- Observations and Conclusions
- Next Steps
8Observations and Conclusions
- Within OID we forecast land use conversions that
will substantially change the water needs of
OIDs customers. - Irrigated agriculture has increased outside of
the district offering good potential for
expansion of service. - There will be less demand for OID supplied water
inside the district in the future.
9Future land use is the foundation for all of our
subsequent work
10Historic Land Use
- Sources of data
- DWR (1996 and 2004 Land Use Surveys)
- OID billing records
- City/County plans
- Soils and topography
- Grower and industry communications
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132004 Land Use Inside OID
Urban / Industrial(7,700 acres) 12
NativeVegetation /Dryland(3,800 acres) 6
Rice(4,300 acres) 6
Pasture(32,000 acres)48
Deciduous Trees(10,300 acres)15
Corn / Oats(9,000 acres) 13
142004 Land Use Outside OID
Urban / Industrial(400 acres) 1
Pasture(5,400 acres) 9
Corn / Oats(3,700 acres) 6
Deciduous Trees(6,900 acres)11
Rice(100 acres)0
Native Vegetation /Dryland(46,300 acres)73
15Land Use Change Inside OID
32,200 30,000
12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0
1996 2004
Acres
Pasture
Corn / Oats
DeciduousTrees
Rice
Native Vegetation /Dryland
Urban /Industrial
Land Use Type
16Land Use Change Outside OID
52,300 46,300
8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0
1996 2004
Acres
Pasture
Corn / Oats
DeciduousTrees
Rice
Native Vegetation /Dryland
Urban /Industrial
Land Use Type
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191996-2004 Deciduous Trees
- Tree acreage increased by 30 (2,400 acres)
inside OID and by 130 (3,900 acres) outside OID - In 2004 10,000 acres inside OID,7,000 acres
outside - All-time high market price driving aggressive
plantings now - Perennial crop (once in, remains inthrough 2025)
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221996-2004 Pasture
- Staying essentially constant inside OID at 32,000
acres - Inside OID is moving from large parcels to more
numerous smaller parcels - Gains inside OID are in NW and SE areas
- Many smaller parcels in San Joaquin Co.
- Pasture outside of OID is growing rapidly(46
increase to 4,600 acres)
231996-2004 Native Vegetation/Dryland
- Significant loss inside OID(-54, -4,400 acres)
- Most remaining native vegetation is not suitable
for irrigated agriculture development - Outside decreased by -11, -6,000 acres
- Changes outside occurred mostly on eastern edge
of OID - Changes outside to mostly trees and pasture
24Existing Urban Land Use
1990Population
2004Population
Average AnnualGrowth Rate
Area
Oakdale Riverbank Rural OID SOI Area Modesto
11,700 8,500 -- 165,000
17,100 18,500 -- 206,000
2.6 5.3 -- 1.5
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27Current Customer Base
- OID currently serves 2,800 ag customers on
approx. 57,000 assessed acres and 700 domestic
accounts. - 40 of OID ag customers are 5 acres or less.
These compose only 5 of OID-served land - 60 of OID ag customers are 10 acres or less,
compose only 12 of OID served land - 40 of the sub-5 acre parcels in three
areasCrane-Langworth (19), Tulloch-Frymire
(11),and Riverbank (11) - Only 4 of OID ag customers are 40 acres or
larger, but these customers compose 60 of
OID-served lands
28Future Land Use - Urban
City of Oakdale
- Next 10 years- steady growth to 29,000
population, fill in 4 primary areas within 2015
Growth Area
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30Future Land Use - Urban
City of Oakdale
- Next 10 years- steady growth to 29,000
population, fill in 4 primary areas within 2015
Growth Area - Loss of 2,700 acres (800 acres orchards,1,600
acres of pasture) - Over next 20 years, projected growth to
42,000,filling approximately 90 of PSA boundary
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32Future Land Use - Urban
City of Oakdale
- Next 10 years- steady growth to 29,000
population, fill in 4 primary areas within 2015
Growth Area - Loss of 2,700 acres (800 acres orchards,1,600
acres of pasture) - Over next 20 years, projected growth to
42,000,filling approximately 90 of PSA boundary - Loss of additional 3,300 acres (1,300 acres
orchards, 1,800 acre of pasture) - Total 20 year acreage of 6,000 acres (10 of
total)
33Urban Land Use Conclusions
- Primary impact in next 10 years will be City of
Oakdale Specific Plan areas - 20-year horizon impacts are primarily along
future City boundary and Highway 120/108 corridor - 10 of current OID lands lost to urban growth by
2025 (vast majority of this land is currently
irrigated agriculture) - Ranchette growth limited by County and City
policies
34Historic and ForecastedTrends Inside OID
35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 0
1996 2004 2015 2025
Acres
Pasture
Corn / Oats
Deciduous Trees
Rice
Native Vegetation /Dryland
Urban /Industrial
Land Use Type
35Historic and ForecastedTrends Outside OID
60,000 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0
1996 2004 2015 2025
Acres
Pasture
Corn / Oats
Deciduous Trees
Rice
Native Vegetation /Dryland
Urban /Industrial
Land Use Type
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37Geographic Conclusions and Implications for Study
- Urban areas will grow contiguous to urban areas
- Pasture will convert to trees
- Within OID, there is no rationale to predict
specific clusters of conversion - Infrastructure Plan and District Service
Standards need to accommodate geographic
distribution of crop types - Opportunities exist for expansion of service
38Results of continuing present practices (the Do
Nothing alternative)
Impact on WaterBalance within OID
Impact on WaterBalance Outside OID
Agriculture Cities/Unincorporated
Increased GW Use and Overall Decreased Demand
Increased GW Use and Increased Demand
Increased GW Use
Increased GW Use
39Future land use is the foundation for all of our
subsequent work
40Land Use Historic Trendsand Future Projections
- Oakdale Irrigation DistrictMay 17, 2005
412004 Crop Distribution
50,000 45,000 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 15,000 1
0,000 5,000 0
Inside OID Outside OID
Acres
Pasture
Corn / Oats
Deciduous Trees
Rice
Native Vegetation /
Urban / Industrial
Dryland
Land Use Type
42Relative Changes 1996-2004
150 100 50 0 -50 -100
Inside OID Outside OID
Percent Change
Native Vegetation/Dryland
Pasture
Corn / Oats
Deciduous Trees
Urban / Industrial
Crop Type
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451996-2004 Corn and Oats
- Associated with dairies as relatively inexpensive
feed source - Constant acreages (minor increases)both inside
(9,000 acres) and outside(3,700 acres) - Changes in areas mostly inside OID and mostly in
the south - New areas outside of OID away from district
boundaries
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48Recent Urban Growth Changes
- City of Oakdales growth contained in City
planning area. Minimal changes to net OID acreage - Riverbank fastest growing City, impacts inside
SOI - Minimal changes on unincorporated areas within
OID - Modesto growth not changing OID Lands
- 1996 to 2004 saw 700 acres of new urban land use
- Urban growth occurring in and around OID, but
minimal net loss of agricultural lands
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50Future Land Use - Urban
Riverbank and Modesto
- Riverbank 10 year growth to 28,000, 20 year
growth to 34,000 - Projected to fill in current Modesto SOI,
primarily west and south - Modesto 10 year growth to 339,000 20 year growth
to 440,000. - Existing SOI can absorb 20 year growth
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52Future Land Use - Hobby Farm
- New hobby farms likely to focus in existing
rural estate type sub-divided areas
with10-acre or smaller parcels - City and County joint policies restrict
unincorporated area development, favor
preservation of ag lands - OID policy on future hobby farm service and
acreage limits will influence growth
53Future Land Use - Agriculture
- Trees
- Inside OID - continued conversion
- Outside OID - accelerated conversion driven by
market - Pasture
- Inside OID - acreage expected to decrease
- Outside OID will be limited by availability of
surface water and costs for groundwater
54Future Land Use - Agriculture
- Corn/Oats
- Inside OID - tied to dairy industry and
inexpensive water - Outside OID - will be limited by availability of
surface water and costs for groundwater - Native Vegetation
- Inside OID - native vegetation essentially
depleted - Outside OID - depleting due to conversionto trees