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O6/08/2015 <br /> 6. On July 15, 2014,the State Water Board adopted an emergency regulation to support <br /> water conservation (Resolution No. 20140038), and that regulation became effective <br /> July 28, 2014 upon approval by the Office of Administrative Law(OAL); <br /> 7. On March 17, 2015, the State Water Board amended and readopted the emergency <br /> regulation to support water conservation (Resolution No. 2015-0013), which became <br /> effective March 27, 2015 upon approval by OAL; <br /> 8. The current emergency regulation has supported Califomians' water conservation <br /> efforts, with over 125 billion gallons saved from August 2014 through March 2015; <br /> however, statewide water use is only nine percerrt less than the same months in 2013. <br /> Achieving a 25 percent reduction in use will require even greater conservation efforts <br /> across the state. In particular, many communities must dramatically reduce their <br /> outdoor water use; <br /> 9. In many areas, 50 percent or more of daily water use is for lawns and outdoor <br /> landscaping. Outdoor water use is generally discretionary, and many irrigated <br /> landscapes will survive while receiving a decreased amount of water; <br /> 10.Although urban water suppliers have placed restrictions on outdoor watering, the State <br /> Water Board continues to receive reports of excessive outdoor water use; <br /> 11.Water conservation is the easiest, most efficient and most cost-effective way to quickly <br /> reduce water demand and extend supplies into the next year, providing flexibiliiy for all <br /> California communities. Water saved this summer is water available later in the season <br /> or next year, reducing the likelihood aF even more severe water shortages should the <br /> drought continue; <br /> 12. Education and enforcement against water waste is a key tool in conservation programs. <br /> When conservation beca�nes a social norm in a community, the need for enforcement is <br /> reduced or eliminated; <br /> 13. Public information and awareness is critical to achieving conservation goals, and the <br /> Save Our Water campaign, run jointly by the Department of Water Resources(DWR) <br /> and the Association of California Water Agencies, is an excellent resource for <br /> conservation information and messaging that is integral to effective drought response <br /> (http://saveo u rwate r.co m); <br /> 14. Many California communities are facing social and economic hardship due to this <br /> drought. The rest of us can make adjustments to our water use, including landscape <br /> choices that conserve even more water; <br /> 15.The California Constitution declares, at article X, section 2, that the water resources of <br /> the state must be put to beneficial use in a manner that is reasonable and not wast�ul. <br /> Relevant to the current drought conditions, the California Supreme Court has clarified <br /> that"what may be a reasonable beneficial use, where water is preserit in excess of all <br /> needs, would not be a reasonable beneFicial use in an area of great scarcity and great <br /> need.What is a beneficial use at onetime may, because of changed conditions, become <br /> a waste of water at a later time." (Tu/ar� Dist. v. Lindsay Strathmore Dist. (1935)3 <br /> Cal.2d 489, 567.) In support of water conservation, the legislature has, through Water <br /> Code section 1011, deemed reductions in water use due to conservation as equivalent <br /> 2 <br /> 2 RESO.#15418 <br /> MUFF#802 <br />