The Santa Barbara County Water Agency be designated as the permanent lead agency of the Santa Barbara County Cooperating Partners and granted enforcement power to ensure reliability of Santa Barbara County water supplies. This response is organized into two parts: 1) enforcement power over Santa Barbara County water supplies, and 2) permanent lead agency of the Santa Barbara County Cooperating Partners. Enforcement power over Santa Barbara County water supplies The City does not support the designation of Santa Barbara County Water Agency (SBCWA) to have enforcement power of water supplies. Local water agency governance with enforcement and decision- making authority is established through State law. The State recognizes that decision-making at the local level is important for accountability to the water rate payers, and because "one size fits all" solutions are not appropriate given the complexity of water management. If several local agencies share a regional water source, the most effective governance structure is to form a joint powers authority to represent the collective interests of those local water agencies, with mutually agreed upon operating terms and a weighted voting structure that is fair and equitable. The County governance structure lacks such voting structure and has no fiduciary responsibility for water supplies. Furthermore, it is important to recognize that all water agencies are subject to the decision and enforcement power of various State and Federal agencies which have broad regulatory power. This includes regulation to ensure that all interests such as public health, water rights, environmental, and public trust interests are protected. Of particular relevance are the regulatory authorities of the State Water Resources Control Board, which do not appear to have been considered by the Santa Barbara County Grand Jury (Grand Jury) report. An example of water management at various agency levels is provided with the State Water Project. The water supply management agencies include the State Department of Water Resources (DWR), the regional Central Coast Water Authority (CCWA), and local water agency members of CCWA. While the County is the formal contract holder with DWR for water service from the State Water Project, the County does not have an active role in the water supply management nor any responsibility for providing the water service. A governance structure that includes the County could be considered a redundant regional governmental layer, since local water supply interests are already represented by CCWA as the lead regional water supply agency, and all water supply service is subject to broad State and Federal regulatory processes. As such, it is unclear how adding another layer of governmental control would improve water management, particularly given the lack of fiduciary responsibility at the County level for any water supply. City of Santa Barbara Response to the With regard to Cachuma Project supplies, the Bureau of Reclamation is the agency that owns and operates Bradbury Dam; and therefore, is the agency that is ultimately responsible for management of the Cachuma Project. The Cachuma Member Units, which are the water supply agencies receiving Cachuma Project water and, in turn, have paid for the costs of the Cachuma Project, have established joint agreements and worked closely with the Bureau of Reclamation regarding water supply issues for decades. The Cachuma Member Units have taken substantial efforts to support the Bureau of Reclamation in the State water rights and federal Biological Opinion processes. Finally, the Grand Jury report states that "there must be an independent, impartial, and forward-thinking agency" with the authority to manage Lake Cachuma water supplies, and the Grand Jury advocates that the Santa Barbara County Water Agency (SBCWA) should be that agency. The City respectfully disagrees with the Grand Jury and would like to clarify that the SBCWA is not an impartial agency. The Grand Jury failed to report that the County holds a contract with the Bureau of Reclamation for recreation services at Lake Cachuma. In 2004, the County is on the record at the State Water Resources Control Board "Phase 2 Public Hearing for U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's Cachuma Project Water Rights Permits" stating that there are conflicting policy goals between water supply, protecting endangered species, and public trust recreational resources. At the time, the County was representing recreation interests and continues to do so. (http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/waterrights/water issues/programs/hearings/cachuma/phase2/closing brie fs/countyofsantabarbaraclosingbrief.pdf). Permanent lead agency of the Santa Barbara County Cooperating Partners The City supports the County as the lead agency for the Santa Barbara Cooperating Partners, specifically in its role in pursuing State and Federal grant funding. However, the City would like to make it clear that regional grant coordination is not the same as water supply management. The County does not have experience managing water supplies because the agency does not have any water customers; nor does the County provide service to convey, treat, or distribute water supply. The County has established its role in some grant funding opportunities, particularly as the lead in the State Integrated Regional Water Management (IRWM) program as well as other federal grant funding. In the IRWM process, the County has established a mechanism for local water agencies to communicate regarding priority water projects, and coordinate where there are projects with multiple or shared benefits. This communication has been beneficial for effective pursuit of grant funding, but ultimately the decision to implement a project is made by local agencies subject to financial feasibility. The City would also like to recognize the efforts of the Cachuma Resource Conservation District in serving as the lead agency for the IRWM grant applications when the County has previously declined. In 2013, the County decided not to participate and the Cachuma Resource Conservation District stepped up as the lead agency working with several water agencies to submit an IRWM grant application for Round 2 Proposition 84 funding. The City appreciates the extensive work of the County of Santa Barbara in many areas, but respectfully disagrees with the County of Santa Barbara Grand Jury that the County should be granted enforcement power over water supplies, given that the County governmental structure does not reflect fair representation of local water agencies through a weighted voting structure, and because the SBCWA does not have direct accountability to water rate payers and financial management of water supply services. Any overarching agency managing water supplies must consider the district's fiduciary responsibility to its rate payers through an appropriate voting structure. City of Santa Barbara Response to the