Esta investigación fue publicada originalmente como parte de un informe consolidado más amplio que contiene múltiples investigaciones. Consulte el PDF consolidado para ver el documento completo.
Sonoma Valley Regional Water Resources Water for a Changing Future
⚠️ Aviso de traducción: Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
⚠️ Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
Findings and Recommendations 8 findings
Additional Recommendations 4
These recommendations are not explicitly linked to specific findings.
-
R7DHS hire a CFO who is experienced in government finance and systems DHS and DHR The Recommendation has been implemented. The Grand Jury acknowledges that the Recommendation has been implemented.
-
R8The County Auditor’s Office institute procedures for verifying actual revenue figures, rather than verifying that projected budgets balance,
-
R9The Compliance Program be adequately funded and supported, by December 31, 2019 DHS
-
R10We recommend the BOS review its budget oversight responsibilities
Conclusions 1
-
CL1 Page 9Sonoma Valley will need to adopt a more regional approach to water management because of ongoing challenges such as population growth and climate change in the region. Water resources in the Valley are clearly limited; formalized agreements and efforts to share water supplies in an emergency should be equally valuable. Mutual aid agreements can also be applied to supplies, equipment and staffing. Cooperative efforts can extend to joint projects such as water conservation, groundwater recharge and distribution of reclaimed water, all of which are regional concerns. Sonoma Valley has had some notable successes in cooperating on water management such as the Sonoma Aqueduct, the Sonoma Valley Groundwater Sustainability Agency and the Regional Water Supply Resiliency Study. Now they are going to need to go beyond that due to future challenges. The need for potable water affects everyone in Sonoma Valley, especially during emergency conditions such as fire, earthquake, drought or flood. As conditions change and we need better ways to manage water, we must seek solutions through cooperation. To anticipate and prepare for tomorrow’s problems, Sonoma Valley needs a regional approach to managing regional water resources.
Agency Responses 1
Government agencies' official responses to this report's findings and recommendations. Click on a response to see the structured breakdown.
No Responses Found 3
Government entities assigned to respond to this report. No response documents have been linked in our database.