BILL REQ. #: H-2269.1
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2007 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 02/26/07.
AN ACT Relating to rainwater collection facilities; amending RCW 90.03.250 and 90.03.370; and adding a new section to chapter 90.03 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 90.03.250 and 1987 c 109 s 83 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) Any person, municipal corporation, firm, irrigation district,
association, corporation, or water users' association hereafter
desiring to appropriate water for a beneficial use shall make an
application to the department for a permit to make such appropriation,
and shall not use or divert such waters until ((he)) the entity has
received a permit from the department as provided in this chapter
((provided)). The construction of any ditch, canal, or works, or
performing any work in connection with said construction or
appropriation, or the use of any waters, shall not be an appropriation
of such water nor an act for the purpose of appropriating water unless
a permit to make said appropriation has first been granted by the
department((: PROVIDED, That)).
(2) A temporary permit may be granted upon a proper showing made to
the department to be valid only during the pendency of such application
for a permit unless sooner revoked by the department((: PROVIDED,
FURTHER, That)).
(3) Nothing in this chapter ((contained)) shall be deemed to affect
RCW 90.40.010 through 90.40.080 except that the notice and certificate
((therein)) provided for in RCW 90.40.030 shall be addressed to the
department, and the department shall exercise the powers and perform
the duties prescribed by RCW 90.40.030.
(4) The appropriation and use of runoff from roofs, paved areas,
and other artificial surfaces is exempt from the permit requirement of
this section if:
(a) The total amount of water storage in rain barrels, cisterns,
and other similar facilities for capturing that runoff does not exceed
three thousand gallons; and
(b) The water is intended to be put to beneficial use on the same
property where the runoff is collected.
(5) Runoff collected under subsection (4) of this section does not
result in a water right under this section or RCW 90.03.370.
Sec. 2 RCW 90.03.370 and 2003 c 329 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1)(a) All applications for reservoir permits are subject to the
provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through 90.03.320. But the party or
parties proposing to apply to a beneficial use the water stored in any
such reservoir shall also file an application for a permit, to be known
as the secondary permit, which shall be in compliance with the
provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through 90.03.320. Such secondary
application shall refer to such reservoir as its source of water supply
and shall show documentary evidence that an agreement has been entered
into with the owners of the reservoir for a permanent and sufficient
interest in said reservoir to impound enough water for the purposes set
forth in said application. When the beneficial use has been completed
and perfected under the secondary permit, the department shall take the
proof of the water users under such permit and the final certificate of
appropriation shall refer to both the ditch and works described in the
secondary permit and the reservoir described in the primary permit.
The department may accept for processing a single application form
covering both a proposed reservoir and a proposed secondary permit or
permits for use of water from that reservoir.
(b) The department shall expedite processing applications for the
following types of storage proposals:
(i) Development of storage facilities that will not require a new
water right for diversion or withdrawal of the water to be stored;
(ii) Adding or changing one or more purposes of use of stored
water;
(iii) Adding to the storage capacity of an existing storage
facility; and
(iv) Applications for secondary permits to secure use from existing
storage facilities.
(c) A secondary permit for the beneficial use of water shall not be
required for use of water stored in a reservoir where the water right
for the source of the stored water authorizes the beneficial use.
(2)(a) For the purposes of this section, "reservoir" includes, in
addition to any surface reservoir, any naturally occurring underground
geological formation where water is collected and stored for subsequent
use as part of an underground artificial storage and recovery project.
To qualify for issuance of a reservoir permit an underground geological
formation must meet standards for review and mitigation of adverse
impacts identified, for the following issues:
(i) Aquifer vulnerability and hydraulic continuity;
(ii) Potential impairment of existing water rights;
(iii) Geotechnical impacts and aquifer boundaries and
characteristics;
(iv) Chemical compatibility of surface waters and ground water;
(v) Recharge and recovery treatment requirements;
(vi) System operation;
(vii) Water rights and ownership of water stored for recovery; and
(viii) Environmental impacts.
(b) Standards for review and standards for mitigation of adverse
impacts for an underground artificial storage and recovery project
shall be established by the department by rule. Notwithstanding the
provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through 90.03.320, analysis of each
underground artificial storage and recovery project and each
underground geological formation for which an applicant seeks the
status of a reservoir shall be through applicant-initiated studies
reviewed by the department.
(3) For the purposes of this section, "underground artificial
storage and recovery project" means any project in which it is intended
to artificially store water in the ground through injection, surface
spreading and infiltration, or other department-approved method, and to
make subsequent use of the stored water. However, (a) this subsection
does not apply to irrigation return flow, or to operational and seepage
losses that occur during the irrigation of land, or to water that is
artificially stored due to the construction, operation, or maintenance
of an irrigation district project, or to projects involving water
reclaimed in accordance with chapter 90.46 RCW; and (b) RCW 90.44.130
applies to those instances of claimed artificial recharge occurring due
to the construction, operation, or maintenance of an irrigation
district project or operational and seepage losses that occur during
the irrigation of land, as well as other forms of claimed artificial
recharge already existing at the time a ground water subarea is
established.
(4) Nothing in chapter 98, Laws of 2000 changes the requirements of
existing law governing issuance of permits to appropriate or withdraw
the waters of the state.
(5) The department shall report to the legislature by December 31,
2001, on the standards for review and standards for mitigation
developed under subsection (3) of this section and on the status of any
applications that have been filed with the department for underground
artificial storage and recovery projects by that date.
(6) Where needed to ensure that existing storage capacity is
effectively and efficiently used to meet multiple purposes, the
department may authorize reservoirs to be filled more than once per
year or more than once per season of use.
(7) This section does not apply to facilities to recapture and
reuse return flow from irrigation operations serving a single farm
under an existing water right as long as the acreage irrigated is not
increased beyond the acreage allowed to be irrigated under the water
right.
(8) In addition to the facilities exempted under subsection (7) of
this section, this section does not apply to small irrigation
impoundments. For purposes of this section, "small irrigation
impoundments" means lined surface storage ponds less than ten acre feet
in volume used to impound irrigation water under an existing water
right where use of the impoundment: (a)(i) Facilitates efficient use
of water; or (ii) promotes compliance with an approved recovery plan
for endangered or threatened species; and (b) does not expand the
number of acres irrigated or the annual consumptive quantity of water
used. Such ponds must be lined unless a licensed engineer determines
that a liner is not needed to retain water in the pond and to prevent
ground water contamination. Although it may also be composed of other
materials, a properly maintained liner may be composed of bentonite.
Water remaining in a small irrigation impoundment at the end of an
irrigation season may be carried over for use in the next season.
However, the limitations of this subsection (8) apply. Development and
use of a small irrigation impoundment does not constitute a change or
amendment for purposes of RCW 90.03.380 or 90.44.055.
(9) Rain barrels, cisterns, and other similar facilities for
capturing runoff from roofs, paved areas, and other artificial surfaces
are exempt from the reservoir and secondary permit requirements of this
chapter if the:
(a) Total amount of water storage does not exceed three thousand
gallons; and
(b) Water is intended to be put to beneficial use on the same
property where the runoff is collected.
(10) Runoff collected under subsection (9) of this section does not
result in a water right under this section or RCW 90.03.250.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 90.03 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The owner of a rain barrel, cistern, or other similar water
storage facility that has a storage capacity greater than three
thousand gallons for capture and use of runoff from roofs, paved areas,
and other artificial surfaces is exempt from the permit requirements of
RCW 90.03.250 and 90.03.370, provided the water is intended to be put
to beneficial use on the same property where the runoff is collected
and the capture, storage, and use is done in compliance with rules or
general permits developed by the department under this section for such
purpose.
(2) The department shall adopt either rules or issue general
permits, or both, to specify conditions under which rainwater
collection facilities may be constructed and operated in order to
protect existing water rights and water quality and to prevent harm to
existing streams and water bodies. The rules or general permits
adopted by the department may address specific geographic areas. The
department shall give priority to adopting rules or issuing general
permits to requests from watershed planning groups under chapter 90.82
RCW, islands, and urban areas that discharge directly into saltwater.
At a minimum, the rules or general permits must address consideration
of annual rainfall, population density, impacts from runoff collection
on the natural hydrology, possible impairment of water rights, and harm
to existing streams and water bodies. In developing these rules and
general permits, the department shall work with representatives of a
broad range of interested parties, individuals with technical
expertise, and project proponents, as appropriate.
(3) Runoff used and collected under this exemption does not result
in a water right under RCW 90.03.250 or 90.03.370.
(4) Any person owning or using a rain barrel, cistern, or other
similar water storage facility greater than three thousand gallons that
was installed before the effective date of this section may continue to
use the facility without obtaining a permit under RCW 90.03.250 or
90.03.370 until the department adopts a final rule or issues a general
permit as provided in this section. After the adoption of final rules
or issuance of general permits, all persons using rain barrels,
cisterns, or other similar water storage facilities must comply with
the final rules or general permits.
(5) The department shall either initiate rule making or issuing
general permits, or both, as provided in this section by August 1,
2007. The department shall report to the appropriate committees of the
legislature by December 31, 2008, regarding the implementation of this
section. The authority provided under this section to issue general
permits that do not create a water right is not intended to modify or
in any way affect existing authority to issue general permits that do
create a water right.