Public hearing for the Chino Basin Program environmental impact report.
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- Published
- Category
- Public Hearing
What to do next
- 1
Review the Draft Report
Access the Recirculated Draft Program Environmental Impact Report online for details.
- 2
Attend the Public Hearing
Join the public hearing to voice your opinions and concerns about the project.
- 3
Submit Comments
Provide your feedback on the report by the specified deadline mentioned in the notice.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the Chino Basin Program?
- The Chino Basin Program aims to enhance local water supplies through advanced water purification.
- How can I participate in the public hearing?
- Details on participation will be provided in the official notice or agency website.
- What is the purpose of the environmental impact report?
- The report evaluates environmental impacts of the proposed Chino Basin Program.
The suggestions and answers above are AI-generated for general information only. They can be wrong, and we don't take responsibility for their accuracy. Talk to a qualified professional before acting on them.
Full Notice Text
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY AND NOTICE OF COMPLETION FOR A RECIRCULATED DRAFT PROGRAM ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT FOR INLAND EMPIRE UTILITIES AGENCY CHINO BASIN PROGRAM In accordance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and the CEQA Guidelines, the Inland Empire Utilities Agency (IEUA) has prepared a partial revision to the previously adopted Final Program Environmental Impact Report for the Chino Basin Program (2022 CBP FPEIR) to respond to a San Bernardino County Superior Court Peremptory Writ of Mandate ruling to re-evaluate specific components of the document. This Recirculated Draft Program Environmental Impact Report is for the Chino Basin Program (SCH No. 2021090310). RDPEIR identifies and evaluates these specific environmental impacts of the proposed Chino Basin Program (CBP). Project Description The Chino Basin Program (CBP) was submitted for Proposition 1 Water Storage Investment Program funding and was awarded $269M in conditional funding as of August 2025. Under the WSIP, the CBP is proposed to be a conjunctive use project that proposes to use advanced water purification to treat and store up to 15,000 acre-feet-per-year (AFY) of "new" water supply for a period of 25-years to provide for the State exchange, to be used in blocks of up to 50,000 AFY in hydrologically drier years when pulse flows in the Feather River would provide the most ecosystem benefit and other State Water Project (SWP) operations would not be affected. The exchange would be administered through agreements with the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), MWD, and other project partners. During the first 25 years of the Project life cycle (while the Proposition 1 WSIP water exchange commitment is fulfilled) locally produced CBP water supplies will directly replace a portion of imported supplies when an SWP water transfer is implemented by MWD and DWR and a pulse flow occurs in Northern California. After fulfillment of the Proposition 1 WSIP exchange commitment, the facilities developed under the CBP by IEUA would continue to be operationally viable as part of the overall project life cycle, and during this period the new water supply will be available for local use annually contributing to IEUA's available supply. The CBP would increase additional available groundwater supplies in the adjudicated Chino Basin through increased water recycling that would result from operation of a new AWPF and through groundwater storage by operation of new injection wells. The CBP would thereby enable IEUA to exchange a commensurate amount of this "new" water locally generated by the proposed facilities to be used locally in order to enable State Water Project water to remain in Lake Oroville in Northern California that would otherwise be delivered to Southern California. The additional Lake Oroville water would subsequently be released in the form of pulse flows in the Feather River to improve habitat conditions for native salmonids and achieve environmental benefits. The CBP's proposed AWPF, new injection and extraction facilities, conveyance facilities, and water system interconnections will allow more optimal management of local water supplies, including meeting water quality requirements for the continued use of recycled water within the Chino Basin, improved storage and recovery operations, as well as redundancies in water delivery infrastructure that will facilitate future rehabilitation and replacement of existing infrastructure. Furthermore, the data contained in the CBP RDPEIR is augmented by the analysis contained in the Final Pulse Flows Component of the Water Storage Investment Program Groundwater Projects Supplemental Environmental Impact Report (2024 DWR Pulse Flow FSEIR; SCH No. 2022080216) dated July 2024 prepared for the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) and prepared by ICF/ESA. This SEIR was circulated from February 16, 2024 to April 1, 2024, and the final document including responses to comments was completed in July 2024. The Pulse Flows Component is defined by the following DWR actions: (1) Release of the pulse flows from Lake Oroville into the Low Flow Channel of the Feather River, with the goal of improving habitat conditions for listed salmonids, as well as improving spawning and migration conditions for other listed and non-listed native fish species. (2) Implementation of the WSIP Operational Exchange Process that develops water used for pulse flow releases. (3) Diversion and conveyance of water to Kern Fan and Willow Springs that would be stored, in part, for ecosystem benefit. Implementation of the Pulse Flows Component would not require construction of any new facilities in addition to those previously analyzed in the three WSIP Groundwater Projects' EIRs (including the 2022 CBP FPEIR and now the RDPEIR). Existing facilities would be used, with operations modified to support the pulse flow releases. The Pulse Flows Component study area analyzed in the FSEIR extends approximately 575 miles from Lake Oroville in Northern California to the WSIP Groundwater Projects in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. The 2024 DWR Pulse Flow FSEIR is presented as Subchapter 8.3 to the RDPEIR, and the information and analysis contained therein is incorporated by reference as part of the RDPEIR. Environmental Documentation and Review Period The RDPEIR and appendices are available on IEUA's website at https://www.ieua.org/chino-basin-program-ceqa-documents/. The RDPEIR is available for a forty-five (45) day pubic review period beginning April 21, 2026 and ending June 5, 2026. Any person wishing to comment on the Draft PEIR may provide written comments by 5:00 PM on June 5, 2026 addressed to: Ms. Elizabeth Hurst Inland Empire Utilities Agency 6075 Kimball Avenue, Chino, CA 91708 (909) 993-1634 ehurst@ieua.org Note that the RDPEIR is presented with special attention to minor additions to the 2022 CBP FPEIR that are presented in red text (with the exception of the inclusion of the 2024 DWR Pulse Flow FSEIR, which is attached as Subchapter 8.3 to the RDPEIR). These additions and omissions are the focus of the RDPEIR, and as a result, only new comments submitted on the revised text presented in this RDPEIR will be considered by IEUA. Notification of the date, time, and place of future public hearings will be provided in compliance with CEQA requirements. 4/21/26 IVDB-4034377# INLAND VALLEY DAILY BULLETIN/ONTARIO
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