Changeflow GovPing Environmental & Energy Delta-Mendota Subbasin Exits State Intervention...
Routine Notice Added Final

Delta-Mendota Subbasin Exits State Intervention, Returns to DWR; Tule and Tulare Lake Exclusions Set

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Summary

The CA State Water Resources Control Board announced two SGMA actions on April 7, 2026. First, the Delta-Mendota Subbasin successfully exited state intervention, having consolidated its 23 groundwater agencies under a single unified sustainability plan with a drinking water well mitigation program, and will now return to DWR oversight—this is the fourth subbasin to exit intervention. Second, the board excluded small groundwater pumpers extracting 20 acre-feet or less annually in the Tule and Tulare Lake subbasins from state reporting and fee requirements; these approximately 3,000 pumpers account for less than 2% of groundwater pumped in those basins.

Why this matters

The Delta-Mendota exit marks the fourth subbasin to successfully exit SGMA state intervention through inter-agency cooperation, establishing a procedural pathway for other subbasins facing similar probationary status. The Tule and Tulare Lake exclusions represent a targeted regulatory relief measure for small extractors, balancing sustainability obligations with administrative burden reduction. Regulated entities in these subbasins should verify their extraction volumes to confirm exclusion eligibility and, if excluded, monitor for any future changes to threshold amounts.

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What changed

The CA State Water Resources Control Board announced the Delta-Mendota Subbasin's exit from state intervention, with the subbasin's 23 groundwater agencies having successfully aligned under one sustainability plan that staff found made significant improvements, including a drinking water well mitigation program. Separately, the board elected to exclude groundwater pumpers extracting 20 acre-feet or less annually in the Tule and Tulare Lake subbasins from reporting and fee requirements, affecting approximately 3,000 small extractors representing less than 2% of groundwater pumped in those basins. The affected subbasins had been designated probationary in 2024, making all pumpers subject to state requirements. The exclusion decision reduces regulatory burden on small farmers and minor extractors while larger pumpers—approximately 3,360 entities extracting over 98% of groundwater—remain subject to reporting by May 1, 2026 and associated fees. Low-income residents, public assistance recipients, public schools, and public water systems serving disadvantaged communities may request fee waivers.

Archived snapshot

Apr 20, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Delta-Mendota Subbasin exits state intervention, returns to DWR oversight

Minimal impact reporting and fee exclusions set in Tule, Tulare Lake

For immediate release

Date

2026-04-07

Category

SGMA

Region

State

Contact

Edward Ortiz – Information Officer

Press Room

1001 I Street, 24th Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 341‑7365
Fax: (916) 341‑5252

Travel to the State Water Resources Control Board in the CalEPA Headquarters Building

Email: OPA@waterboards.ca.gov

Press Releases

SACRAMENTO – The State Water Resources Control Board today took two major actions under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA): it ended the prospect of probation for the Delta-Mendota Subbasin and excluded about 3,000 groundwater pumpers in the Tule and Tulare Lake Subbasins from state reporting and fee requirements.

The Department of Water Resources (DWR) referred the Delta-Mendota Subbasin to the State Water Board in 2023 for state intervention because the sustainability plans of its 23 groundwater agencies were inconsistent in key areas and would not lead to sustainable management. In 2024, the subbasins successfully aligned their management activities to adopt one plan that board staff found made significant improvements, including a mitigation program for drinking water wells.

“Delta-Mendota is the fourth subbasin to exit state intervention after groundwater agencies came together and coalesced around the common goal of achieving sustainability,” said board Chair E. Joaquin Esquivel. “I congratulate the agencies on their cooperation and partnership, which will be key to managing the subbasin’s groundwater in the future.”

Following today’s board decision, the subbasin will return to DWR oversight.

In two separate decisions at the same meeting, the board elected to exclude groundwater pumpers in the Tule and Tulare Lake subbasins who extract 20 acre-feet or less annually from paying fees or reporting their usage to the state. Their extractions account for less than 2% of all groundwater pumped in these basins.

In 2024, the board designated the Tule and the Tulare Lake subbasins as probationary, which made all groundwater pumpers in these basins subject to state fees and reporting requirements.

“By excluding small farmers and other minor extractors from state fees and reporting, we are reducing hardship where we can while ensuring sustainability occurs,” said Chair Esquivel.

All other pumpers in these subbasins, totaling approximately 3,360 entities extracting over 98% of all groundwater pumped, are required to report pumping amounts by May 1, 2026, and pay associated fees.

Groundwater pumpers who are low-income residents, enrolled in income-based public assistance plans, public schools, or public water systems serving disadvantaged communities will have the option to request a fee waiver.

SGMA, enacted in 2014, established a new framework to ensure long-term groundwater sustainability in California. Under the law, local groundwater agencies must achieve long-term sustainable management of their subbasins within 20 years of implementing their sustainability plans. Initially, when DWR finds that plans to manage groundwater in a subbasin are inadequate to achieve sustainability within that period, it refers the subbasin to the board to initiate the state intervention process.

More information on the board’s role and implementation of SGMA can be found here.

The State Water Board’s mission is to preserve, enhance and restore the quality of California’s water resources and drinking water for the protection of the environment, public health, and all beneficial uses, and to ensure proper resource allocation and efficient use for present and future generations.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
CA SWRCB
Published
April 7th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Agricultural firms Government agencies
Industry sector
1111 Crop Production
Activity scope
Groundwater extraction Sustainability planning
Threshold
≤20 acre-feet per year extraction for Tule/Tulare exclusions
Geographic scope
California US-CA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Water Agriculture

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