Well Registration and Groundwater Extraction Reporting
The Monterey County Water Resources Agency (MCWRA) and the Salinas Valley Basin Groundwater Sustainability Agency (SVBGSA) are partnering to improve the collection and storage of regional groundwater data through the Groundwater Monitoring Program (GMP). The GMP includes well registration, the Groundwater Extraction Management System (GEMS), and groundwater elevation and quality monitoring.
The partnership establishes one cohesive program to comply with the regulatory-driven monitoring requirements under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), while ensuring efficiency and transparency. The key goal is to improve the availability of accurate and timely groundwater information, which aids in effectively managing water resources. The SVBGSA is charged with achieving sustainability in the Salinas Valley Groundwater Basin, which extends from the southern boundary of Monterey County to northwestern Monterey County.
Through the GMP, the expansion of well registration and the Groundwater Extraction Management System requires all wells in the Salinas Valley Groundwater Basin to be registered with the MCWRA. Those wells extracting more than 2 acre-feet per year (i.e. non-de minimis) will also need to report extraction data to MCWRA through GEMS.
Well registration with MCWRA involves well owners submitting or verifying well information through a registration portal (under development) or, in the interim, using a form available on the MCWRA website. The data submission requirements include general information about well ownership, well construction specifications and the status of the well (for a complete list see the MCWRA GMP Program Manual). Data on well location and depth helps to understand the relationship between the wells and groundwater conditions. Well owner name and address information obtained through the GMP is confidential.
Nearly 500 well operators currently submit groundwater extraction information to MCWRA through GEMS, a program established in 1993. But data gaps exist, specifically in the Langley Subbasin, on the northern coastal side of the 180/400 Subbasin and across a significant portion of the Upper Valley Subbasin in southern Monterey County. The GEMS expansion applies to all non-de minimis users, including agricultural users, domestic users with 15 or more connections, and in subsequent years (tentatively October 2025) domestic users with 5-14 connections.
Groundwater extraction data can be tracked with the well operator’s choice of an approved method. Approved methods currently include water flowmeter, electrical meter, or hour meter (timer). Data must be recorded by the well operator monthly for each water year, from October 1 to September 30, and reported to MCWRA by November 1 of each year. For the 2023 reporting year, 96% of the 1,940 wells that were required to report submitted their data. As the Groundwater Monitoring Program is further developed and enhanced, SVBGSA and MCWRA are striving for efficient data collection to support effective water resources management in the region.