Legislation Details

File #: 26-0448    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Information Item Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 4/22/2026 In control: Board Policy and Monitoring Committee
On agenda: 5/19/2026 Final action:
Title: Receive Update on the West Valley and Lower Peninsula Watershed Master Plans.
Attachments: 1. Attachment 1: PowerPoint
COMMITTEE AGENDA MEMORANDUM
Board Policy and Monitoring Committee

Government Code ? 84308 Applies: Yes ? No ?
(If "YES" Complete Attachment A - Gov. Code ? 84308)



SUBJECT: title
Receive Update on the West Valley and Lower Peninsula Watershed Master Plans.
End

RECOMMENDATION: Recommendation
Receive an update on the West Valley and Lower Peninsula Watershed Master Plans.
Body

SUMMARY:
Background
The Watershed Master Plans are Valley Water's planning effort to identify watershed management needs across the county's five watersheds and develop prioritized, multi-benefit actions aligned with existing policies, programs, and community values. Watershed Master Planning includes the One Water Countywide Framework and watershed-specific plans that translate this framework into actions. The Board adopted the Framework and Coyote Watershed Plan in March 2022, followed by the Guadalupe and Upper Pajaro Watershed Plans in April 2024. Valley Water is currently developing the final two plans, the West Valley and Lower Peninsula Watershed Plans, anticipated for completion in early 2027.
The Watershed Master Plans are developed through a structured process based on five objective areas: natural ecosystems, flood risk, water quality, water supply, and climate change. The process includes three primary components: establishing existing watershed conditions (the setting), performance metrics, and priority actions. Setting reports establish baseline conditions and identify key challenges and opportunities, which inform development of metrics and targets used to evaluate performance and identify gaps. Based on this analysis, priority actions are developed to address challenges and gaps and advance progress toward objectives.
While priority actions for flood risk, natural ecosystems, and water quality are developed through analysis of watershed conditions, metrics, and external partner input, water supply and climate change actions taken from existing plans such as ...

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