Difference between revisions of "Marina Coast Water District (MCWD)"

From CCoWS Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Summary)
Line 1: Line 1:
http://www.mcwd.org/
 
 
==Summary==
 
==Summary==
The Marina Coast Water District (MCWD) was established in 1960 and provides potable water and wastewater treatment services to the city of Marina<ref name="MCWD, About"> [http://www.mcwd.org/about_overview.html MCWD, About] </ref>. The MCWD provides these services to the entire city of Marina, and the former Fort Ord (known as the Ord Community)<ref name="MCWD, UWMP"> [http://www.mcwd.org/docs/engr/uwmp_final_12-27-05.pdf MCWD, Urban Water Management Plan] </ref>.
+
The [http://www.mcwd.org/ Marina Coast Water District] (MCWD) was established in 1960 and provides potable water and wastewater treatment services to the city of Marina<ref name="MCWD, About"> [http://www.mcwd.org/about_overview.html MCWD, About] </ref>. The MCWD provides these services to the entire city of Marina, and the former Fort Ord (known as the Ord Community)<ref name="MCWD, UWMP"> [http://www.mcwd.org/docs/engr/uwmp_final_12-27-05.pdf MCWD, Urban Water Management Plan] </ref>.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
According to the [http://www.mcwd.org/about_overview.html MCWD, About] webpage, the MCWD has existed since 1958<ref name ="MCWD, About"> [http://www.mcwd.org/about_overview.html MCWD, About Webpage] </ref>. The history of its service and functioning is provided below:
+
According to the [http://www.mcwd.org/about_overview.html MCWD, About] webpage, the MCWD has existed since 1958<ref name ="MCWD, About" />. The history of its service and functioning is provided below:
 
*'''1958''' - The Marina Community Service Corporation, a group of local citizens, proposed formation of a municipal-owned water system. Their intention was to create boundaries that coincided with the already existing Marina Fire District.
 
*'''1958''' - The Marina Community Service Corporation, a group of local citizens, proposed formation of a municipal-owned water system. Their intention was to create boundaries that coincided with the already existing Marina Fire District.
 
 
Line 15: Line 14:
 
*'''1983''' - The District abandoned pumping from the well that pulled water out of the 180 ft [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Aquifer aquifer] because of [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Salinas_Valley_Seawater_Intrusion saltwater intrusion].
 
*'''1983''' - The District abandoned pumping from the well that pulled water out of the 180 ft [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Aquifer aquifer] because of [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Salinas_Valley_Seawater_Intrusion saltwater intrusion].
  
*'''1982-1989''' - The District drilled three new deep wells into the 900 ft aquifer in 1982, 1985, and 1989<ref> [http://www.mcwd.org/docs/engr/uwmp_final_12-27-05.pdf MCWD, Urban Water Management Plan, December 2005] </ref>. This is what provides the city of Marina with its water, presently.
+
*'''1982-1989''' - The District drilled three new deep wells into the 900 ft aquifer in 1982, 1985, and 1989<ref name="MCWD, UWMP" />. This is what provides the city of Marina with its water, presently.
  
 
*'''1993''' - The District made agreement with the [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Monterey_Regional_Water_Pollution_Control_Agency_%28MRWPCA%29 Monterey Regional Water Pollution Control Agency] (MRWPCA) to treat the city of Marina's wastewater at their [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Regional_Treatment_Plant Regional Treatment Plant]. The District does, however, continue to operate and maintain the sewer system.
 
*'''1993''' - The District made agreement with the [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Monterey_Regional_Water_Pollution_Control_Agency_%28MRWPCA%29 Monterey Regional Water Pollution Control Agency] (MRWPCA) to treat the city of Marina's wastewater at their [http://ccows.csumb.edu/wiki/index.php/Regional_Treatment_Plant Regional Treatment Plant]. The District does, however, continue to operate and maintain the sewer system.

Revision as of 15:28, 31 March 2015

Summary

The Marina Coast Water District (MCWD) was established in 1960 and provides potable water and wastewater treatment services to the city of Marina[1]. The MCWD provides these services to the entire city of Marina, and the former Fort Ord (known as the Ord Community)[2].

History

According to the MCWD, About webpage, the MCWD has existed since 1958[1]. The history of its service and functioning is provided below:

  • 1958 - The Marina Community Service Corporation, a group of local citizens, proposed formation of a municipal-owned water system. Their intention was to create boundaries that coincided with the already existing Marina Fire District.
  • 1960 - Two years later, formation of the Marina County Water District occurred through a vote of the then unincorporated city of Marina, California.
  • 1966 - City of Marina voters authorized the sale of $950,000 in water bonds to acquire a privately owned water company for servicing the area.
  • 1970 - The city of Marina voters responded to increasing septic failures and community requests by constructing a sewage treatment plant and disposal system, which was financed by $1.3M in sewer bonds.
  • 1982-1989 - The District drilled three new deep wells into the 900 ft aquifer in 1982, 1985, and 1989[2]. This is what provides the city of Marina with its water, presently.
  • 1994 - The Marina County Water District became the Marina Coast Water District (MCWD), replacing "county" with "coast" to avoid confusion of being a county agency, or that Marina was a county and not in Monterey County.
  • 1997 - MCWD began operating a desalination plant located on the end of Reservation Road; however, this plant is no longer operational due to beach well damage associated with coastal erosion[3].
  • 1997 - The MCWD contracted with the US Army, when it closed the former Fort Ord, to operate its water and wastewater systems. Within this agreement, the Fort Ord Reuse Authority established a Water and Wastewater Oversight Committee (WWOC)[4].
  • 2001 - The US Army officially transferred these systems to the MCWD[5]. Since then, the MCWD has improved water distribution and storage efficiency with a variety of infrastructure projects

Board of Directors

Funding

Where the Water Comes From

Water Costs to the Consumer

Current Water Conservation Efforts

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 MCWD, About
  2. 2.0 2.1 MCWD, Urban Water Management Plan
  3. NOAA, Desalination Feasibility Study for the Monterey Bay Region: Final Report
  4. FORA, Annual Report for FY 2012-2013
  5. MOU: Department of the Army, MRWPCA, FORA, and MCWD

Disclaimer

This page may contain student's work completed as part of assigned coursework. It may not be accurate. It does not necessarily reflect the opinion or policy of CSUMB, its staff, or students.