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October 14, 2025

Committee approved a draft policy for an incentivized fallowing program that will pay farmers $730 per acre annually for 3 consecutive years to voluntarily fallow fields, with applications accepted November-December for 2026 implementation. Staff recommended rescinding a priority action area designation for monitoring well ETSGSA-08 after discovering calculation errors. 47% of groundwater accounting platform accounts remaining unclaimed, which represents only 26% of total acres.

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October 14, 2025

The board unanimously approved terminating a 1985 recreation agreement with Stanislaus County, effective October 2026, due to failed negotiations and facility concerns. This will cost $2.8 million but generate future revenue. Health insurance premiums were approved with modest increases of 4-10% for employees. Board members praised staff for successfully managing the 2025 irrigation season with minimal disruptions despite ongoing organizational changes.

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October 14, 2025

Board maintained annual assessment rate at $95 per acre for 2025 despite staff recommendations for an increase, citing concerns about financial burden on farmers. Water supplies remain critically limited with only 700 acre-feet remaining after the 2024 season, prompting continued conservation measures. State Water Resources Control Board is expected to make a final decision on December 2nd regarding whether to return basin management to local control after years.

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October 14, 2025

Groundwater levels have recovered to 2013 levels at about 120 feet district-wide, though faster progress is needed to meet 2040 sustainability targets. Staff recommended changes to subsidence management policies, moving away from depth-based pumping restrictions due to complex geology showing most district pumping contributes to subsidence. Board approved a $50,000 public relations campaign to enhance its communication with state regulators and stakeholders outside Central Valley.

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October 13, 2025

Agricultural experts determined that sufficient data exists to establish nitrogen limits for major crops in some regions, but a landscape-level approach targeting broader areas is more effective than field-specific regulations. Current nitrogen application rates significantly exceed what's needed for groundwater protection, with some cropping systems showing 350+ pounds of excess nitrogen per acre versus the 27 pounds needed for water quality targets. The panel is moving toward identifying...

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