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ARIZONA STATE SENATE
Fifty-Seventh Legislature, First Regular Session
water use; prohibition; landscaping
Purpose
An emergency measure that prohibits a municipality that is located within an active management area (AMA) that has a safe-yield management goal from adopting or enforcing any code, ordinance, rule, regulation, standard, stipulation or other requirement that directly or indirectly requires outlined turf, plant, ground cover, open space or detached sidewalk requirements. Prohibits a municipality that is located in an initial AMA from adopting or enforcing any requirement that establishes, directly or indirectly, outlined turf and plant installation requirements.
Background
Statute establishes five initial AMAs which comprise of: 1) the Tucson AMA which includes the Upper Santa Cruz and Avra Valley sub-basins; 2) the Phoenix AMA which includes the East Salt River Valley, West Salt River Valley, Fountain Hills, Carefree, Lake Pleasant, Rainbow Valley and Hassayampa sub-basins ; 3) the Prescott AMA which includes the Little Chino and Upper Agua Fria sub-basins; 4) the Pinal AMA which includes the Maricopa-Stanfield, Eloy, Aguirre Valley, Santa Rosa Valley and Vekol Valley sub-basins; and 5) the Santa Cruz AMA which includes a portion of the Upper Santa Cruz Valley sub-basin (A.R.S. §§ 45-411 and 45-411.03).
The Director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources (ADWR) must develop a management plan for each initial AMA for each of five management periods. The plans must include a continuing mandatory conservation program for all persons withdrawing, distributing or receiving groundwater designed to achieve reductions in withdrawals of groundwater. The management goal of the Tucson, Phoenix and Prescott AMA's is safe-yield by January 1, 2025, or an earlier date as may be determined by the Director of ADWR. The management goal of the Santa Cruz AMA is to maintain a safe-yield condition in the AMA and to prevent local water tables from experiencing long-term declines (A.R.S. §§ 45-562 and 45-563).
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation.
Provisions
1. Prohibits a municipality that is located within an AMA that has a safe-yield management goal from adopting or enforcing any code, ordinance, rule, regulation, standard, stipulation or other requirement that directly or indirectly requires:
a) a minimum number of trees;
b) a minimum size for trees or shrubs;
c) a minimum percentage of ground cover;
d) a minimum amount of turf;
e) open space beyond what is required for retention; or
f) detached sidewalks.
2. Prohibits a municipality that is located in an initial AMA from adopting or enforcing any requirement that establishes, directly or indirectly;
a) minimum turf requirements; or
b) the installation of plants that are not included on the low-water-use and drought-tolerant plant list that is published by ADWR for the most current management plan in the initial AMA's.
3. Exempts, from the outlined minimum turf requirements, functional turf requirements that are associated with public recreational use areas or other public spaces that are regularly used for civic, community or recreational purposes, including playgrounds, sports fields, cemeteries, schoolyards and stormwater management.
4. Defines safe-yield as a groundwater management goal which attempts to achieve and thereafter maintain a long-term balance between the annual amount of groundwater withdrawn in an AMA and the annual amount of natural and artificial recharge in the AMA.
5. Defines AMA.
6. Becomes effective on signature of the Governor, if the emergency clause is enacted.
Prepared by Senate Research
February 7, 2025
SB/slp