70 datasets found
  1. California Drinking Water System Area Boundaries

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data.lacounty.gov
    • +4more
    Updated Mar 16, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). California Drinking Water System Area Boundaries [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/fbba842bf134497c9d611ad506ec48cc
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 16, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    In order to provide an accurate data set of service area boundaries for California drinking water systems, the Division of Drinking Water of the California Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB DDW) has undertaken a project to vet and verify the data collected by the Tracking California's Water Boundary Tool (WBT).Note: This feature layer is updated on a regular basis. However, in some locations where it is shared, it shows the “Data Updated” date as the last time the item has changed, not the data. To accurately determine when the data was last updated, open the data table and sort by Last Edited Date field.SWRCB DDW downloaded a copy of the current water system service areas loaded in the WBT as of June 27, 2019. Additional attribute fields indicating verification status, verification staff and system type were appended to the data set. SWRCB DDW staff are reviewing and validating the displayed boundaries of each service area as well as contacting the service providers regarding necessary corrections. The verification status of any particular service area may be found in the Verification Status field.For any questions regarding this dataset, please contact the Data Support Unit at DDW-DSU@waterboards.ca.gov.

  2. Aquifer Risk Map 2022

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Apr 4, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). Aquifer Risk Map 2022 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/b25cf272c7c7448f89dd4e41d86948fa
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    This is the 2022 version of the Aquifer Risk Map. The 2021 version of the Aquifer Risk Map is available here.This aquifer risk map is developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing raw source groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding. This is the final 2022 map based upon feedback received from the 2021 map. A summary of methodology updates to the 2022 map can be found here.This map displays raw source groundwater quality risk per square mile section. The water quality data is based on depth-filtered, declustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells. The process used to create this map is described in the 2022 Aquifer Risk Map Methodology document. Data processing scripts are available on GitHub. Download/export links are provided in this app under the Data Download widget.This draft version was last updated December 1, 2021. Water quality risk: This layer contains summarized water quality risk per square mile section and well point. The section water quality risk is determined by analyzing the long-tern (20-year) section average and the maximum recent (within 5 years) result for all sampled contaminants. These values are compared to the MCL and sections with values above the MCL are “high risk”, sections with values within 80%-100% of the MCL are “medium risk” and sections with values below 80% of the MCL are “low risk”. The specific contaminants above or close to the MCL are listed as well. The water quality data is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells.Individual contaminants: This layer shows de-clustered water quality data for arsenic, nitrate, 1,2,3-trichloropropane, uranium, and hexavalent chromium per square mile section. Domestic Well Density: This layer shows the count of domestic well records per square mile. The domestic well density per square mile is based on well completion report data from the Department of Water Resources Online System for Well Completion Reports, with records drilled prior to 1970 removed and records of “destruction” removed.State Small Water Systems: This layer displays point locations for state small water systems based on location data from the Division of Drinking Water.Public Water System Boundaries: This layer displays the approximate service boundaries for public water systems based on location data from the Division of Drinking Water.Reference layers: This layer contains several reference boundaries, including boundaries of CV-SALTS basins with their priority status, Groundwater Sustainability Agency boundaries, census block group boundaries, county boundaries, and groundwater unit boundaries. ArcGIS Web Application

  3. Small Water Systems RCAC

    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Apr 4, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). Small Water Systems RCAC [Dataset]. https://arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/waterboards::small-water-systems-rcac/about
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The aquifer risk map is being developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.Methodology for the draft aquifer risk map available for download.This layer shows the locations of state small water systems. The state small water system locations were collected by the Rural Community Assistance Corporation. The locations are approximate and may not exactly represent well locations or service boundaries.

  4. State Small Water Systems 2023 ARM

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 13, 2022
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    California Water Boards (2022). State Small Water Systems 2023 ARM [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/waterboards::state-small-water-systems-2023-arm
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 13, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The Aquifer Risk Map is developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 (Monning, 2019) and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the map is made available to the public and updated annually starting January 1, 2021. This layer is part of the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.

    This layer displays the approximate location of state small water systems (location data accessed October 2022 from the Division of Drinking Water) joined with water quality risk estimates from the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map.

    The water quality risk is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells. To provide comments or feedback on this map, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov or GAMA@Waterboards.ca.gov.

  5. d

    Hydrogeologic map of the Death Valley regional ground-water flow system,...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.usgs.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Nov 19, 2025
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2025). Hydrogeologic map of the Death Valley regional ground-water flow system, Nevada and California [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/hydrogeologic-map-of-the-death-valley-regional-ground-water-flow-system-nevada-and-califor
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Area covered
    Nevada, Death Valley, California
    Description

    This digital dataset represents the surface hydrogeology of an approximately 45,000 square-kilometer area of the Death Valley regional ground-water flow system (DVRFS) in southern Nevada and California. Faunt and others (2004) constructed the map by merging mapped lithostratigraphic units into 27 hydrogeologic units (HGUs). The HGUs represent rocks and deposits of considerable lateral extent and distinct hydrologic properties. The hydrogeologic map was fundamental to the development of a hydrogeologic framework model and a transient ground-water flow model of the DVRFS. These models are the most recent in a number of regional-scale models developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to support investigations at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) and at Yucca Mountain, Nevada (see "Larger Work Citation", Chapter A, page 8).

  6. PWS boundary and reg agency map

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 5, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). PWS boundary and reg agency map [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/waterboards::pws-boundary-and-reg-agency-map/about
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 5, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    Use Constraints:This mapping tool is for reference and guidance purposes only and is not a binding legal document to be used for legal determinations. The data provided may contain errors, inconsistencies, or may not in all cases appropriately represent the current boundaries of PWSs in California. The data in this map are subject to change at any time and should not be used as the sole source for decision making. By using this data, the user acknowledges all limitations of the data and agrees to accept all errors stemming from its use.Description:This mapping tool provides a representation of the general PWS boundaries for water service, wholesaler and jurisdictional areas. The boundaries were created originally by collection via crowd sourcing by CDPH through the Boundary Layer Tool, this tool was retired as of June 30, 2020. State Water Resources Control Board – Division of Drinking Water is currently in the process of verifying the accuracy of these boundaries and working on a tool for maintaining the current boundaries and collecting boundaries for PWS that were not in the original dataset. Currently, the boundaries are in most cases have not been verified. Map Layers· Drinking Water System Areas – representation of the general water system boundaries maintained by the State Water Board. This layer contains polygons with associated data on the water system and boundary the shape represents.· LPA office locations – represents the locations of the Local Primacy Agency overseeing the water system in that county. Address and contact information are attributes of this dataset.· LPA office locations – represents the locations of the Local Primacy Agency overseeing the water system in that county. Address and contact information are attributes of this dataset· California Senate Districts – represents the boundaries of the senate districts in California included as a reference layer in order to perform analysis with the Drinking Water System Boundaries layers.· California Senate Districts – represents the boundaries of the assembly districts in California included as a reference layer in order to perform analysis with the Drinking Water System Boundaries layers.· California County – represents the boundaries of the counties in California included as a reference layer in order to perform analysis with the Drinking Water System Boundaries layers.Informational Pop-up Box for Boundary layer· Water System No. – unique identifier for each water system· Water System Name – name of water system· Regulating Agency – agency overseeing the water system· System Type – classification of water system.· Population the approximate population served by the water system· Boundary Type – the type of water system boundary being displayed· Address Line 1 – the street or mailing address on file for the water system· Address Line 2 – additional line for street or mailing address on file for the water system, if applicable· City – city where water system located or receives mail· County – county where water system is located· Verification Status – the verification status of the water system boundary· Verified by – if the boundary is verified, the person responsible for the verification Date Created and Sources:This web app was most recently updated on July, 21, 2021. Each layer has a data created date and data source is indicated in the overview/metadata page and is valid up to the date provided.

  7. d

    Topographic reference points in California for the regional ground-water...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.usgs.gov
    • +4more
    Updated Nov 12, 2025
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2025). Topographic reference points in California for the regional ground-water potential map by Bedinger and Harrill (2004), Death Valley regional ground-water flow system, Nevada and California [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/topographic-reference-points-in-california-for-the-regional-ground-water-potential-map-by-
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 12, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Area covered
    Death Valley, California
    Description

    This digital data set is a compilation of reference points representing surface-water features, ground-water levels, and topographic settings in California that were used for the regional ground-water potential map by Bedinger and Harrill (2004). The regional ground-water potential map was developed to assess potential interbasin flow in the Death Valley regional ground-water flow system (DVRFS), a 100,000-square-kilometer region of southern Nevada and California. To obtain an adequate network of control points, Bedinger and Harrill (2004) also used regional potential altitudes derived from springs and deep well data. A set of general guidelines was developed to relate regional ground-water potential to these more readily observed surface and near-surface ground-water levels and to hydrologic characteristics of ground-water basins in the DVRFS (see "Larger Work Citation", Appendix 1).

  8. State Small Water Systems 2022 (DDW)

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 1, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). State Small Water Systems 2022 (DDW) [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/waterboards::state-small-water-systems-2022-ddw
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    Layer includes geocoded point locations and Administrative contact information for state smalls, collected by the Needs Analysis Unit as of 9/22/21. This information was collected as part of SB200 requirements for counties to submit state small water system location information. This layer also includes water quality risk estimates from the 2022 Aquifer Risk Map. The risk estimates are not based on samples collected directly from each state small water system, but reflect the average water quality of the raw source groundwater nearby. This data collection is ongoing and this layer will be updated/obsolete in a few months when the information will be included in SDWIS records.

  9. California Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Funded Projects

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jul 23, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). California Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Funded Projects [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/7f6dd6b53e7740008959838f222574b3
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 23, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    Interactive GIS Mapping Tool – Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Web Map in California

    Use Constraints:

    This mapping tool is for reference and guidance purposes only and is not a binding legal document to be used for legal determinations. The data provided may contain errors, inconsistencies, or may not in all cases appropriately represent the current status of Urgent Drinking Water Needs project locations. The data in this map are subject to change at any time and should not be used as the sole source for decision making. By using this data, the user acknowledges all limitations of the data and agrees to accept all errors stemming from its use. The Urgent Drinking Water Needs map does not provide the locations of individual households that were provided funding through grant agreements with non-profit organizations.

    Description:

    This map displays Urgent Drinking Water Needs due to drought, contamination, or other eligible emergencies. This includes projects approved for funding from July 1, 2014 to November 18, 2022, including both active and completed projects. The data comes from the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Cleanup and Abatement Account’s (CAA) project database and was exported on November 18, 2022. The map contains four layers: UDWN_Projects, UDWN_Summary_by_county, CA_Assembly_Districts_WEB, and CA_Senate_Districts_WEB.

    The attributes for each project in the UDWN_Projects layer include the recipient of grant funding (grantee), community served, type of project, grant amount, funding program, date the project was approved, date the project was completed, Disadvantaged Community status, Small Disadvantaged Community status, the public water system number, status of the project (Active or Completed), and the state fiscal year in which the project was approved.

    How to Use the Interactive Mapping Tool:When the map loads, it displays the state of California, UDWN Project locations, and California county boundaries. The “About” tab is located on the left-hand side of the map and displays instructions for using the map. The next tab display pre-set filters, the legend, and a layer list. Clicking on the “Legend” tab in the menu will show the legend of the map. Projects that appear as blue dots are still active, while projects that appear as red dots have already been completed.Note: Layers that show CA Assembly and Senate Districts were created by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC). These layers must be toggled on in the layers list to be seen. To view information about a specific project, click on a project location. A pop-up box will appear with the following information: (a) county name, (b) community served, (c) type of project, (d) approved funding amount, (e) approval date, and (f) status. To view information about the total funding and number of projects in a county, click within a county boundary and a pop up will appear.Use the pre-set filters to filter projects by status, fiscal year, funding program, county, assembly district, and/or senate district using the drop-down menu. The filters can be toggled on or off using the switches on the right side of the menu. To create a custom filter, click the filter icon at the bottom of the preset filter menu and enter the desired parameters. For one parameter, click “add expression” to create a custom filter. For more than one, click “add set” to create a custom filter.To export and download filtered data, open the Attribute Table located at the bottom of the map, click the “Options” drop down menu, select “Export all to CSV” from the drop-down menu, and download the desired information.

    Map Layers:UDWN_Projects – This layer shows all active or completed UDWN projects from July 1, 2014 to November 18, 2022. Active projects are represented with blue dots while completed projects are represented with red dots. The attributes in this layer include what county the project is in, the community served, the type of project, approved funding amount, approval date, and status.UDWN_Summary_by_county – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the counties in California. The attributes in this layer include the total number of projects and total funding approved in that county since July 1, 2014. CA_Assembly_Districts_WEB – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the assembly districts in California. It is owned and maintained by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) and boundaries may not be accurate. CA_Senate_Districts_WEB – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the senate districts in California. It is owned and maintained by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) and boundaries may not be accurate.

    Informational Pop-up Box:County – California county where the project is locatedCommunity Served – California community that is benefiting from UDWN funding Type of Project – Project type, which can include bottled water, consolidation, hauled water, pilot study, POU, pump, tank, treatment, and well Approved Funding Amount – Amount of money in U.S. dollars approved for the projectApproval Date – Date that the project was approved for fundingStatus – Current status of the project (active or closed)Date Created:

    Data created on November 18, 2022 and valid up to this date.

    Sources:

    Urgent Drinking Water Needs data was exported from the CAA Database.

    The Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) created the California Senate and Assembly layers.

    Points of Contact:

    Christina Raynard is the creator and owner of this layer. Christina.raynard@waterboards.ca.gov (State Water Resources Control Board, Division of Financial Assistance)

    Terms of Use

    No special restrictions or limitations on using the item’s content have been provided.

  10. Nitrate Water Quality by Section

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    Updated Apr 4, 2021
    + more versions
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    California Water Boards (2021). Nitrate Water Quality by Section [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/7d53db6304954c77833c196353934d8d
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The aquifer risk map is being developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding..Methodology for the draft aquifer risk map available for download.This layer shows declustered water quality data for arsenic, nitrate, 1,2,3-trichloropropane, per square mile section that was used to create the aquifer risk map required by SB-200. The intent of the aquifer risk map is to help prioritize areas where domestic well users and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL) and will be updated annually starting January 1, 2021.

    The section water quality data is based on depth-filtered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells, collected following a similar methodology as the Domestic Well Needs Assessment White Paper. This layer contains the long-term average (20 years) as well as the count of recent results (within 2 years) above the MCL, between 80% - 100% of the MCL, and below 80% of the MCL for each square mile section.

  11. Water Quality Risk Final

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 2, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). Water Quality Risk Final [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/waterboards::water-quality-risk/about
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 2, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    This is the map image layer. The feature layer is available here.The aquifer risk map is being developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. This layer is part of the 2022 Aquifer Risk Map. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.This layer contains summarized water quality risk per square mile section and per well point. The water quality risk is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells for all contaminants with an MCL (plus hexavalent chromium). The methodology used to determine water quality risk is outlined here. To provide comments or feedback on this map, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov or Emily.Houlihan@Waterboards.ca.gov.

  12. c

    Aquifer Risk Map 2023

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 14, 2022
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    California Water Boards (2022). Aquifer Risk Map 2023 [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/54f61cf721f94ba4b441bba8692c6178
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 14, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The Aquifer Risk Map Web Tool contains all archived maps, including this 2023 Aquifer Risk Map.The Aquifer Risk Map is developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 (Monning, 2019) and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the map is made available to the public and updated annually starting January 1, 2021. This web map is part of the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.

    This web map includes the following layers:Water Quality Risk: water quality risk estimates per square mile section for all contaminants with an MCL. Water quality risk is listed as “high” (average or recent concentration in section is above MCL for one or more contaminants), “medium” (average or recent concentration in section is between 80% - 100% of MCL for one or more contaminants), “low” (average or recent concentration in section is less than 80% of MCL for all measured contaminants) or “unknown” (no water quality data available in section).Individual Contaminant Risk: water quality risk estimates for nitrate, arsenic, 1,2,3-trichloropropane, hexavalent chromium, and uranium per square mile section.State Small Water Systems (DDW): state small water systems (5-14 connections) location from the Division of Drinking Water joined with water quality risk section estimates from the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map.Domestic Well Records (OSWCR): the approximate count and location of domestic well completion reports submitted to the Department of Water Resources. This is used as a proxy to identify domestic well locations.Public Water System Boundaries (DDW): the approximate boundaries of public drinking water systems, from the Division of Drinking Water. For reference only.Census Areas: Census block groups and census tract boundaries containing demographic information from the 2021 American Community Survey (B19013 Median Household Income and B03002 race/ethnicity) joined with summarized water quality risk estimates from the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map (count of high risk domestic wells and state small water systems per census area).Reference Boundaries: Various geographic boundaries including counties, basins, GSA’s, CV-SALTS basin prioritization status, Disadvantaged Community (DAC) status, and legislative boundaries. For reference only.CalEnviroScreen 4.0: CalEnviroScreen scores from OEHHA. For reference only.Groundwater Level Percentiles (DWR): Groundwater depth in various monitoring wells compared to the historic average at that well. For reference only.

    The water quality risk is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells. The methodology used to determine water quality risk is outlined here. For more information about the SAFER program, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov. For technical questions or feedback on the map please email GAMA@waterboards.ca.gov.

  13. Domestic Depth Groundwater Quality (Water Quality Risk)

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • +2more
    Updated Apr 4, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). Domestic Depth Groundwater Quality (Water Quality Risk) [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/4cddc28da2654fe4a0196f2c8be273ad
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The aquifer risk map is being developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding. This layer contains summarized water quality risk per census block group, square mile section, and well point. The overall census block group water quality risk is based on five risk factors (1. the count of chemicals with a long-term average (20 year) or recent result (within 2 years) above the MCL, 2. the count of chemicals with a long-term average (20 year) or recent result (within 2 years) within 80% of the MCL, 3. the average magnitude or results above the MCL, 4. the percent area with chemicals above the MCL, and 5. the percent area with chemicals within 80% of the MCL). The specific chemicals that contribute to these risk factors are listed as well. Higher values for each individual risk factor contribute to a higher overall score. The scores are converted to percentiles to normalize the results. Higher percentiles indicate higher water quality risk. The water quality data is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells, collected following a similar methodology as the Domestic Well Needs Assessment White Paper. The methodology used to calculate the risk percentiles is outlined in the Aquifer Risk Map Methodology. To provide comments or feedback on this map, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov or Emily.Houlihan@Waterboards.ca.gov.Methodology for the draft aquifer risk map available for download.

  14. l

    CVA Drought Risk

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jul 30, 2024
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    County of Los Angeles (2024). CVA Drought Risk [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/datasets/cva-drought-risk
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Drinking Water - SAFER Dashboard Failing and At-Risk Drinking Water SystemsDrought is a regional hazard; a community's susceptibility to it is influenced primarily by the status of their water system. During periods of drought, communities served by at-risk water systems could lose access to safe drinking water. Drought impacts water quality because decreasing well water levels lead to increased concentrations of contaminants such as arsenic. A lack of clean, sufficient well water can cause financial burden, sanitation concerns, and other issues for communities that rely on active wells for bathing, washing dishes, and other daily needs. This map layer draws data from State assessments of the hundreds of water systems across the county. The Division of Drinking Water (DDW) identifies Failing and At-Risk community water systems and K-12 non-transient, non-community schools. This information is displayed online in the Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience (SAFER) Dashboard. The data utilized for this assessment is derived from multiple sources: self-reported from water systems, data generated by DDW staff, other California state agencies, and U.S. Census. The data sources, calculation methods, Failing and At-Risk criteria, etc. are fully documented in the annual Drinking Water Needs Assessment report which is published annually on the State Water Board’s website.SAFER Dashboard: https://www.waterboards.ca.gov/drinking_water/certlic/drinkingwater/saferdashboard.htmlAttribute Data: https://data.ca.gov/dataset/safer-failing-and-at-risk-drinking-water-systemsWater System Boundaries: https://gispublic.waterboards.ca.gov/portal/home/item.htmlData from the SAFER Dashboard joined to water system boundaries using the Water System ID. If no matching Water System ID, the nearest boundary to the point location noted in the SAFER dataset was used.This dataset is updated nightly from the Attribute Data source above.

  15. c

    Aquifer Risk Map 2021

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 2, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). Aquifer Risk Map 2021 [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/c72538f699d74001bb4eaaaf15cc3b63
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 2, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The aquifer risk map is being developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the risk map is to be made available to the public and is to be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.Methodology for the draft aquifer risk map available for download.Water quality risk: This layer contains summarized water quality risk per census block group, square mile section, and well point. The overall census block group water quality risk is based on four risk factors (the count of chemicals with a long-term average (20 year) or recent result (within 2 years) above the MCL, the count of chemicals with a long-term average (20 year) or recent result (within 2 years) within 80% of the MCL, the average magnitude or results above the MCL, and the percent area with chemicals above the MCL or within 80% of the MCL). The specific chemicals that contribute to these risk factors are listed as well. Higher values for each individual risk factor contribute to a higher overall score. The scores are converted to percentiles to normalize the results. The water quality data is based on depth-filtered, declustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells, collected following a similar methodology as the Domestic Well Needs Assessment White Paper. This layer also displays the total estimated count of domestic wells per census block group, based on the Department of Water Resources Online System for Well Completion Reports, and the total estimated count of domestic well user population, based on the United States Geological Survey Road-Enhanced Methodology (Johnson and Belitz, 2019). To provide comments or feedback on this map, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov or Emily.Houlihan@Waterboards.ca.gov. Individual chemicals: This layer shows declustered water quality data for arsenic, nitrate, 1,2,3-trichloropropane, uranium, and hexavalent chromium per square mile section. The intent of the aquifer risk map is to help prioritize areas where domestic well users and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL) and will be updated annually starting January 1, 2021. The section water quality data is based on depth-filtered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells, collected following a similar methodology as the Domestic Well Needs Assessment White Paper. This layer contains the long-term average (20 years) as well as the count of recent results (within 2 years) above the MCL, between 80% - 100% of the MCL, and below 80% of the MCL for each square mile section. Drinking water users: This layer shows the locations of state small water systems and domestic well density. The state small water system locations were collected by the Rural Community Assistance Corporation. The locations are approximate and may not exactly represent well locations or service boundaries. The domestic well density per square mile is based on well completion report data from the Department of Water Resources Online System for Well Completion Reports. This layer also contains the public water system boundaries (available on the State Water Board REST endpoint) for reference.Reference layers: This layer contains several reference boundaries, including boundaries of CV-SALTS basins with their priority status, Groundwater Sustainability Agency boundaries, census block group boundaries, county boundaries, and groundwater unit boundaries.

  16. c

    AS sectionrisk2023

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 13, 2022
    + more versions
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    California Water Boards (2022). AS sectionrisk2023 [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/waterboards::individual-contaminants-2023-arm?layer=1
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 13, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The Aquifer Risk Map is developed to fulfill requirements of SB-200 (Monning, 2019) and is intended to help prioritize areas where domestic wells and state small water systems may be accessing groundwater that does not meet primary drinking water standards (maximum contaminant level or MCL). In accordance with SB-200, the map is made available to the public and updated annually starting January 1, 2021. This layer is part of the 2023 Aquifer Risk Map. The Fund Expenditure Plan states the risk map will be used by Water Boards staff to help prioritize areas for available SAFER funding.This layer contains summarized water quality risk per square mile section for arsenic.The water quality risk is based on depth-filtered, de-clustered water quality results from public and domestic supply wells. To provide comments or feedback on this map, please email SAFER@waterboards.ca.gov or Emily.Houlihan@Waterboards.ca.gov.

  17. DWRAT Map (Public)

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Sep 27, 2021
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    California Water Boards (2021). DWRAT Map (Public) [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/maps/8fd64f07f29844339fc5c7862edd1ac3
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 27, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    The State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Division of Water Rights staff have developed an interactive tool that graphically displays water availability for water rights in the lower Russian River Watershed. Water rights are symbolized by circles, the colors of which correspond to shortage determinations. Water supply information was obtained from the Drought Water Rights Allocation Tool (DWRAT), a model developed by the SWRCB Division of Water Rights. Water demand was obtained from the SWRCB's eWRIMS database. Shortage determinations were made by comparing supply to demand.Additional information about the SWRCB's Russian River drought response can be found at https://www.waterboards.ca.gov/drought/russian_river/For feedback about the map design, please email DWR@waterboards.ca.gov or call (916) 341-5300. For feedback about the underlying data or shortage determinations, please email RussianRiverDrought@waterboards.ca.gov or call (916) 341-5318.

  18. w

    Small Drinking Water Systems

    • data.waterloo.ca
    • geohub.cambridge.ca
    • +5more
    Updated Aug 24, 2022
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    Region of Waterloo (2022). Small Drinking Water Systems [Dataset]. https://data.waterloo.ca/datasets/RMW::small-drinking-water-systems/about
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Region of Waterloo
    Area covered
    Description

    This is designed to provide the public with information regarding inspections of all geographically fixed small drinking water systems in Waterloo Region. Please be advised that the results of all inspections posted here describe what the Public Health Inspector (PHI) observed on the date of inspection. This data is not intended to guarantee the conditions of a small drinking water system premise at all times and should not be relied upon for that purpose.

  19. c

    Water System Standard Grid Atlas Map

    • geohub.cambridge.ca
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Oct 10, 2017
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    City of Kitchener (2017). Water System Standard Grid Atlas Map [Dataset]. https://geohub.cambridge.ca/documents/KitchenerGIS::water-system-standard-grid-atlas-map/about?path=
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Kitchener
    Area covered
    Description

    Kitchener water distribution system standard grid tabloid size atlas map.PDF document updates daily. The date above is the date the document link was created or last updated. Check the date in the pdf for the date it was created.

  20. c

    cr2022 dwssws

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 24, 2022
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    California Water Boards (2022). cr2022 dwssws [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/waterboards::cr2022-dwssws
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    This map image layers displays combined risk (water shortage + water quality) for domestic wells and state small water systems. This layer is for use in the 2022 SAFER Needs Assessment. There are three key data fields available:Combined Risk: water shortage and water quality risk combined in one score (combined risk score = (water shortage risk score + water quality risk score)/2)Water Quality Risk: raw data is from the 2022 Aquifer Risk Map. Raw data is normalized into four risk bins which correspond to numeric scores (high risk = 1; medium risk = 0.25; low risk = 0, no data available = N/A).Water Shortage Risk: raw data from the Department of Water Resources Water Shortage Vulnerability Tool for self-supplied communities. Raw data is normalized into four risk bins which correspond to numeric scores (top 10% of scores = 1; top 25% of scores = 0.25; lower 75% of scores = 0; no data available = N/A).All PLSS sections also display the estimated count of domestic well locations (derived from Department of Water Resources Online System for Well Completion Reports) and the count of known state small water systems (from the Division of Drinking Water).

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California Water Boards (2021). California Drinking Water System Area Boundaries [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/fbba842bf134497c9d611ad506ec48cc
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California Drinking Water System Area Boundaries

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12 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Mar 16, 2021
Dataset provided by
California State Water Resources Control Board
Authors
California Water Boards
Area covered
Description

In order to provide an accurate data set of service area boundaries for California drinking water systems, the Division of Drinking Water of the California Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB DDW) has undertaken a project to vet and verify the data collected by the Tracking California's Water Boundary Tool (WBT).Note: This feature layer is updated on a regular basis. However, in some locations where it is shared, it shows the “Data Updated” date as the last time the item has changed, not the data. To accurately determine when the data was last updated, open the data table and sort by Last Edited Date field.SWRCB DDW downloaded a copy of the current water system service areas loaded in the WBT as of June 27, 2019. Additional attribute fields indicating verification status, verification staff and system type were appended to the data set. SWRCB DDW staff are reviewing and validating the displayed boundaries of each service area as well as contacting the service providers regarding necessary corrections. The verification status of any particular service area may be found in the Verification Status field.For any questions regarding this dataset, please contact the Data Support Unit at DDW-DSU@waterboards.ca.gov.

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