San Diego County Water Authority: Governance and Public Role

The San Diego County Water Authority (SDCWA) is a public agency responsible for securing and managing wholesale water supplies for the San Diego region. Its governance structure, financing mechanisms, and interagency relationships shape how 3.3 million residents across San Diego County receive reliable water service. Understanding how the Authority operates clarifies why water rate decisions, infrastructure investments, and drought response policies unfold the way they do.

Definition and scope

The San Diego County Water Authority was established in 1944 under California's County Water Authority Act (California Water Code §§ 30000 et seq.). It functions as a wholesale water agency, meaning it delivers water in bulk to 24 member agencies — cities, smaller water districts, and municipal utilities — rather than billing individual households directly. Those member agencies handle retail distribution to end users.

The SDCWA's geographic scope covers approximately 1,900 square miles across San Diego County, stretching from the coast to inland communities and from Camp Pendleton in the north to the international border in the south. Member agencies include entities such as the City of San Diego's Public Utilities Department, the Otay Water District, the Padre Dam Municipal Water District, and the Helix Water District, among the 24 total.

Scope limitations and what is not covered: The Water Authority does not govern wastewater treatment, stormwater management, or groundwater adjudication — those functions are distributed among individual cities, the County, and separate special districts. Policies specific to the City of San Diego's retail water service fall under the San Diego Water Authority topic addressed elsewhere. State-level water rights, Delta conveyance infrastructure, and Colorado River Compact allocations are administered by the California Department of Water Resources and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD), not by the SDCWA directly. Environmental permitting for land use adjoining reservoirs is subject to San Diego zoning and land-use rules at the municipal or county level.

How it works

The Authority's governance centers on a 36-member Board of Directors. Each of the 24 member agencies appoints at least one director, with larger agencies entitled to additional representation proportional to water deliveries and assessed land value. Board members are appointed — not directly elected by the general public — though they typically hold elected or appointed positions within their home member agencies.

The Board sets policy, approves annual budgets, authorizes bond issuances, and negotiates long-term water supply contracts. Day-to-day operations are managed by a General Manager who reports to the Board.

Water supply reaches the region through three primary pathways:

  1. Colorado River Aqueduct — Managed by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, this aqueduct delivers Colorado River water into the region. The SDCWA purchases treated water from MWD under a long-term contract, and the MWD–SDCWA relationship has been the subject of significant litigation, including a 2017 California Court of Appeal ruling (Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, 2017) that addressed how MWD calculated certain wheeling and treatment charges.
  2. State Water Project — Northern California water delivered via the California Aqueduct, again purchased through MWD.
  3. Local supplies — Including storage in 25 reservoirs totaling approximately 891,000 acre-feet of capacity, water recycling programs, groundwater, and a seawater desalination contract with the Claude "Bud" Lewis Carlsbad Desalination Plant, which produces up to 56,000 acre-feet of water per year (Poseidon Water/Carlsbad Desalination Plant, San Diego County Water Authority).

Financing flows through water sales revenues, connection fees, property taxes on assessed land within the service area, and periodic bond issuances. The San Diego bonds and ballot measures framework governs how certain capital projects are approved by voters.

Common scenarios

Rate disputes between member agencies and the Authority: Member agencies periodically contest how the SDCWA allocates infrastructure costs among its 24 members. The MWD litigation mentioned above stemmed from a dispute over transportation charges — a recurring tension when wholesale pricing methodologies change.

Drought response and water allocation: During declared water shortages, the SDCWA activates allocation schedules that reduce how much water each member agency may request. Member agencies then impose tiered pricing or use restrictions on retail customers. The Authority's Water Shortage Contingency Plan outlines six allocation stages, each corresponding to a different percentage reduction in supply.

Infrastructure bond financing: Major capital projects — pipeline expansions, reservoir rehabilitation, emergency storage — are financed through revenue bonds approved by the Board. These projects connect to the broader San Diego infrastructure and public works planning context at both city and county levels.

Coordination with SANDAG: Regional growth projections prepared by the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) feed directly into the Water Authority's Urban Water Management Plan, which California law (Water Code §§ 10610–10656) requires agencies serving more than 3,000 connections to update every five years.

Decision boundaries

The SDCWA's authority is bounded on multiple sides by overlapping jurisdictions:

The distinction between wholesale and retail governance is the most consequential boundary. A household experiencing a service interruption deals with its retail member agency — not the Water Authority. A policy decision affecting regional supply portfolios or imported water costs originates at the SDCWA Board level and flows downward through member agency pricing structures. For broader context on how San Diego's public agencies interact, the San Diego metro government overview provides a reference framework.

Regional environmental constraints — particularly those related to endangered species habitat around reservoirs — can affect SDCWA operations but are adjudicated through federal and state environmental review processes, documented under the San Diego environmental policy framework, rather than by the Authority acting alone.

References