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PROJECT INFORMATION FORM <br />Please complete a unique Project Information Form for each project in the application. <br />There are no character limits on specific questions but the Project Information Form as <br />a whole may not exceed 10 pages. <br />1. Project Name: Well 29 Rehabilitation Improvement Project <br />2. Local Project Sponsor (if different than grantee): Same as grantee <br />3. Please provide the latitude and longitude of the project site. For linear projects or those <br />covering a large area, report the coordinates for a central point. If this information is <br />confidential, it must be clearly labeled "confidential." You can find the latitude and longitude <br />easily using google maps. You can find instructions at the following link: <br />https://support.google.com/maps/answer/18539?hl=en&co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop. <br />Latitude: 33°44'43.1"N Longitude: 117°52'34.3"W <br />4. Please briefly describe the proposed project. <br />The City's Well 29 is located at 722 West 1st Street. Drilling of the well occurred in <br />1980, with the subsequent installation of pumping facilities occurring in 1982. Well <br />29 is one of three wells pumping water from the groundwater basin to the Walnut <br />Street Reservoir as part of the City's Walnut Pump Station System. Due to the age of <br />the well and the deterioration of the well's capacity and equipment, the City is not <br />able to utilize Well 29 at its full capacity and therefore needs to rehabilitate Well 29 <br />and reconfigure the existing site. The rehabilitation of Well 29 is referred to in this <br />application as the "Project". The Project will achieve the following benefits: <br />• Makes additional water supplies available (adding approximately 2,500 <br />gallons per minute (gpm) to the City's pumping capacity). <br />• Improves water management (by enhancing system flexibility). <br />• Benefits fish, wildlife and the environment (by making the City less reliant on <br />imported water, 4,000 acre-feet yearly (AFY). <br />Does this project respond to an existing emergency to humans and/or wildlife? If so, please <br />describe the emergency and how this project is addressing it. <br />Yes, the Project will rehabilitate a local groundwater well which will provide the City <br />of Santa Ana increased resilience to ongoing and future droughts. Currently the City <br />acquires approximately 22% of its water supply from the Metropolitan Water District <br />of Southern California's (MWD) imported water connections that receive water from <br />the Colorado River and the State Water Project (SWP) from northern California, <br />which are directly influenced by climate conditions in northern California and the <br />Colorado River Basin, respectively. Both regions are currently experiencing and have <br />been suffering from multi -year drought conditions which directly impact water <br />supplies to southern California. For instance, due to the on -going drought conditions <br />in the Colorado River Basin, the federal government declared a shortage on the <br />Colorado River for the first time in the existence of the Colorado River Compact. This <br />declaration curtails allocations to Colorado River water users. Additionally, the <br />Sierra Nevada Mountains (the source of water for the SWP) are currently designated <br />City Council 36 — 14 12/21/2021 <br />