The 11 Stages of Plan for Water
Stage 1: System Overview
- Top of system to the bottom (watershed, reservoirs, hydropower facilities, transport systems, end-user delivery)
- Common understanding of how the system works
Stage 2: Water Rights Overview
- Review of Water Rights Currently Held
- Locations
- Year of Seniority
- Current Usage
Stage 3: Watersheds
- Review of watershed management
- Cultural awareness and sensitivity
Stage 4: Risk
- Presentation of risk analysis and mitigation efforts presentation relating to three organizational considerations: Operational, Regulatory and Environmental
Stage 5: Strategic Planning
- Leverage work previously completed
- Can be revisited during process
- Mission
- Vision
- Strategic priorities
- Used as framework for Plan for Water process
- Used to guide policy decisions
- Used to guide annual budget
Stage 6: Basis for Plan Water
- Planning horizon
- Intended outcome refinement
- Frequency of Plan update
- How Plan is used
- Responsibility for Plan
Stage 7: Hydrology and Hydrography
- Leverage existing work
- Drought scenarios
- Consider climate change
- Consider Impacts of watershed health
- Science and data driven
Stage 8: Demand
- Model future demand for planning horizon
- Requires new model
- Considers land use
- Considers end-user use changes
- Considers Regulatory Flows - FERC
Stage 9: Supply Needs
- Supply Needs
- Short Term
- Long Term
- Consistent with Planning Horizon
Stage 10: Strategy Options
- Operations (system and end users)
- Restoration (system and watershed)
- Management (ongoing adaptive management of watershed)
- Programs (capital)
Stage 11: Evaluate Strategies
- Develop evaluation criteria consistent with Board-determined mission, vision, and strategic priorities
- Possible consideration (environmental, cost, technical feasibility, constructability risk, political)