California Code of Regulations
Title 14 - Natural Resources
Division 9 - Delta Protection Commission
Chapter 3 - Regulations Governing Land Use and Resource Management in the Primary Zone of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
Section 20100 - Levees
Current through Register 2024 Notice Reg. No. 38, September 20, 2024
(a) Overview
The Delta is the natural drain for a watershed that includes the Central Valley and the western slope of the Sierra Nevada from Fresno to Mount Shasta. Existing flood management and water supply facilities (dams, levees, and bypasses) throughout the watershed influence floodflows to the Delta. Settlers began to farm the rich lands of the Delta by the 1850s. They built low levees to allow land to be drained for farming. Few of these levees were built using modern engineering techniques, and many rest on peat foundations that have settled with the added weight.
The main flood management facilities in the Delta include the approximately 1,100 miles of levees and the Yolo Bypass. The Yolo Bypass, with about 500,000 cubic feet per second (cfs) capacity, was designed to flood occasionally to relieve high water stages on the Sacramento River. Easements held by the Central Valley Flood Protection Board provide the right to inundate the land, including some islands such as Liberty Island, with floodwaters. The lower Sacramento ship channel and the Stockton ship channel provide some flood-carrying capability. Dredging to enlarge and clean Delta channels used to be an important element of flood management.
Levees can fail for various reasons including the burrowing activities of animals, erosion, overtopping, deferred maintenance, seepage through sand layers underlying levee foundations, slope stability and other causes.
Delta levees face risk of high water overtopping during the wet season (winter and spring), particularly when large storms coincide with high tides. Storms contribute to the levee overtopping risk by increasing water levels in the rivers and creating wind-induced waves. In addition, the low barometric pressures associated with large storms raise water surface levels in Delta and Suisun Marsh channels. In many cases, the flooding of the islands has been costly to local residents and farmers and to the state as a whole. Damage to levees could also occur due to sea level rise and other aspects of climate change.
(b) Goal
Support the improvement, emergency repair, and long-term maintenance of Delta levees and channels. Promote levee maintenance and rehabilitation to preserve the land areas and channel configurations in the Delta as consistent with the objectives of the Act.
(c) Policies
1. New section filed 5-8-2001; operative 6-7-2001 (Register 2001, No. 19).
2. Amendment filed 10-7-2010; operative 11-6-2010 (Register 2010, No. 41).
Note: Authority cited: Section 29752, Public Resources Code. Reference: Sections 29760, 29763 and 29763.5, Public Resources Code.