Adjudicated
The court decides who is allowed to pump from
the groundwater basin and how much annually
can be pumped. The amount pumped is dependent
upon the condition of the basin. The court
also designates a water master to oversee
adjudication. The Orange County Groundwater
Basin is a non-adjudicated basin. An example
of an adjudicated basin is the central basin.
Aqueducts
Canals used to carry water from a great distance.
Aquifer
A natural underground layer of porous, water-bearing
materials (sand, gravel) usually capable of
yielding a large amount or supply of water.
Artesian
Water held under pressure in porous rock or
soil confined by impermeable geologic formations.
An artesian well is free flowing.
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Backflow
A reverse flow condition, created by a difference
in water pressures, which causes water to
flow back into the distribution pipes of a
potable water supply from any source or sources
other than an intended source. Also see backsiphonage
and cross-connection.
Bay Delta
The San Francisco Bay/San Joaquin Delta is
an estuary forming 700 miles of waterways,
surrounding 57 islands. The State Water Project
and Central Valley Project extract water from
the Bay-Delta for delivery south.
Best management practices (BMPs)
Structural, nonstructural and managerial techniques
that are recognized to be the most effective
and practical means to control nonpoint source
pollutants yet are compatible with the productive
use of the resource to which they are applied.
BMPs are used in both urban and agricultural
areas.
Brackish Water
Mixed fresh and salt waters.
Brown Act
Ralph M. Brown Act enacted by the State legislature
governing all meetings of legislative bodies.
Also know as the Open Meeting requirements.
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Capital costs
Costs (usually long-term debt) of financing
construction and equipment. Capital costs
are usually fixed, one-time expenses, which
are independent of the amount of water produced.
Central Valley Project
Federally owned aqueduct carrying water from
Northern California to regions in Los Angeles.
Chloramines
Compounds formed by the reaction of hypochlorous
acid (or aqueous chlorine) with ammonia.
Chlorination
The application of chlorine to water, generally
for the purpose of disinfection, but frequently
for accomplishing other biological or chemical
result (aiding coagulation and controlling
tastes and odors).
Chlorine demand
Chlorine demand is the difference between
the amount of chlorine added to water and
the amount of residual chlorine remaining
after a given contact time. Chlorine demand
may change with dosage, time, temperature,
pH, and nature and amount of the impurities
in the water.
Clear Well
A reservoir for the storage of filtered water
of sufficient capacity to prevent the need
to vary the filtration rate with variations
in demand. Also used to provide chlorine contact
time for disinfection.
Coagulation
The clumping together of very fine particles
into larger particles caused by the use of
chemicals (coagulants). The chemicals neutralize
the electrical charges of the fine particles.
This clumping together makes it easier to
separate the solids from the water by settling,
skimming, draining, or filtering.
Coliform
A group of bacteria found in the intestines
of warm-blooded animals (including humans)
and also in plants, soil, air and water. Fecal
coliforms are a specific class of bacteria,
which only inhibit the intestines of warm-blooded
animals. The presence of coliform bacteria
is an indication that the water is polluted
and may contain pathogenic organisms.
Colorado River
One of Metropolitan Water District of Southern
California's import water sources, supplying
water and hydroelectric power for Southern
Californians. Supplies about 65 percent of
total water used south of the Tehachapi Mountains,
from the Pacific Ocean to the river.
Colored Water
Water from the groundwater basin that has
the color of weak tea, a slight sulfur odor
and slightly elevated temperature. The color
and odor are believed to result from ancient
redwood forests leaching into the basin. Colored
water is found in aquifers below the clear
water zone. In Mesa's service area, colored
water is found below 600 ft. with the elimination
of aesthetic characteristics (color, odor).
Colored water meets all State and Federal
water quality standards.
Conductance
A rapid method of estimating the dissolved-solids
content of a water supply. The measurement
indicates the capacity of a sample of water
to carry an electrical current, which is related
to the concentration of ionized substances
in the water. Also called Specific Conductance.
Continuous sample
A flow of water from a particular place in
a water treatment plant to the location where
samples are collected for testing. This continuous
stream may be used to obtain grab or composite
samples. Frequently, several taps (faucets)
will flow continuously in the laboratory to
provide test samples from various places in
a water treatment plant.
Conjunctive use
The planned use of groundwater in conjunction
with surface water in overall management to
optimize total water resources.
Corrosivity
An indication of the corrosiveness of water.
The water’s pH, alkalinity, hardness,
temperature, total dissolved solids, dissolved
oxygen concentration, and the Langelier Index
describe the corrosiveness of water.
Cost/benefit analysis
A quantitative evaluation of the costs that
would be incurred versus the overall benefits
to society of a proposed action such as the
establishment of an acceptable dose of a toxic
chemical.
Cross-connection
Any actual or potential connection between
a drinking (potable) water system and an unapproved
water supply or other source of contamination.
For example, if you have a pump moving nonpotable
water and hook into the drinking water system
to supply water for the pump seal, a cross-connection
or mixing between the two water systems can
occur. This mixing may lead to contamination
of the drinking water.
Curb stop
A water service shutoff valve located in a
water service pipe near the curb and between
the water main and the building. This valve
is usually operated by a wrench or valve key
and is used to start or stop flows in the
water service line to a building. Also called
a "curb cock."
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Demineralization
A treatment process that removes
dissolved minerals (salts) from water.
Desalinization
The removal of dissolved salts (such as sodium
chloride, NaCl) from water by natural means
(leaching) or by specific water treatment
processes.
Direct filtration
A filtration method of treating water which
consists of the addition of coagulant chemicals,
flash mixing, coagulation, minimal flocculation,
and filtration. The flocculation facilities
may be omitted, but the physical-chemical
reactions will occur to some extent. The sedimentation
process is omitted.
Disinfection
The process designed to kill most microorganisms
in water, including essentially all pathogenic
(disease-causing) bacteria. There are several
ways to disinfect, with chlorine being most
frequently used in water treatment. Compare
with sterilization.
Disinfection by-product
A compound formed by the reaction of a disinfectant
such as chlorine with organic material in
the water supply.
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Effluent
Water or some other liquid (raw, partially
or completely treated) flowing from a reservoir,
basin, treatment process or treatment plant.
E.P.A.
United States Environmental Protection Agency.
Estuary
Area where tidal and river currents meet,
and where salinity is between the extremes
of ocean and fresh waters.
Evaporation
The process by which water or other liquid
becomes a gas (water vapor or ammonia vapor).
Water from land areas, bodies of water, and
all other moist surfaces is absorbed into
the atmosphere as a vapor.
Evapotranspiration
The combined processes of evaporation and
transpiration. It can be defined as the sum
of water used by vegetation and water lost
by evaporation.
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Filtration
A process for removing particulate matter
from water by passage through porous media.
Finished water
Water that has passed through a water treatment
plant. All the treatment processes are completed
or "finished". This water is ready
to be delivered to consumers. Also called
Product Water.
First draw
The water that immediately comes out when
a tap is first opened. This water is likely
to have the highest level of lead contamination
from plumbing materials.
First draw sample
A one-liter sample of tap water that has been
standing in plumbing pipes at least six hours,
and is collected without flushing the tap.
Floc
Clumps of bacteria and particulate impurities
that have come together and formed a cluster.
Found in flocculation tanks and settling or
sedimentation basins.
Flocculation
The gathering together of fine particles in
water by gentle mixing after the addition
of coagulant chemicals to form larger particles.
Fluoridation
The addition of a chemical to increase the
concentration of fluoride ions in drinking
water, to a predetermined optimum limit, to
reduce the incidence (number) of dental caries
(tooth decay) in children. Defluoridation
is the removal of excess fluoride in drinking
water to prevent the mottling (brown stains)
of teeth.
Flushing
A method used to clean water distribution
lines. Hydrants are opened and water, with
a high velocity, flows through the pipes,
removes deposits from the pipes, and flows
out the hydrants.
Fresh water
Water that generally contains less than 1,000
milligrams-per-liter of dissolved solids.
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Giardia Lamblia
Flagellate protozoan which is shed during
its cyst stage into the feces of humans and
animals. When water containing these cysts
is ingested, the protozoan causes a severe
gastrointestinal disease called giardiasis.
Giardiasis
Intestinal disease caused by an infestation
of Giardia flagellates.
Grey water
Wastewater other than sewage, such as sink
drainage or washing machine discharge.
Green Acres Project (GAP)
A 7.5 million gallons per day (Mgd) water
reclamation project that serves tertiary treated
recycled water to irrigation and industrial
users in Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Huntington
Beach, Newport Beach, and Santa Ana.
Groundwater
The supply of fresh water found beneath the
Earth's surface, usually in aquifers, which
is often used for supplying wells and springs.
Because groundwater is a major source of drinking
water, there is growing concern over areas
where leaching agricultural or industrial
pollutants or substances from leaking underground
storage tanks are contaminating groundwater.
Groundwater basin
A groundwater reservoir defined by all the
overlying land surface and the underlying
aquifers that contain water stored in the
reservoir. Boundaries of successively deeper
aquifers may differ and make it difficult
to define the limits of the basin.
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Hard water
Alkaline water containing dissolved salts
that interfere with some industrial processes
and prevent soap from lathering. Water may
be considered hard if it has a hardness greater
than the typical hardness of water from the
region. Some textbooks define hard water as
water with a hardness of more than 100 mg/L
as calcium carbonate.
Hardness, water
A characteristic of water caused mainly by
the salts of calcium and magnesium, such as
bicarbonate, carbonate, sulfate, chloride
and nitrate. Excessive hardness in water is
undesirable because it causes the formation
of soap curds, increased use of soap, deposition
of scale in boilers, damage in some industrial
processes, and sometimes causes objectionable
tastes in drinking water.
Hydrogeologic cycle
The natural process recycling water from the
atmosphere down to (and through) the earth
and back to the atmosphere again.
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Import Water
Water purchased from the Metropolitan Water
District of Southern California through Municipal
Water District of Orange County. Import water
comes from two sources, the Colorado River
and the State Water Project.
Influent
Wastewater entering a treatment plant.
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Maximum contaminant level (MCL)
The maximum permissible level of a contaminant
in water which is delivered to the free flowing
outlet of the ultimate user of a public water
system, except in the case of turbidity where
the maximum permissible level is measured
at the point of entry to the distribution
system. Contaminants added to the water under
circumstances controlled by the user are excluded
from this definition, except those contaminants
resulting from the corrosion of piping and
plumbing caused by water quality.
Mesa
Mesa Consolidated Water District. A retail
water agency serving the city of Costa Mesa,
parts of Newport Beach and parts of unincorporated
Orange County, including the John Wayne Airport.
MGD
Million gallons per day.
Monitoring wells
Wells used to collect groundwater samples
for analysis to determine the amount, type,
and spread of contaminants in groundwater.
MWDOC
Municipal Water District of Orange County,
a wholesale water agency, sells import water
from Metropolitan Water District to retail
water agencies throughout Orange County.
MWD
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
was created by founding-area voters in 1928,
following passage of an enabling bill by the
California Legislature, to provide supplemental
water for cities and communities on the south
coastal plain. Metropolitan Water District's
service area now includes about 225 cities
and unincorporated areas, and covers some
5,200 square miles in Los Angeles, Orange,
San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura
counties.
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Nitrification
The biochemical transformation of ammonium
nitrogen to nitrate nitrogen.
Non-potable
Water that may contain objectionable pollution,
contamination, minerals, or infective agents
and is considered unsafe and/or unpalatable
for drinking.
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OCWD
Orange County Water District. Agency charged
with managing the Orange County Groundwater
Basin.
Odor threshold
The minimum odor of a water sample that can
just be detected after successive dilutions
with odorless water. Also called Threshold
Odor.
Operation and maintenance costs
The ongoing, repetitive costs of operating
a water system; for example, planned maintenance
and costs for treatment chemicals, and periodic
equipment repairs.
Orange County Groundwater Basin
The basin where groundwater and rain runoff
is naturally stored.
Ozonation
The application of ozone to water for disinfection
or for taste and odor control.
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Parts per million
Parts per million, a measurement of concentration
on a weight or volume basis. This term is
equivalent to milligrams per liter (mg/L)
which is the preferred term.
Percolation
The slow seepage of water into and through
the ground. The slow passage of water through
a filter medium.
Permeability
Generally used to refer to the ability of
rock or soil to transmit water.
pH
pH is an expression of the intensity of the
basic or acid condition of a liquid. Mathematically,
pH is the logarithm (base 10) of the reciprocal
of the hydrogen ion concentration, [H+].
Picocurie
A measure of radioactivity. One picocurie
of radioactivity is equivalent to 0.037 nuclear
disintegrations per second.
Point-of-use treatment device
A treatment device applied to a single tap
used for the purpose of reducing contaminants
in drinking water at that one tap.
Polymer
A chemical formed by the union of many monomers
(a molecule of low molecular weight). Polymers
are used with other chemical coagulants to
aid in binding small-suspended particles to
larger chemical flocs for their removal from
water. All polyelectrolytes are polymers,
but not all polymers are polyelectrolytes.
Potable water
Water that is safe and satisfactory for drinking
and cooking.
ppb
Parts per billion.
ppm
Parts per million. Also mg/L or milligrams
per liter.
Product water
Water that has passed through a water treatment
plant. All the treatment processes are completed
or finished. This water is the product from
the water treatment plant and is ready to
be delivered to the consumers. Also called
finished water.
psi
Pounds per square inch.
Pumping station
Mechanical devices installed in sewer or water
systems or other liquid-carrying pipelines
that move the liquids to a higher level.
Purveyor, water
An agency or person that supplies water (usually
potable water).
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Raw water
Water in its natural state, prior to any treatment.
Usually the water entering the first treatment
process of a water treatment plant.
Recharge
Process by which rainwater (precipitation)
seeps into the ground-water system.
Recharge area
Generally, an area that is connected with
the underground aquifer(s) by a highly porous
soil or rock layer. Water entering a recharge
area may travel for miles underground.
Recharge rate
The quantity of water per unit time that replenishes
or refills an aquifer.
Reclaimed Water
Highly treated wastewater. California has
one of the most stringent wastewater reclamation
criteria in the U.S. Reclaimed water treatment
steps:
(1) Primary Treatment - Sand, grit and the
larger solids are separated from the liquid,
removing 45 to 50 percent of the waste materials.
The residual water, or effluent, can be used
for irrigating orchards and vineyards, and
animal feed, fiber and seed crops. Opportunities
for using this type of reclaimed water do
not exist in Los Angeles.
(2) Secondary Treatment - This step, largely
a biological process, removes 85 percent of
the remaining waste materials. Bacteria and
other organisms consume these materials. The
wastewater is then disinfected to kill any
remaining harmful bacteria. The reclaimed
water produced at this stage is 95 percent
free of the original solids and organic matter.
It can be used for surface irrigation (flooding)
of most crops, pastures, cemeteries, and other
large turf areas.
(3) Tertiary Treatment - This advanced step
filters and removes nearly all remaining fine
solids. Water is chlorinated for disinfection,
then dechlorinated to protect fish and other
aquatic life. Reclaimed tertiary effluent
can be used for irrigation of parks and playgrounds,
spray irrigation of food crops, and some types
of groundwater recharge.
Representative sample
A portion of material or water that is as
nearly identical in content and consistency
as possible to that in the larger body of
material or water being sampled.
Reservoir
Any natural or artificial holding area used
to store, regulate, or control water.
Residual chlorine
The amount of free and/or available chlorine
remaining after a given contact time under
specified conditions.
Reverse osmosis
The application of pressure to a concentrated
solution, which causes the passage of a liquid
from the concentrated solution to a weaker
solution across a semipermeable membrane.
The membrane allows the passage of the solvent
(water) but not the dissolved solids (solutes).
The liquid produced is a demineralized water
Riparian rights
A doctrine of State water law under which
a land owner is entitled to use the water
on or bordering his property, including the
right to prevent diversion or misuse of upstream
waters. Riparian land is land that borders
on surface water.
Run-off
The part of precipitation, snowmelt, or irrigation
water that runs off the land into streams
or other surface water. It can carry pollutants
from the air and land into the receiving waters.
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
An Act passed by the U.S. Congress in 1974.
The Act establishes a cooperative program
among local, State and Federal agencies to
insure safe drinking water for consumers.
Salinity
The relative concentration of dissolved salts,
usually sodium chloride, in a given water.
A measure of the concentration of dissolved
mineral substances in water.
Seepage
The percolation of water through the soil
from unlined channels, ditches, watercourses
and water storage facilities.
Sedimentation
A water treatment process in which solid particles
settle out of the water being treated in a
large clarifier or sedimentation basin.
Sludge
The settable solids separated from water during
processing.
Slurry
A watery mixture or suspension of insoluble
(not dissolved) matter, a thin watery mud
or any substance resembling it (such as a
grit slurry or a lime slurry).
SMCLs
Secondary Maximum Contaminant Levels. Secondary
MCLs for various water quality indicators
are established to protect public welfare.
Soil profile
A vertical section of the earth's highly weathered
upper surface often showing several distinct
layers, or horizons.
Sole source aquifer
An aquifer that supplies 50 percent or more
of the drinking water of an area.
Standard
A physical or chemical quantity whose value
is known exactly, and is used to calibrate
or standardize instruments.
Sterilization
The removal or destruction of all microorganisms,
including pathogenic and other bacteria, vegetative
forms and spores. Compare with disinfection.
Surface runoff
Precipitation, snowmelt, or irrigation in
excess of what can infiltrate the soil surface
and can be stored in small surface depressions.
Runoff is a major transporter of nonpoint
source pollutants.
Surface water
All water naturally open to the atmosphere
(rivers, lakes, reservoirs, streams, impoundments,
seas, estuaries, etc.); and all springs, wells,
or other collectors which
are directly influenced by surface water.
Suspended solids
Solids that either float on the surface or
are suspended in water or other liquids, and
which are largely removable by laboratory
filtering. The quantity of material removed
from water in a laboratory test, as prescribed
in “Standard Methods for The Examination
of Water and Wastewater”.
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Telemetry
The electrical link between the transmitter
and the receiver. Telephone lines are commonly
used to serve as the electrical line.
Total dissolved solids (TDS)
All of the dissolved solid in a water. TDS
is measured on a sample of water that has
passed through a very fine mesh filter to
remove suspended solids. The water passing
through the filter is evaporated and the residue
represents the dissolved solids.
Total residual chlorine
The amount of available chlorine remaining
after a given contact time. The sum of the
combined available residual chlorine and the
free available residual chlorine.
Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
The sum of the concentration, in milligrams
per liter, of the several trihalomethane compounds,
rounded to two significant figures.
Treated wastewater
Wastewater that has been subjected to one
or more physical, chemical, and biological
processes to reduce its pollution of health
hazard.
Trihalomethane (THM)
One of a family of organic compounds, named
as derivatives of methane. THMs are generally
the by-product from chlorination of drinking
water that contains organic material. The
resulting compounds (THMs) are suspected of
causing cancer.
Turbidity
The cloudy appearance of water caused by the
presence of suspended and colloidal matter.
In the waterworks field, a turbidity measurement
is used to indicate the clarity of water.
Technically, turbidity is an optical property
of the water based on the amount of light
reflected by suspended particles. Turbidity
cannot be directly equated to suspended solids
because white particles reflect more light
than dark-colored particles and many small
particles will reflect more light than an
equivalent large particle.
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Ultraviolet light disinfection
A disinfection method for water that has received
either secondary or tertiary treatment, used
as an alternative to chlorination.
User fee
A fee that is collected only from those persons
who use a particular service as opposed to
one collected from the public in general.
User fees generally vary in proportion to
the degree of use of the service.
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Variable costs
Input costs that change as the nature of the
production activity of its circumstances change.
For example, as production levels vary.
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Wastewater
The used water and solids from a community
(including used water from industrial processes)
that flow to a treatment plant. Storm water,
surface water, and groundwater infiltration
also may be included in the wastewater that
enters a wastewater treatment plant. The term
-sewage usually refers to household wastes,
but this word is being replaced by the term
-wastewater.
Wastewater treatment plant
A facility that receives wastewaters (and
sometimes runoff) from domestic and/or industrial
sources; and by a combination of physical,
chemical, and biological processes reduces
(treats) the wastewaters to less harmful byproducts
known by the acronyms WWTP, STP (sewage treatment
plant) and POTW (publicly owned treatment
works).
Waterborne disease outbreak
The significant occurrence of acute infectious
illness, epidemiologically associated with
the ingestion of water from a public water
system that is deficient in treatment, as
determined by the appropriate local or State
agency.
Water purveyor
An agency or person that supplies water (usually
potable water).
Water table
The level of groundwater. The upper surface
of the zone of saturation of groundwater above
an impermeable layer of soil or rock (through
which water cannot move) as in an unconfined
aquifer. This level can be very near the surface
of the ground or far below it.
Watershed
The land area that drains into a stream. An
area of land that contributes runoff to one
specific delivery point. Large watersheds
may be composed of several smaller "subsheds",
each of which contributes runoff to different
locations that ultimately combine at a common
delivery point.
Well
A bored, drilled, or driven shaft, or a dug
hole, whose depth is greater than the largest
surface dimension, and whose purpose is to
reach underground water supplies or oil, or
to store or bury fluids below ground.
Well field
Area containing one or more wells that produces
usable amounts of water.
Well monitoring
The measurement, by on-site instruments or
laboratory methods, of the quality of water
in a well.
Well plug
A watertight and gastight seal installed in
a borehole or well to prevent movement of
fluids.
Wetlands
Any number of tidal and nontidal areas, characterized
by saturated or nearly saturated soils most
of the year, which form an interface between
terrestrial (land-based) and aquatic environments.
Includes freshwater marshes around ponds,
channels, rivers and streams, and brackish
and salt marshes. Other common names include
swamps and bogs.
Withdrawal
The process of taking water from a source
and conveying it to a place for a particular
type of use.
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