NID NEWS RELEASE
May 26, 2010
Contact: Ron Nelson
(530) 273-6185
Or: Dave Carter
(530) 265-NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
GRASS
VALLEY - Nineteen parcels in Nevada
City will be annexed into the boundaries of the Nevada Irrigation District,
under action taken Wednesday (May 26) by the NID Board of Directors.
The
annexations were requested by the City of Nevada City and will allow the
property owners, who are already using NID water, to receive water at NID
rates, which are 25 percent less than rates charged outside of NID boundaries.
The parcels to be annexed are along the city’s perimeters, including
parcels on Zion Street, Brock Road, Nursery Street and Willow Valley Road.
NID Asst. General Manager Tim Crough said the district’s
annexation strategy is intended to facilitate the orderly expansion of treated
water pipelines and make more water available to areas where it is needed.
In other business, NID directors:
• heard concerns from Division I Director Nancy Weber about
NID’s recent replacement of Flume No. 13 on the D-S Canal near Nevada City, where
unseasonal rains caused muddy conditions at the construction site.
General Manager Ron Nelson and Chief Engineer Gary King took responsibility for
the stormwater incident, which had resulted in a
citizen complaint to state regulators. They said NID needed to get
the job done before the irrigation season and that the state’s concerns were
immediately addressed and rectified. Weber requested a full report at the
board’s next meeting.
• amended a lease agreement with Gene and LaDyne Luster, who hold a grazing lease to a 555-acre NID
parcel near the Bear River and Magnolia Road. The lease is based on
actual market prices for beef and was adjusted to $1900 per year.
• approved a new job description for a safety analyst, a planned
position that has been budgeted but not filled for the past three years.
The position is expected to pay about $72,000 in salary and benefits;
recruitment is planned in coming months.
• heard a water supply update from Operations and
Maintenance Manager John Kirk, who reported that most NID reservoirs are full
and spilling. He said the NID storage system would reach capacity this
year, except Jackson Meadows Reservoir where a slightly lower level is being
maintained for operational purposes. General Manager Ron Nelson added
that this should be a very good year for hydroelectric power production.
“The only dark cloud is that the meter’s aren’t
spinning,” he said, noting that lower water sales would translate to lower
revenues to the district. “Given the choice,” he said,
“we’ll take the good water supply.”
The next regular meeting of the NID Board of Directors will
be held at 9 a.m. on June 9 at the NID Business Center in Grass Valley.
NID board meetings are open to the public.
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