Bill
LC 558
Generally revise state water storage law
LC 558 aims to broadly revise the state water storage law, potentially reshaping permits, agency powers, and project timelines, but the draft died in process in 2025.
Bill
LC 558
LC 558 aims to broadly revise the state water storage law, potentially reshaping permits, agency powers, and project timelines, but the draft died in process in 2025.
A concise overview of the bill LC 558, titled “Generally revise state water storage law,” including its purpose, status, and potential impact based on the information available.
If enacted, a broad revision of the state water storage law could affect:
- Regulatory framework: How water storage projects are reviewed, permitted, and regulated; potential changes to timelines and criteria for approvals.
- Agency roles and authority: Allocation of powers among state agencies overseeing water resources, storage operations, and environmental compliance.
- Project developers and operators: Requirements, costs, and timelines for proposing and building new storage facilities or modifying existing ones.
- Water users and communities: Impacts on water supply reliability, drought preparedness, and potential changes to priority or rights administration depending on revised policy.
- Environmental and public-interest considerations: Changes to environmental review standards, mitigation requirements, and stakeholder notice or public participation processes.
- Financing and funding: Possible revisions to funding mechanisms, grants, bonds, or other financial support for storage-related infrastructure.
Notes: The summary above reflects information provided without the full bill text. Specific provisions, fiscal impacts, and implementation details would require the actual bill language.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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