The San Diego County Water Authority Board of Directors reconvened its March 19, 2026 meeting at 2:58 p.m., proceeding with an in-person session and one remote participant, Director Quayle, joining from the publicly accessible location listed on the agenda. With a quorum confirmed and no public speakers, the Board moved swiftly through approvals and committee reports before adjourning at 4:03 p.m.
In governance and transparency measures, the Board approved the minutes from the February 26, 2026 meeting by roll-call vote, with one partial dissent on consent item 9.1 noted by Director Paul. No additions to the agenda were made, and no presentations or public hearings were held.
The most substantive actions came through committee reports:
- Imported Water: The Board amended its agreement with M Strategic Communications, extending consulting services through February 29, 2028 and increasing funding by $192,000, for a total not to exceed $2,562,000.
- Administrative and Finance: Directors noted and filed the monthly treasurer’s report; authorized compensation agreements with the City of San Diego; and accepted proceeds from several real property transfers, including the Naval Training Center site ($2,742.70), Walker Scott site ($1,664.05), and the Chinese Historical Museum site ($337.15). The Board also approved a capacity charges refund of $107,179 to Katie Logan LLC and authorized staff to schedule debt management activities—issuing a new senior lien water revenue bond, restructuring Series 11 of the Commercial Paper Program, refunding select senior lien bonds, and selecting financing parties.
- Legislation and Public Outreach: The Board adopted positions on state and federal measures—opposing H.R. 7078 (Equal Access to Colorado River Act), supporting S. 3923 (Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation Reauthorization Act) and AB 2880 (Proposition 218 Omnibus Implementation Act, proportional cost of service), opposing unless amended AB 2013 (Fire Risk Areas Water Suppliers Emergency Preparedness Plan), and supporting SB 1153 (Disaster Preparedness for urban retail water suppliers and public water systems).
No reportable actions were noted from the Water Planning and Environmental Committee. Special reports from the General Manager, General Counsel, and regional bodies (SANDAG and subcommittees) indicated no updates. The Board entered closed session under the Government Code sections listed on the agenda and returned with “nothing to report” on both items.
“Our responsibility is to keep San Diego County’s water system resilient and fiscally sound,” Chair Serrano summarized during the proceedings. Vice Chair Hilliker added, “These decisions ensure we’re prepared—financially and operationally—for the challenges ahead.”
As drought dynamics, wildfire risks, and infrastructure needs continue to shape regional priorities, the Board’s funding, debt management, and legislative stances signal a cautious but proactive approach. The next steps—particularly in bond issuance and readiness planning—will test how local governance balances affordability, reliability, and long-term sustainability in the months to come.

