The Otay Water District Board of Directors on April 1, 2026, adopted its 2026 top ten legislative and regulatory priorities and updated its governance policies during a public meeting in Chula Vista. The session featured a detailed legislative overview by Senior Policy Advisor Baltazar Cornejo of BHFS and culminated in actions aimed at strengthening affordability, wildfire resilience, local control, and operational governance.
Lead: The legislature’s second-year session is off to a brisk pace for water agencies, with 1,800 bills introduced by the February 20 deadline—the fewest in two decades but heavy with implications for local utilities.
What was decided: The Board approved the Otay Water District Legislative Program Policy Guidelines and the 2026 priorities, and later held a public hearing to adopt a 4.97% increase in the directors’ per diem, consistent with the legal annual cap.
Key issues discussed:
- Affordability: AB 2180, sponsored by ACWA, clarifies proportionality in rate-setting, codifying the Dreher framework; Otay provided testimony. “The momentum is clearly in our favor,” Cornejo said, noting opposition from the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association and realtors.
- Rate assistance: SB 1125 would create a low-income water rate assistance program, currently referencing the state General Fund with funding details still emerging before the June 15 budget deadline.
- Budget and climate resilience: The Governor’s proposed $349 billion budget includes about $2.1 billion in Prop 4 climate bond spending, with $792 million for water investments—$232 million for flood control, $173 million for disadvantaged communities’ drinking water, and $68 million for conveyance upgrades.
- Wildfire preparedness: SB 1153 (ACWA-sponsored) would require wildfire response procedures in water suppliers’ emergency plans by 2028 and clarify liability limits; alternative bills raise concerns about mandates and exposure.
- Water supply management: The Delta Conveyance Project faces a major legal setback on bond financing, while the California Water Plan 2028 effort advances long-term reliability targets.
- Governance updates: AB 2568 proposes increasing permissible compensated meeting days for water district boards from 10 to 15 per month.
How it moves forward: Directors requested coordinated testimony trips to Sacramento on AB 2180. The Board also approved administrative updates, delegated claims handling authority, and commissioned a classification and compensation study.
Closing remark: As climate extremes, affordability pressures, and infrastructure needs converge, Otay’s proactive legislative agenda positions the district to balance local accountability with statewide resilience—inviting residents to consider how smart policy can keep water reliable, equitable, and ready for the next emergency.

