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City of San Diego Water History
From City of San Diego Website (8/2004) http://www.sannet.gov/water/gen-info/history.shtml
1850 -- California becomes a state and the
City of San Diego is incorporated.
1852 -- City declared insolvent. Management oversight by the
state instituted.
1873 -- San Diego Water Company formed to provide an organized
water supply to serve a population of approximately 2,000. Water is
$.25 per bucket. An army private soldier makes $13.00 per month.
1885 -- Sewer service begins along the lower portion of 5th
and 6th Avenues with the raw effluent discharged directly into San
Diego Bay.
1887 -- Old Town Reservoir built to store water from 12 wells
located in the San Diego River bed adjacent to the old Presidio.
1889 -- The San Diego Flume Company completes a 35.6 mile wooden
flume to carry water from Boulder Creek to La Mesa Reservoir (the
duck pond at Grossmont Summit).
1897 -- Lower Otay Dam completed by what becomes the Southern
California Mountain Water Company. Construction of Morena Dam begun.
Work is soon suspended.
1901 -- Following a vote of the people, the City of San Diego
enters into the municipal
water supply business by purchasing the facilities of the San Diego
Water Company.
1906 -- The Lower Otay water supply is connected to the City's
distribution system by the Bonita Pipeline to a filtration plant located
at Chollas Heights Reservoir.
1912 -- The City purchases the Otay River-Cottonwood Creek
system from the Southern California Mountain Water Company. Morena
Dam completed. The City of East San Diego incorporated.
1914 -- The City purchases Morena Dam.
1916 -- A series of very heavy rain storms, in conjunction
with the alleged rainmaking activities of Charles Hatfield, hit the
county. The San Diego River floods Mission Valley from cliff to cliff
cutting all highways to the north. Lower Otay Dam, built without a
spillway, tops out and bursts, flooding the Otay Valley.
1918 -- Lower Otay Dam, now renamed Savage Dam, reconstruction
completed. Lake Hodges Dam and San Dieguito Dam completed by the Santa
Fe Land & Improvement Co. Both were later purchased by the City.
1922 -- City forces complete Barrett Dam and the Dulzura Conduit
built to link Morena Reservoir and the Cottonwood Creek/Pine Creek
watersheds with the City's water supply system at Lower Otay.
1923 -- City of East San Diego consolidates into the City of
San Diego.
1928 -- Construction of what is now Sutherland Dam is halted
after only one year of construction. The Metropolitan Water District
of Southern California (MWD) is formed to bring Colorado River Water
to Southern California. San Diego was not a member.
1930 -- The U.S. Supreme Court determines the City of San Diego
has prior and paramount rights to the water of the San Diego River.
1931 -- Current San Diego City Charter adopted formalizing
the Council-Manager form of government.
1935 -- With water rights secured, the City completes construction
of El Capitan Dam and the El Capitan Pipeline connecting it to the City's
water supply system. University Heights Filtration Plant enlarged.
1936 -- The City decommissions water well fields operated in
Mission Valley.
1943 -- San Vicente Dam and pipeline are dedicated following
two years of construction. This provides another source of water for
San Diego's booming wartime population. The U.S. Navy completes the
City's first sewerage treatment plant to reduce the health risks to
sailors on ships in San Diego Bay.
1944 -- The San Diego County Water Authority (CWA) is formed,
with the City joining, and became a member agency of MWD. CWA's first
task is to complete a pipeline connecting the county with MWD's water
supply system.
1947 -- The first MWD water from the Colorado River flows into
San Vicente Reservoir. This ends San Diego's total dependence on local
sources for water.
1950 -- The City of San Diego takes over operation of Murray
Reservoir and commissions the Alvarado Filtration Plant. The water
treatment plants at University Heights and Chollas Heights are decommissioned.
1954 -- Sutherland Dam, dormant since 1928, completed and connected
by pipeline and natural streambeds to San Vicente Reservoir.
1956 -- South San Diego, Nestor, San Ysidro, and part of Otay
Mesa annexed to the City. Service charges for sewer service instituted
for the first time.
1958 -- The sewerage function transferred to the newly renamed
Water Utilities Department.
1960 -- Miramar Dam completed and Miramar Filtration Plant
put into commission. Lake Murray purchased from Helix Irrigation District.
1962 -- What is now Tierrasanta annexed.
1963 -- The Point Loma Wastewater Treatment Plant and the Metropolitan
Sewerage System, now the Metropolitan Wastewater System, are put into
service ending regular direct discharge of raw wastewater into the
San Diego Bay and the Pacific Ocean. What is now Rancho Bernardo,
Rancho Penasquitos and the San Pasqual Valley annexed to the City.
1996 and 1997 -- The wastewater collection and treatment functions
are separated from the Water Utilities Department forming the Metropolitan
Wastewater Department. The Water Utilities Department becomes the
Water Department.
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