The State of California 5th District Court of
Appeals has halted the unlicensed drilling of water wells by a public entity in
a lawsuit involving the California Groundwater Association (CGA) and the
Semitropic Water Storage District (Semitropic) in Kern County.
The Court ruled that public entities, such as water storage
districts, are not exempt from drilling water wells without a C-57 license as
specified in Water Code Section 13750.5. “The Court’s decision is a major step
in protecting the state’s ground water,” notes CGA executive director Mike
Mortensson. “Just being a public entity does not guarantee that the entity has
the requisite skills and knowledge to drill water wells. That’s why we brought
action in this matter, and we are extremely pleased with the Court’s reversal
of the lower court’s ruling,” remarks Mortensson. CGA had filed the lawsuit in
2008 after Semitropic began to drill its own wells and refused to halt such
actions.
Semitropic contended that it was exempt from Water Code
13750.5 as it was a public entity, a property owner and had engineering skills
to construct wells. The Court rejected those assertions, noting the C-57
license requirement was imposed in Water Code Section 13750.5, which contained
no exemptions, and did not reference any of the exemptions to the Contractors
State Licensing Law.
The Court’s decision, made on Nov. 9, is Case No. F056823,
titled California Groundwater Assn. v Semitropic
Water Storage Dist.
Semitropic has the right to file an appeal to the California
Supreme Court.
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