Site MapFAQsHome
 
   

Water Agencies

 
  • Beaumont Cherry Valley Water District
  • The Beaumont Cherry Valley Water District is responsible for providing domestic water to residences, businesses, and industries within the District boundaries, primarily in the City of Beaumont and the Cherry Valley area. The District's main source of water supply is water wells in Edgar Canyon and the Beaumont Basin.
  • Link:

  • Cucamonga Valley Water District
  • The Cucamonga Valley Water District is a special district (it is independent of local government) that serves approximately 170,000 customers, including approximately 45,000 water connections and 35,000 sewer connections.
  • Link:



  • Municipal Water District Orange County
  • The Municipal Water District of Orange County (MWDOC) is dedicated to ensuring water reliability for the communities we serve. Our efforts are focused on sound planning and appropriate investment in water supply, regional delivery infrastructure and emergency preparedness.
  • MWDOC is a member of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MET), which supplies imported water to six Southern California counties. MWDOC is a recognized leader in its water use efficiency programs. Through an innovative, multi-agency approach, MWDOC has formed partnerships with other federal, state and local agencies to create award-winning water use efficiency programs that target all water users - residents, businesses and industrial customers.
  • Link:

  • Palmdale Water District
  • The Palmdale Water District is a special district (it is independent of local government). The Palmdale Water district has grown from an agency providing irrigation water for 60 customers, to an agency providing domestic water to the thriving community we know today. The Palmdale Water District?s distribution system has grown to over 345 miles of pipeline, multiple well sites, booster pumping stations, and water storage tanks maintaining a total storage capacity of over 40 million gallons.
  • Link:

  • Santa Margarita Water District
  • The Santa Margarita Water District provides our customers with quality water and wastewater service - maximizing human, environmental and financial resources - to help guide south Orange County's water and wastewater needs into the future.
  • The District was formed in 1964 to serve a handful of ranchers who ran cattle in the semi-arid hills of Southern Orange County. Today, SMWD serves more than 108,000 people through 48,000 residential and commercial connections in Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Ladera Ranch, Las Flores and areas of San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente - and even a few ranches in the area's rural foothills.
  • The District is located in the southeastern portion of Orange County, California and encompasses nearly 62,000 acres of territory, making it the county's second-largest water district.
  • Link:

  • Western Municipal Water District
  • Western was formed by the voters in 1954 to bring supplemental water to growing western Riverside County. Today, WMWD serves more than 17,000 retail and nine wholesale customers with water from both the Colorado River and the State Water Project. As a member agency of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD), WMWD provides supplemental water to the cities of Corona, Norco, and Riverside and the water agencies of Elsinore Valley and Rancho California, as well as customers in the unincorporated areas of El Sobrante, Eagle Valley, Temescal Creek, Woodcrest, Lake Mathews, and March Air Reserve Base.
  • Link:
  • Featured Projects:

  • Yucaipa Valley Water District
  • The Yucaipa Valley Water District provides water, wastewater, and recycled water service to customers in the City of Calimesa, the City of Yucaipa and portions of Riverside County and San Bernardino County. The Yucaipa valley is bounded by the San Bernardino National Forest to the north and east, low lying hills to the south, and the Crafton Hills to the northwest. The valley opens to the west into a canyon leading to the City of Redlands. The hills in the south provide for two unique naturally channeled drainage courses, which are referred to as Live Oak Canyon and San Timoteo Canyon.
  • Link: