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    Recent News
    Image
    Box culvert in West Little Llagas Creek
    A look at a completed flood wall as part of the Coyote Creek Flood Management Measures Project.
    January 23, 2026
    Valley Water’s annual Capital Improvement Program: Projects to reduce flood risk 

    Editor’s Note: This is the first in a three-part series highlighting some of the projects included in the Capital Improvement Program Fiscal Year 2027-2031 Preliminary Five-Year Plan.

    Read More
    Image
    Valley Water completes erosion repair project along Saratoga Creek in fall 2025
    January 21, 2026
    Providing flood protection through ongoing stream maintenance projects

    Each summer, under the Stream Maintenance Program (SMP), Valley Water takes important steps to protect neighborhoods from flooding. Over time, sediment can accumulate in creeks, reducing their capacity to carry stormwater. During heavy rains, this can lead to an increased risk of flooding for nearby homes, roads and businesses.

    Read More
    Image
    Mockups Design
    January 7, 2026
    Discover how Valley Water is building climate resilience; read the latest biennial report

    Valley Water’s mission is to provide safe, clean water, protect against flooding, and care for local streams. Climate change is affecting this mission. Rising temperatures, changing rainfall patterns, more severe droughts, a declining Sierra Nevada snowpack and rising sea levels all impact water reliability, infrastructure, and ecosystem health throughout Santa Clara County.

    Read More
  • About Valley Water
    Highlights
    Mission, Vision and Values
    Learn about our core mission, vision for the future, and the values that guide us
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    Meet the board members who provide leadership and oversight for the district
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    Access financial information, budgets, and fiscal reports for transparency
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    Explore our various committees and their roles in district governance
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Home

Main navigation

    • FAQ
    • Permits and District Business
    • Valley Water Websites
  • For Residents
    Highlights
    Access Valley Water
    Easily send requests, reports or feedback directly to helpful district staff.
    Rebates & Surveys
    Programs and rebates helping you save water and money.
    Water Conservation
    Learn the best ways to save water indoors and outdoors.
    Current Water Charges
    Valley Water is funded by property taxes, well owners, agricultural water customers and water retailers like San Jose Water Company
    Emergency & Planning
    Flood Emergency Action Plans
    Drought Information
    Local Hazard Mitigation Plan
    Get Flood Ready
    Preparation for Extended Power Outages
    Alert System Real Time Data*
    Levee Safety
    Save Water & Money
    Rebates & Surveys
    Watersavings.org
    Current Water Charges
    Water Savings Videos
    Indoor Conservation
    Outdoor Conservation
    Projects & Plans
    Projects In Your Neighbourhood
    Creek & River Projects
    Dam & Reservoir Projects
    Grants and Environmental Protection
    Infrastructure Improvement Projects
    Climate Change Action Plan
    Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Programs
    Studies and Reports
    Hydraulic Model Data (HEC)
    Stream Maintenance Program
  • Your Water
    Highlights
    Access Valley Water
    Easily send requests, reports or feedback directly to helpful district staff.
    Current Water Charges
    Valley Water is funded by property taxes, well owners, agricultural water customers and water retailers like San Jose Water Company
    Rebates & Surveys
    Programs and rebates helping you save water and money.
    Water Conservation
    Learn the best ways to save water indoors and outdoors.
    Water Sources
    Groundwater
    Imported Water
    Local Dams and Reservoirs
    Recycled and Purified Water
    Where your water comes from
    Information & Resources
    GIS Data
    Glossary of Water Terms
    District Library
    Popular Documents and Data
    Local Dams and Reservoirs
    Water Planning
    Water Supply Master Plan
    Water Supply Planning
    Water Treatment
    Water Treatment Plants
    Water Quality
  • Learning Center
    Highlights
    Access Valley Water
    Easily send requests, reports or feedback directly to helpful district staff.
    Rebates & Surveys
    Programs and rebates helping you save water and money.
    Water Conservation
    Learn the best ways to save water indoors and outdoors.
    Current Water Charges
    Valley Water is funded by property taxes, well owners, agricultural water customers and water retailers like San Jose Water Company
    Learning & Exploration
    Next Gen Career Pathways Program
    Water Education programs and Events
    Water 101 Academy
    Public Tours
    Local Dams and Reservoirs
    Volunteer Engagement
    Volunteer and Engage
    Valley Water Youth
    Commission
    Adopt a Creek
    Grants & Partnerships
    Public Art
    Environmental Science & Conservation
    Healthy Creeks and Ecosystems
    Watersheds of Santa Clara Valley
    The Water Treatment Process
    Aerial Drone Pilot Program
  • News & Events
    Highlights
    District News
    Learn more about the latest headlines and announcements from around the district
    Events
    Find district events happening on variety of topics
    Valley Water News Blog
    Catch up on all the latest list of articles and blog posts
    Videos
    Stay up to date with the latest videos from the district
    Public Records
    Public Records feature many commonly requested documents and data sets.
    Recent News
    Image
    Box culvert in West Little Llagas Creek
    A look at a completed flood wall as part of the Coyote Creek Flood Management Measures Project.
    January 23, 2026
    Valley Water’s annual Capital Improvement Program: Projects to reduce flood risk 

    Editor’s Note: This is the first in a three-part series highlighting some of the projects included in the Capital Improvement Program Fiscal Year 2027-2031 Preliminary Five-Year Plan.

    Read More
    Image
    Valley Water completes erosion repair project along Saratoga Creek in fall 2025
    January 21, 2026
    Providing flood protection through ongoing stream maintenance projects

    Each summer, under the Stream Maintenance Program (SMP), Valley Water takes important steps to protect neighborhoods from flooding. Over time, sediment can accumulate in creeks, reducing their capacity to carry stormwater. During heavy rains, this can lead to an increased risk of flooding for nearby homes, roads and businesses.

    Read More
    Image
    Mockups Design
    January 7, 2026
    Discover how Valley Water is building climate resilience; read the latest biennial report

    Valley Water’s mission is to provide safe, clean water, protect against flooding, and care for local streams. Climate change is affecting this mission. Rising temperatures, changing rainfall patterns, more severe droughts, a declining Sierra Nevada snowpack and rising sea levels all impact water reliability, infrastructure, and ecosystem health throughout Santa Clara County.

    Read More
  • About Valley Water
    Highlights
    Mission, Vision and Values
    Learn about our core mission, vision for the future, and the values that guide us
    Board of Directors
    Meet the board members who provide leadership and oversight for the district
    Finance/Budget
    Access financial information, budgets, and fiscal reports for transparency
    Committees
    Explore our various committees and their roles in district governance
    Board Meetings, Agendas & Minutes
    Review meeting schedules, agendas, and official minutes from board meetings
    Leadership
    Board of Directors
    Board Meetings Agendas & Minutes
    Committees
    Redistricting
    Board Governance Policies
    Accountability
    Public Records
    Lobbyist Ordinance
    Grand Jury Reports
    Enterprise Systems
    Information & Resources
    Finance/Budget
    Capital Improvement Program
    Public Facilities Financing Corporation
    Community Engagement
    Renewed Safe, Clean Water & Natural Flood Protection: Independent Monitoring Committee
    Committees
    Community Partnering Sponsorship Program
  • Services and Support
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  • Almaden Lake Improvement Project
  • Canal Maintenance Program
  • Lower Berryessa Creek Flood Protection
  • Lower Berryessa Creek Flood Protection (Phase 3)*
  • Upper Berryessa Creek Flood Protection*
  • Calabazas Creek Bank Rehabilitation Project
  • Calabazas/San Tomas Aquino Creek-Marsh Connection Project
  • Coyote Creek Flood Protection*
  • Cunningham Flood Detention Certification
  • Ecological Data Collection and Analysis*
  • FAHCE: Fish and Aquatic Habitat Collaborative Effort
    • FAHCE Final Program Environmental Impact Report
    • FAHCE-Related Board Committee Items
    • FAHCE: Adaptive Management Program
    • FAHCE: Fish Monitoring Program
    • FAHCE-Related Board Agenda Items
    • FAHCE: Certified Final EIR
  • Fish Habitat and Passage Improvement*
  • Flood Risk Assessment Studies*
  • Lower Guadalupe River Project
  • Upper Guadalupe River Flood Protection*
  • Interagency Urban Runoff Program*
  • Upper Llagas Creek Flood Protection*
  • Palo Alto Flood Basin Tide Gate Structure Replacement Project
  • Upper Penitencia Creek Flood Protection*
  • Lower Penitencia Creek Improvements Project
  • Restoration of Natural Creek Functions*
  • Permanente Creek Flood Protection*
  • San Francisco Bay Shoreline Protection*
  • San Francisquito Creek: Bay to Highway 101
  • San Francisquito Creek Flood Protection*
  • Saratoga Creek Hazard Tree Removal and Restoration Project
  • Sediment Reuse to Support Shoreline Restoration*
  • Sunnyvale East and Sunnyvale West Channels Flood Protection*
  • Vegetation Control and Sediment Removal for Capacity*
  • Vegetation Management for Access and Fire Safety*
  • Uvas Creek Levee Rehabilitation

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  1. Home
  2. Project Updates
  3. Creek & River Projects
  4. D3: Sediment Reuse to Support Restoration Projects

D3: Sediment Reuse to Support Restoration Projects

Image
Sediment Reused Build along Maintenance Road at Pond A8
Status
Active
Location
Countywide
Schedule
Start FY 2022 / Finish FY 2036
Funding
Safe, Clean Water Fund ($4.1 million)

This project reuses local sediment removed through Valley Water’s Stream Maintenance Program, capital projects and other local sources to create and restore tidal marsh, riparian or wetland habitats. Sediment may be reused to support the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration project or other environmental enhancement and restoration projects. Valley Water removes sediment from streams to maintain their capacity to carry floodwaters. To secure environmentally appropriate reuse sites, partnership agreements may be required. This project also funds site improvements necessary to facilitate sediment delivery to the reuse sites.

Beneficial reuse of sediment has become a key component in tidal marsh, riparian or wetland restoration around the bay and throughout the county. As sea levels rise, natural sedimentation and vegetation rates cannot keep up and tidal zones are in danger of being submerged, erasing environmental gains from restoration work. By delivering clean sediment from local creeks that would have naturally flowed into the San Francisco or Monterey Bays, this project accelerates natural marsh-building processes and helps to keep up with sea-level rise. Activities necessary for sediment reuse may include testing, transport, cover material, and site improvements required for access.

*This project was voter approved as part of the Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Program.

Upon completing beneficial reuse efforts with the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project at Pond A8, Valley Water explored and identified the Pond A4 Resilient Habitat Restoration Project (Pond A4 Project) along the southern shoreline in Sunnyvale as a new location for sediment reuse. The Pond A4 Project, a Valley Water multi-benefit project that the Valley Water Board of Directors approved in April 2023, is designed to create shallow water habitat for shorebirds and promote flood resilience by beneficially reusing material harvested from local creeks to construct a habitat bench along the southern perimeter of Pond A4. This constructed habitat bench will also provide a great foundation for a potential upland transition zone if and when Pond A4 is restored to tidal action. Construction access improvements are needed to complete this work and are anticipated to be completed in FY27, with sediment delivery beginning in FY28. For more information on the Pond A4 Project, visit https://www.valleywater.org/project-updates/pond-a4-resilient-habitat-restoration-project. Staff is also exploring private partnerships to accelerate the project schedule, reduce costs, and maximize the goal of creating habitat by utilizing not only SMP sediment but also external upland sediment sources.

In the past, because of the higher standards required to meet criteria under the new Quality Assurance Project Plan (QAPP), Valley Water was unable to find enough soil that met the foundation criteria and even less for cover, thus limiting Valley Water’s ability to deposit the soil at Pond A8. SBSPRP, USFWS, and Valley Water are working with the Regional Water Quality Control Board to modify the criteria for reuse material. As a part of that effort, Valley Water continued to test the sediment removed to ensure consistent sediment quality data was available. Valley Water staff met with RWQCB in April 2024 to develop a site-specific QAPP for the Pond A4 Project. RWQCB requested additional studies in order to consider granting a relaxation on the cover thickness requirement (allowing for a thinner cover), which would enable increased reuse of SMP material. Staff is working to complete these studies by FY26, aiming for site-specific QAPP approval, including the thinner cover requirement, by FY27.

Project Modification (2023)

On January 24, 2023, the Valley Water Board of Directors (Valley Water Board) held a formal public hearing and approved modifying KPI #1 to “Reuse sediment meeting applicable screening criteria at available Valley Water or partnership project sites to support restoration.” To align with the modification, the Valley Water Board also approved adjusting the project description thus facilitating sediment reuse to support other environmental enhancement and restoration projects beyond the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project (SBSPRP). Valley Water had been delivering sediment to Salt Pond A8 of the SBSPRP via an agreement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). In July 2022, Valley Water was informed that Salt Pond A8 had received 100% of the material needed for the ecotone habitat that was designed and permitted as part of SBSPRP. Valley Water had paused sediment delivery to Pond A8 in July 2022. The modification and the adjustments are incorporated into this webpage above (title, description) and in the Environmental & Community Benefits section (KPIs, benefits). For more information and to view the project modification public hearing, visit tinyurl.com/2023Jan24BoardMtg.

August 2025

For more information:

  • Ryan Tregoning, (408) 630-3195

 

Upon completing beneficial reuse efforts with the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project at Pond A8, Valley Water explored and identified the Pond A4 Resilient Habitat Restoration Project (Pond A4 Project) along the southern shoreline in Sunnyvale as a new location for sediment reuse. The Pond A4 Project, a Valley Water multi-benefit project that the Valley Water Board of Directors approved in April 2023, is designed to create shallow water habitat for shorebirds and promote flood resilience by beneficially reusing material harvested from local creeks to construct a habitat bench along the southern perimeter of Pond A4. This constructed habitat bench will also provide a great foundation for a potential upland transition zone if and when Pond A4 is restored to tidal action. Construction access improvements are needed to complete this work and are anticipated to be completed in FY27, with sediment delivery beginning in FY28. For more information on the Pond A4 Project, visit https://www.valleywater.org/project-updates/pond-a4-resilient-habitat-restoration-project. Staff is also exploring private partnerships to accelerate the project schedule, reduce costs, and maximize the goal of creating habitat by utilizing not only SMP sediment but also external upland sediment sources.

In the past, because of the higher standards required to meet criteria under the new Quality Assurance Project Plan (QAPP), Valley Water was unable to find enough soil that met the foundation criteria and even less for cover, thus limiting Valley Water’s ability to deposit the soil at Pond A8. SBSPRP, USFWS, and Valley Water are working with the Regional Water Quality Control Board to modify the criteria for reuse material. As a part of that effort, Valley Water continued to test the sediment removed to ensure consistent sediment quality data was available. Valley Water staff met with RWQCB in April 2024 to develop a site-specific QAPP for the Pond A4 Project. RWQCB requested additional studies in order to consider granting a relaxation on the cover thickness requirement (allowing for a thinner cover), which would enable increased reuse of SMP material. Staff is working to complete these studies by FY26, aiming for site-specific QAPP approval, including the thinner cover requirement, by FY27.

Project Modification (2023)

On January 24, 2023, the Valley Water Board of Directors (Valley Water Board) held a formal public hearing and approved modifying KPI #1 to “Reuse sediment meeting applicable screening criteria at available Valley Water or partnership project sites to support restoration.” To align with the modification, the Valley Water Board also approved adjusting the project description thus facilitating sediment reuse to support other environmental enhancement and restoration projects beyond the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project (SBSPRP). Valley Water had been delivering sediment to Salt Pond A8 of the SBSPRP via an agreement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). In July 2022, Valley Water was informed that Salt Pond A8 had received 100% of the material needed for the ecotone habitat that was designed and permitted as part of SBSPRP. Valley Water had paused sediment delivery to Pond A8 in July 2022. The modification and the adjustments are incorporated into this webpage above (title, description) and in the Environmental & Community Benefits section (KPIs, benefits). For more information and to view the project modification public hearing, visit tinyurl.com/2023Jan24BoardMtg.

August 2025

For more information:

  • Ryan Tregoning, (408) 630-3195

 

No current documents. 

Safe, Clean Water Program Documents

  • FY25 Annual Report
  • All annual reports, annual IMC audit reports and independent audits

FY22-36 Key Performance Indicators for the Safe, Clean Water Program

  1. Reuse sediment meeting applicable screening criteria at available Valley Water or partnership project sites to support restoration.
  2. Provide up to $4 million per 15-year period to support activities necessary for sediment reuse.

Benefits

  • Accelerates progress of important tidal wetland restoration projects, including tidal marsh, wetland, and riparian habitat
  • Reduces disposal costs for sediment that has been removed from local channels
  • Reduces disposal of clean fill into local landfills
  • Addresses climate change impacts by accelerating the natural marsh-building process and helping keep up with the sea-level rise

Geographic Area of Benefit

Countywide 

 

About the Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Program

In November 2020, voters in Santa Clara County overwhelmingly approved Measure S, a renewal of Valley Water’s Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Program.

The program was first passed by voters in 2000 as the Clean, Safe Creeks and Natural Flood Protection Plan, then again in 2012 as the Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Program. The renewal of the Safe, Clean Water Program will continue to provide approximately $47 million annually for local projects that deliver safe, clean water, natural flood protection, and environmental stewardship to all the communities we serve in Santa Clara County.

While evaluating ways to improve the 2012 program, Valley Water gathered feedback from more than 21,000 community members. That helped Valley Water create the six priorities for the renewed Safe, Clean Water Program, which are:

Priority A: Ensure a Safe, Reliable Water Supply

Priority B: Reduce Toxins, Hazards and Contaminants in our Waterways

Priority C: Protect our Water Supply and Dams from Earthquakes and Natural Disasters

Priority D: Restore Wildlife Habitat and Provide Open Space

Priority E: Provide Flood Protection to Homes, Businesses, Schools, Streets and Highways

Priority F: Support Public Health and Public Safety for Our Community

Each year, Valley Water prepares a report providing a progress update for each of these program priorities, along with fiscal year accomplishments.

To ensure transparency and accountability to the voters, the ballot measure also created an Independent Monitoring Committee, appointed by the Santa Clara Valley Water District Board of Directors. The Independent Monitoring Committee annually reviews the program’s progress to ensure the outcomes are achieved in a cost-efficient manner and reports its findings to the Board. Additionally, the IMC also reviews each proposed 5-year implementation plan prior to its submittal for Board approval.

In addition, the program requires three independent audits.

View the Safe, Clean Water Program’s annual reports, annual IMC audit reports, and independent audits, including a staff response, on the Valley Water website.

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