URBANWATERS

FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

Restoring Urban Waters. Revitalizing Communities

river

NETWORK

connecting people saving rivers

Promoting Equitable Water Supply Management
Through Integrated Planning and Partnerships-
An Urban Waters Project



SAN ANTONIO

Rivt z?

100 Mites

March 2022

EPA842R22002


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Acknowledgements

This document was developed by EPA Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds' employee Tara Flint,
ORISE Research Participant Yeana Kwagh, River Network's Diana Toledo, and Industrial Economic
Incorporated's Eric Ruder and Meagan Currie. Yeana Kwagh's role did not include establishing EPA policy,
and all final decisions were made by the Agency. The information presented here would not have been
possible without significant contributions from the Consensus Building Institute in their contracted role
for in-depth stakeholder engagement through River Network. Additionally, the project and the
information in this document depended heavily on EPA Regional Office staff, Urban Waters Federal
Partnership ambassadors and partners, and other external partners from River Network and EPA's Office
of Water. The project was designed and implemented in partnership with the National Park Service.

Disclaimer

This document is disseminated under a cooperative agreement with the National Park Service (NPS) and
River Network and an Interagency Agreement between NPS and the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA). The U.S. Government assumes no liability for the use of information contained in this document.
The contents of this report reflect the views of the authors, who are responsible for the facts and
accuracy of the data presented herein. The contents do not necessarily represent the EPA or NPS's
position on the topics covered or official policy. To the extent this report contains summaries and
discussions of statutory authorities and regulations, the report itself does not constitute a statute or
regulation and does not substitute for such authorities. This report does not, nor is it intended to, affect
the behavior of non-agency parties.


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Table of Contents

1.	Introduction	1

2.	Project Development	2

2A. Location Selection	2

2B. Project Approach	3

3.	San Antonio Location	4

3A. Context	4

3B. Approach	5

3C. Stakeholder Engagement Process Findings	7

3D. Water Equity Mapping Findings	8

4.	Verde River Location	11

4A. Context	11

4B. Approach	14

4C. Stakeholder Engagement Process Findings	14

4D. Water Equity Mapping Analysis Findings	15

5.	Lessons Learned	19

5A. Lessons Learned from Stakeholder Engagement	19

5B. Lessons Learned from Mapping with the Recovery Potential Screening Tool	21

Appendix I: Stakeholder Engagement Final Report: Integrated Water Resource Management with an
Equity Lens

Appendix II: EPA Recovery Potential Screening (RPS) Tool: Potential Applications for Watershed Analysis
and Water Equity Mapping


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1. Introduction

Water is critical to the health, economic and social vibrancy and resilience of communities, but managing
available water resources to meet a community's diverse needs is a complex exercise. Due to this
complexity of meeting so many users' demands while balancing natural environmental systems' needs,
water resource management across the United States has often taken a very siloed approach. Different
sectors work on their own without high levels of collaboration with related or overlapping sectors. For
example, environmental interests with a focus on ecological system integrity may overlook local social
needs of a community, or industrial interests that aim to maximize profits through processes dependent
on water neglect collaborative planning with local water utilities.

A useful framework for navigating these complex
dynamics is Integrated Water Resource
Management (IWRM), a comprehensive and
holistic approach to water management and
planning that integrates areas such as water
supply, wastewater, and stormwater systems. In
particular, IWRM can be applied to advance water
conservation and reuse goals in water-
constrained regions. However, traditional efforts
at IWRM have often overlooked one key
component - water equity. Goals for water equity should be built into any and all water resource
management work, including water reuse and conservation efforts.

The Urban Waters Federal Partnership (UWFP) was established in 2011 to help urban communities
(especially those that are underserved or economically distressed) connect with their water systems and
work to improve them. With 20 designated locations, the collaboration between 15 federal agencies and
more than 60 non-governmental organizations works to reconnect urban communities with their
waterways through community-led revitalization efforts. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
has taken a lead role in many of the Urban Waters locations. The EPA Office of Water uses the UWFP to
pursue a systems-based approach to water conservation and management in order to maximize
economic, social, and environmental welfare in an equitable manner. IWRM strategies are prioritized
while leveraging strong multi-stakeholder relationships to address specific issues such as water scarcity,
water access, improved stormwater management, and riparian ecosystem restoration.

In 2020, EPA and other Federal and state partners established the National Water Reuse Action Plan
(WRAP) as a coordinated public/private effort to advance water conservation, flood and drought
resilience, and reuse activities across sectors and geographies. Given the focus of the Urban Waters
program on using collaborative, integrated approaches to address major water and equity issues, EPA
initiated an action in the WRAP to expand the use of established partnership programs like Urban Waters
to achieve WRAP objectives on a larger geographic scale. WRAP Action 1.4 outlined several projects to be
undertaken with the active engagement of two geographically-based water partnership programs: the

1 US Water Alliance; http://uswateralliance.org/wec/framework

WATER EQUITY

According to the US Water Alliance, water equity
occurs when communities: 1) have access to safe,
clean, and affordable drinking water and wastewater
services; 2) share in the economic, social, and
environmental benefits of water systems; and 3) are
resilient in the face of floods, droughts, and other
climate risks.1

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Urban Waters Program (https://www.epa.Rov/urbanwaters) and the National Estuary Program
(www.epa.Rov/nep).2

The project described in this report is a core element of WRAP Action 1.4. The objective of the project
was to assess data and stakeholder perspectives related to water management and equity in two
freshwater ecosystems, both of which are Urban Waters partnership locations. That assessment was used
to identify systemic barriers and strategic opportunities for collaborative actions to improve conditions in
the targeted river systems. This report draws out lessons learned from the assessment process which can
be applied and replicated in other river systems. Prospective improvements through the project model
would seek to address water conservation, capture, and reuse opportunities through IWRM and
collaborative local stakeholder engagement, with a major focus on more equitable services to
underserved communities within the two watersheds. The project was a collaboration between EPA's
Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds (OWOW), the National Park Service (NPS), and River Network
(RN). It is an example of how water equity can be integrated across watersheds and sectors to become a
foundational aspect of water resource management work.

This report provides the summary of the core findings of the river system project, which focused on
UWFP locations in the San Antonio River Watershed (Texas) and a critical tributary to the Rio
Reimagined's Salt River and Middle Gila watershed: the Upper Verde watershed (Arizona). This report
synthesizes information taken from more extensive analyses (attached in appendices) conducted by the
Consensus Building Institute (CBI) and Industrial Economics, Incorporated (lEc), two partners on the
project who facilitated extensive stakeholder engagement and outreach and conducted watershed
analyses via water equity mapping efforts. The report and appendix documents provide findings, lessons
learned, and a path forward for continuing work in the two watersheds with EPA support.

2. Project Development

2A. Location Selection

Project Team members developed an initial list of 18 river systems across the country to evaluate for
possible inclusion in this project. All of the locations had connections to EPA's water partnership
programs (i.e., UWFP or NEP locations) and/or the Healthy Watersheds Program; while some locations
had connections to NPS Programs (i.e., RTCA, Wild and Scenic Rivers, National Water Trails, or other
designations).

In the fall of 2020, Project Team members evaluated an initial list of 18 river systems in relation to the
objectives of this project to identify 1-2 sites that met the following criteria: prioritization and relevance
of water reuse or water efficiency issues to systems' health; existence of local environmental justice or
climate resilience work already underway; and the presence of a strong cadre of local stakeholders.

Project Team members conducted extensive outreach to partners across the various locations and
engaged in detailed conversations to assess locations' fit to project goals.

^The National Estuary Program is a place-based program (similar to the UWFP) established in 1987 under the Section 320 of the Clean Water Act to protect and restore the ecological integrity of
28 estuaries of national significance.

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Team members selected San Antonio, Texas and the Verde River tributary to the Salt River in Arizona as
the sites for this project. Both locations are affiliated with UWFP locations - the San Antonio Federal
Partnership in Texas and Rio Reimagined Partnership in Phoenix, Arizona. In addition, sections of the
Verde River are designated as a Wild and Scenic River (managed by the U.S. Forest Service). To
accommodate time and budget constraints, San Antonio was selected as the "primary" project location,
in large part due to the high level of activity and engagement by the UWFP, clear "fit" with project goals,
and strength of relationships among partnership stakeholders. The project's work in the Verde River
watershed was more limited in the number and scope of stakeholder engagement activities given time
constraints for the project itself, as well as the outreach required to solidify participation in the location.

The WRAP Project incorporated two separate levels of analysis: one grounded in extensive stakeholder
engagement, led by the Consensus Building Institute (CBI), and a separate but parallel analysis based on
water equity mapping, led by Industrial Economics, Incorporated (lEc).

Stakeholder Engagement - River Network engaged consulting firm CBI to facilitate the WRAP project in
the San Antonio and Verde River basins. CBI followed a phased approach to exploring key challenges and
opportunities for advancing equity-focused integrated water planning, including water reuse, in each
watershed. The effort was also expected to highlight lessons for strengthening collaborative, integrated
water management approaches at Urban Waters Partnership locations more broadly.

Phgse I - CBI conducted preliminary stakeholder interviews and facilitated discussions with UWFP
members to explore how water planning efforts might be expanded to include important and previously
underrepresented stakeholders and to further emphasize water reuse activities.

Phgse II - Recommendations from Phase 1 activities informed the goals, key messages, logistics, and
support needed to promote further engagement with key stakeholders.

Phgse ///-CBI drafted the report included in Attachment 1 in consultation with the Project Team. The
report includes a set of recommendations for advancing existing collaborative efforts, promoting more
inclusive IWRM and addressing barriers to water conservation and reuse.

Water Equity Mapping / Recovery Potential Screening Application

Throughout the project phases discussed above, a parallel workstream in the project was advanced by lEc
to provide visualizations integrating both social and environmental data in order to identify the most

2B. Project Approach

Phase 1:
Stakeholder
Assessment and
Process Design

Phase a:
Identifying Key
Issues and IWRM
Priorities

Phase 3:
Recommendations
and Path Forward

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vulnerable areas in the two locations. This project referred to these vulnerable areas as hot spots -
geographic areas in which challenges with a nexus to water are being experienced disproportionately by
low-income and BIPOC (Black, indigenous, and person of color) communities.

lEc worked with the EPA to utilize the Recovery Potential Screening Tool (RPS) to create numerous maps
of social and environmental indicators for both the San Antonio and Verde River watersheds. The RPS tool
was originally developed by the EPA's Healthy Watersheds Program to help states, territories and tribes
identify priority areas for watershed restoration. It houses 284 unique indicators from many national
database sources, including the National Hydrography Dataset, the US Census Bureau, and National Land
Cover Database. The data are stored by Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC) at the HUC12 regional level, which
delineate regional watershed boundaries at the local, sub-watershed level. lEc and EPA sought feedback
throughout CBI's stakeholder engagement to establish which environmental and social indicators were
the most appropriate for mapping.

lEc then took the RPS tool data and integrated it into GIS software to generate index scores that ranked
the watershed regions for each location according to chosen indicators. The maps created were used to
profile the watershed and to offer a more comprehensive and holistic view into each location with
respect to integrated water management. Ultimately, this work also illustrates how the RPS tool could be
applied in other UWFP locations around the country.

3. San Antonio Location

3A. Context

Since 2011, the San Antonio community, local agencies, and federal partners have worked together
through the San Antonio Urban Waters Federal Partnerships (UWFP) and other local initiatives to
promote watershed health, improving community connections to waterways and restoring damaged
ecosystems.

The 240-mile San Antonio River springs from the Edward Aquifer in Bexar County and flows through 15
counties in southern Texas to its confluence with the Guadalupe River towards the San Antonio Bay and
the Gulf of Mexico. The San Antonio River Basin includes the Medina, Cibolo, Upper San Antonio, and
Lower San Antonio watersheds. (See Exhibit 1 for a map of the full river basin.) The San Antonio River
watershed holds significant value for the region, supporting native species, migratory birds, and other
wildlife. The river and interconnected aquifer system provide drinking and irrigation water to urban and
rural communities. The river's network of trails and parks also hold significant scenic, historic, and
recreation values to locals and visitors alike. However, increased pressures on the river and
interconnected aquifer system from trash, polluted runoff, rapid urban growth, and changing climate
conditions have damaged the riparian ecosystem and pose serious water quality and quantity concerns.

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Exhibit 1. The San Antonio River Basin includes four major river basins: the Medina, Cibolo, Upper and Lower San Antonio.

3B. Approach

In the San Antonio River watershed, the focus of the project was to strengthen and revitalize the San
Antonio UWFP, including broadening participation to include previously underrepresented communities
in water resource management. In recent years, the San Antonio UWFP experienced a brief period of
inactivity as a result of key staff transitions, and this project offered an opportunity to re-engage
stakeholders and identify areas ripe for collaboration to advance shared goals. Expected outcomes of this
project included (1) identification of water challenges that could benefit from increased collaboration and
engagement of historically underrepresented groups, and (2) an expansion of stakeholders engaged in
IWRM and water reuse through the Urban Waters Federal Partnership.

Following stakeholder interviews and consultation with the UWFP Ambassador, EPA Region 6 project
lead, and key UWFP members, CBI and the Project Team convened an ad-hoc UWFP work group focused
on equity and community engagement to guide the UWFP's update of its work plan. Over the course of 3
meetings, the Work Group explored ways in which the UWFP can promote integrated approaches to
watershed-wide issues of concern to historically disadvantaged communities.

For water equity mapping efforts, lEc staff selected the full San Antonio Basin to broaden the scope of
watershed understanding around the San Antonio urban center. lEc incorporated data from 21 of the
indicators available through the RPS tool and combined them to generate index scores for social
vulnerability, human land and water use, watershed health, present and future climate
vulnerability and toxicant load. For the fuli list of indicators, see the text box on the following page.

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Vulnerability Indicators Applied from the RPS Tool

For the purpose of this combined report and the RPS Tool Analysis, a total of 21 indicators were
incorporated into the analysis of the two regions. These indicators are categorized and listed below.

Social Vulnerability

1.	% Low-Income Population in Watershed

2.	% Minority Population in Watershed

3.	% Linguistically Isolated Population in Watershed

4.	% < High School Educated Population in Watershed

5.	% Vulnerable Age Group Population in Watershed

Human Land and Water Use

6.	Population Density in Watershed

7.	Domestic, Agricultural and Industrial Water Demand in Watershed

8.	Groundwater Source Protection Areas in Watershed

Watershed Health

9.	% Natural Land Cover (N-lndexl) in Watershed

10.	Change in % N-lndexl in Watershed (2001-16)

11.	Soil Stability, Mean in Watershed

12.	Preliminary Healthy Watershed Analysis (PHWA) Watershed Health Index, State

Present Vulnerability

13.	% 100-Year Flood Zone in Watershed

14.	PHWA Water Use Vulnerability Index, State

15.	Wildfire Hazard Potential, Mean in WS (2018)

Toxics Load

16.	Toxic Release and Exposure Potential in WS

17.	Hazardous Waste Management Sites, Count in WS

18.	Risk Management Plan Sites, Count in WS

Projected Vulnerability

19.	Projected Change in Annual Temperature

20.	% Projected Change in Annual Precipitation, Inverse

21.	% Projected Change in Annual Evaporative Deficit

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3C. Stakeholder Engagement Process Findings

The following findings emerged through discussions with UWFP members, local stakeholders and Work
Group members led byCBI:

•	The water challenges of greatest shared interest and priority for stakeholders in the San Antonio
watershed include issues at the intersection of water quality, stormwater, and equity; rural and
urban water dynamics; urban growth and integrated water and land-use planning; and climate
resilience (e.g., drought and flood preparedness).

•	Key water priorities and watershed-wide challenges in San Antonio are intertwined, creating
opportunities to advance multi-benefit projects. Rapid urban growth and land-use changes,
coupled with climate change, have led to growing demands on local water supplies (i.e., the
Edwards Aquifer) and increased stormwater runoff. In addition, trash and other pollutants carried
by stormwater contaminate local water supplies. Stakeholders strongly support projects designed
to address issues at the intersection of water management, trash and solid waste management,
pollution, air quality, biodiversity, etc.

•	The San Antonio UWFP plays an important role promoting communication and connection across
agencies and can bring value to the various collaborative efforts already underway. These include
IWRM efforts, water reuse initiatives and water equity efforts that are currently spearheaded by
the City of San Antonio and local water agencies.

•	There is a need to incorporate considerations of equity and environmental justice more directly
into the UWFP's work. Consider prioritizing projects using equity mapping and tools such as EPA's
EJSCREEN or the RPS tool. Stakeholders highlighted that these wealthier areas tend to be more
flood resilient and have more green space, while historically disadvantaged communities tend to
be disproportionately and negatively impacted by water issues. BIPOC communities tend to rely
on older infrastructure, flood more often, suffer greater water quality concerns, and rely on
concrete-lined flood infrastructure.

•	There is a need to expand community outreach and education efforts. Most stakeholders agreed
that community engagement, equity, and public education could be a central element of the
UWFPs work. They pointed to neighborhood associations as natural partners to engage with on
issues, particularly those that result from historical inequities, and identified the need to connect
with communities lacking neighborhood associations.

•	There is a need to better coordinate and leverage funding, and to work across silos to identify
cross-cutting funding opportunities for multi-benefit projects and water initiatives.

•	More can be done to integrate urban growth and water planning across the San Antonio
metropolitan area. This may include steering new development in unincorporated areas to better
use, reuse and protect water resources, and promoting stormwater containment in areas of rapid
growth.

•	Additional support is needed for the San Antonio UWFP Work Plan Update. Stakeholders voiced a
shared vision in moving from a project-based work plan towards a thematic approach, using
equity as a guiding principle for the UWFP. Stakeholders identified the following areas as being
ripe for promoting water equity: messaging/education, technical support, funding, and spanning

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institutional boundaries. Topicaiiy, they suggested the UWFP focus on watershed health and
resilience; stewardship, education and outreach; economic revitalization/prosperity; and
collaboration and true partnerships.

3D. Water Equity Mapping Findings

The maps generated for the San Antonio region are designed to offer a holistic understanding of the
watershed and to identify areas that experience comparatively high levels of social and environmental
stress. To better understand population vulnerability, a series of five social indicators were equally
weighted and a 100-point comparative index was generated using the RPS tool, henceforth referred to as
the "broad social vulnerability index". Metrics included in these index scores include the percent of the
population identified as:

•	Low-income

•	Minority population (non-white)

•	Linguistically isolated (non-English household with low English proficiency)

•	Less than a high-school education

•	Vulnerable age group (below 5 and above 64).

The heatmap in Exhibit 2 illustrates the areas with the highest index scores.

Kendall



Fayette

[SarTAntonro

Uvalde

WifBon

DeWitt

Victoria

laJhour

Exhibit 2. The top [10th] decile of vulnerable HUC12 regions in the watershed include the central and southern portion of the city
of San Antonio and the HUC12 regions south of the city along the Medina River and directly south of the intersection between
the San Antonio and Medina Rivers. Other socially vulnerable regions include the Hondo Creek region of Karnes County and
central Goliad County along the San Antonio River, both downstream of the City of San Antonio.

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Broad social vulnerability is more significant when considering watershed health alongside the social
hotspots. Exhibit 4 visualizes the overlap between the top decile of socially vulnerable HUGH regions and
those with the lowest watershed health. The watershed health index was generated by combining three
environmental indicators: the % natural land cover (N-lndexl) in watershed, mean soil stability in
watershed, and Preliminary Healthy Watershed Analysis (PHWA) water quality sub-index.

Combined Score

The scores that range from 2 to 10 are
a combined score of the race and
income tabs, indicating that the higher
the number, the higher the
concentration of both people of color
and low income households in that
census tract. Click on a census tract to
see the overall combined score that it
recerved and the total population for
that tract

Exhibit 3. Equity Atlas low income and minority populations (left) within the city of San Antonio compared to RPS broad social
vulnerability by HUC12 (right). The granularity of the San Antonio Equity map is finer and more clearly illustrates the population
divisions within the city boundaries. The RPS map includes more indicators to generate the final score (percent linguistically
isolated and percent vulnerable age group in addition to percent low income and percent minority). The RPS map also includes
all HUC12 regions with a majority area in Bexar County, rather than only regions within the San Antonio city boundary. The map
trends overlap and both indicate that central and Southern Bexar County are home to some of the most vulnerable populations.

As the hotspot maps displaying social and watershed vulnerability indicate, the HUC12 regions within the
upper San Antonio River Basin through the city have the potential to benefit the most from water
planning that supports environmental wellbeing arid protects socially vulnerable populations. Increased
green spaces, the development of water reuse systems, and the creation of community-driven efforts to
protect the vulnerable communities against current and future environmental strain and natural disasters
will help the city of San Antonio and surrounding counties to protect the population and shared water
resources. Within Bexar County, communities in the central Southeast regions of San Antonio have
consistently higher rates of non-high school graduates, and lower life expectancy. As of 2019,15.6% of
Bexar County received cash assistance or food stamps compared to 13.1% of Texas residents.3 The 2019
Poverty Report also found that census tracts with the lowest life expectancy also had the highest poverty
levels.4 These high poverty levels contrast the high-income levels in surrounding areas that include
military bases. Bexar County includes a series of military bases collectively known as Joint Base San
Antonio (which comprises Fort Sam Houston, JBSA-Lackland and JSBA-Randolph). These military bases

^ https://www.sanantonio.gOv/Portals/0/Files/HiirnanServices/FaithBased/20igpovertvReport.pdf
^ https://www.sanantonio.gOv/Portals/0/Files/HumanServices/FaithBased/20igPovertvReport.pdf

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provide direct and indirect jobs and increase revenue in the surrounding area. Major water infrastructure
investment has been spent on wealthier areas of Bexar County, including these military bases.

The map on the right side of Exhibit 3 illustrates the broad social vulnerability index in Bexar County
based on data from RPS. The map on the left side is taken from the San Antonio Office of Equity mapping
project, which compiles data by census tract within the San Antonio city boundaries to show areas with
the greatest low income and percent minority populations. Each census tract is scored from two to ten.
These two maps show a similar distribution of vulnerable populations in Bexar County.

Outside of the city, regions south of San Antonio in central Karnes and Goliad Counties also face social
and environmental vulnerability and lower resiliency compared to the rest of the watershed (see Exhibit
4). These hotspots are worth investigating more thoroughly to identify ways that water management may
alleviate environmental and socioeconomic strain.

Guadalupe

Driver

San'Antonio

Wilson

DeWitt

Social and Watershed Vulnerability Crossover

Social Vulnerability Top Decile

Karnes

Watershed Health Vulnerability Top Decile

Top Decile Crossover

Exhibit 4. This exhibit shows the top deciles for broad social vulnerability (red) and watershed health vulnerability (yellow), and
the overlap between these top deciles (striped). Areas of overlap indicate regions that fall within the top decile for both
categories.

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4. Verde River Location

4A. Context

As of September 2020, Rio Reimagined became the newest UWFP location, bringing together eight river
communities to protect, restore and revitalize the river corridor. Initially, the project was intended to
focus on the Rio Reimagined UWFP location, which is located in the Phoenix area encompassing a 58-mile
stretch of the Salt and Gila Rivers in Arizona's Middle Gila watershed.

However, when information about the WRAP project was shared with Rio Reimagined partners, many did
not feel the Salt and Middle Gila River watershed was in a position to pursue a project in the near term
due to: local sensitivities surrounding source water management; the short project timeline; and the
UWFP location's limited staff capacity, given its recent addition to the UWFP system and its lack of a
designated Ambassador. The WRAP project team was advised to shift the focus to the Upper/Middle
Verde, due to existing collaborative efforts underway and opportunities to build on their momentum and
expand water reuse in an integrative way. While stakeholder engagement through CBI focused on
portions of the Verde River basin, lEc undertook a larger scope for data visualization and mapping across
the entire Salt/Gila/Verde watershed to provide greater context for regional IWRM with utility to a
greater number of stakeholders working with the UWFP. Water equity mapping for the Arizona location
of the project therefore encompassed the three river systems (see Exhibit 5).

The 192-mile Verde River is one of the last vibrant and flowing rivers in Arizona. It passes through federal,
state, tribal and private lands, before reaching the confluence with the Salt River near Phoenix. Given its
upstream location from the Rio Reimagined UWFP location, it is a direct supply of water to the entire
river corridor (tied to the Salt and Gila Rivers). Water from the Verde River accounts for approximately
40% of the surface water delivered by the Salt River Project to the Phoenix-area for municipal and
agricultural use. The Verde River watershed is generally divided into three subsections (see Exhibit 6
below) including the Upper, Middle and Lower Verde. Given existing stakeholder collaboration and
interest in the project, CBI focused their stakeholder engagement in the Upper and Middle portions. The
Upper Verde base flow is fed by interconnected aquifers in the Big Chino basin, flowing through red-rock
canyons and supporting a lush riparian habitat. Further along, a series of tributaries (i.e., Sycamore Creek,
Oak Creek, Wet Beaver Creek, and West Clear Creek) and washes feed in the Middle Verde River/Verde
Valley, supporting local communities and economies. Downstream, a stretch of the Lower Verde is
designated a National Wild and Scenic River. The river continues to flow into two major reservoirs, the
Horseshoe and Bartlett dams, before joining the Salt River north of Mesa, Arizona.

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HAVASUFfcl

Coconino

HUALAPAI

^YAVAPAI-'APACHE NATION

YAVAPAI-PRE SCOTT

Yavapai*

"SvXa4 V4

TONTO APACHE

FORT MCDOWELL YAVAPAI NATlONj 7

*» ( h?' Phoenix

w T [	^T^SALT RIVER

GILA RIVER

Mancopal

Monave

Yuma

NAVAJO NATION

HOPI

Navajo

Apache

^MARICOPA (AK CH IN >

Pinal

SAN CARLOS

Green

Graham

80 Miles

Exhibit 5. The Verde, Salt and Gila Rivers converge just north of Phoenix, and each is a part of one or more watersheds that
comprise the central and southern regions of Arizona. This area includes the Verde River Basin to the North (yellow), the Salt
Basin to the West (red), and the Lower Gila-Agua Fria Basin to the Southeast (blue). This entire area Includes 634 distinct HUC12
regions.

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Rio Verde-Sub watersheds

I	1

| | Upper Verde
Middle Verde
Lower Verde

0	10 20	40

1	I I I I I I I I

Exhibit 6. i he subwatershed regions of the Verde River Watershed are the Upper, Middle and Lower Verde. The Verde River
flows through these sub-watersheds to its intersection point with the Salt River.

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4B. Approach

In the Verde River watershed, the goal of the project was to explore opportunities to support current
collaborative efforts while identifying potential gaps for water reuse and other integrated water planning.
A concurrent goal was to highlight water-related challenges for smaller, under-resourced communities
and opportunities to engage those who have not historically been at the table in regional water resources
planning. Similar to the San Antonio location, water equity mapping was also created for the larger region
in Arizona encompassing the Verde, Salt and Gila Rivers in order to provide more regional context on
current social demographics, watershed health and land use change.

As described in the previous section on San Antonio, CBI used a multi-phase approach to engage
stakeholders in Arizona, specifically in the Upper and Middle Verde River basin. CBI first conducted
stakeholder interviews to identify key water issues and opportunities and then designed a more targeted
engagement effort that culminated in a meeting with a small group of representatives from local non-
profit organizations, watershed coalitions, and one of the tribal government representatives to outline
the second phase of the WRAP project in the Verde River watershed. The strong take-away from that
discussion was that the most promising forum through which to advance water equity, reuse, and
integrated planning in the region is through an update to the Section 208 Water Quality Management
Plan.

Although stakeholder conversations for the project primarily concerned the Upper Verde River Basin, the
visualization scope taken on by lEc was designed to analyze the broader watershed area comprised of the
Verde, Salt and Gila Rivers. Applying the same approach as used for the San Antonio watershed,
indicators were selected from the RPS tool to help the Project Team identify watershed vulnerability
hotspots for this region. These were then combined to create a set of indicator indices to allow the
overlay of environmental and social factors tied into water equity concerns.

4C. Stakeholder Engagement Process Findings

The following findings emerged through discussions with UWFP members and local stakeholders:

•	Major watershed-wide challenges in the Verde include rapid growth and land-use changes,
unregulated groundwater pumping, and a lack of coordinated land-use and water planning. A

significant proportion of the population relies on septic tanks, which in turn limits regional
capacity for water reuse, recharge, and storage and presents a water quality hazard. Stakeholders
echoed concerns about climate impacts on local water resources, such as increased water stress,
sustained drought, and increased risk of wildfire risk and flooding.

•	The Verde River watershed is ripe for integrated planning. Stakeholders suggested building on
successful collaborative efforts underway, such as the Watershed Improvement Plan (2009-
2013), the Verde Watershed Restoration Coalition, the SustaininR Flows Council, the Verde Front,
the Verde River ExchanRe, the Northern Arizona Climate Action Plan, among others. However, the
funding and resources needed to support equitable IWRM need to be made available.
Stakeholders pointed to a lack of sustained statewide funding and leadership to support IWRM at
a larger watershed or regional scale.

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•	The Gila River general stream adjudication process will impact all water users and uses in the
Verde River by determining their water rights allocation and priority date. The adjudication
process includes the quantification and settlement process for the Yavapai-Apache Tribal water
rights. Any/all conversations about water availability and demands will be inextricably linked to
the legal adjudication process, which has been underway for 45 years and has yet to be settled.

•	There is a massive need to secure new state or federal funding to advance IWRM and water
equity, prioritizing multi-benefit projects (i.e., restore riparian corridors and fostering water
conservation/reuse); enhanced community outreach on IWRM and sustainable growth; and
improved climate resiliency.

•	Efforts to promote IWRM, water conservation and water reuse need to be longer-term and have
clear follow through. The state of Arizona lacks the resources invested in similar initiatives in
California and could benefit from EPA support. That said, efforts need to be sustained and longer
term to gain people's trust. Further, some watershed groups have struggled to engage
municipalities and local leaders in these types of discussions. A process like this would be a heavy
lift and require a longer scope.

•	Updating the Areawide Water Quality Management Plan (208 Plan) is a prime opportunity to
leverage the existing partnerships and incorporate water reuse into integrated planning, as the
current plan is almost 20 years old. There is a need for federal partners to provide funding,
technical and facilitation support to address the existing resource and capacity limitations for
such an effort. Specifically, the Verde watershed would benefit from EPA advocating to the
Northern Arizona Council of Governments (NACOG) and the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality (ADEQ) that an updated 208 plan is a priority.

o An updated 208 plan would foster water reuse and provide certainty and clarity around
effluent discharge, consistent with the Clean Water Act. The plan could (1) help identify
multi-benefit solutions (e.g., maximize water reuse, improve stormwater capture and
management, retire septic systems); (2) assess barriers and constraints for implementation of
multi-benefit strategies (e.g., regulatory obstacles, funding); and (3) foster strategic thinking
at a watershed scale. For a detailed list of the key issues that stakeholders suggested for
inclusion in the 208 Plan, see the full CBI Report (Appendix I).

4D. Water Equity Mapping Analysis Findings

As with the San Antonio location, lEc combined a series of indicators from RPS to create index scores and
map overlays in order to better visualize the areas with the highest relative vulnerability across multiple
social and environmental categories. They calculated the broad social vulnerability index and the
watershed health vulnerability index using the same combination of indicators as
used for San Antonio. The results are shown in Exhibit 7 and 8.

As can be seen in the exhibit, particularly high values for social vulnerability occur north of the Salt River
around the Fort Apache-White Mountain Reservation. Additional vulnerability hotspots fall within the
central and southern boundaries of the city of Phoenix, as well as the western half of Maricopa County
along the Gila River. Some additional areas of vulnerability include northwestern Maricopa County and in
the upper reaches of the Verde River watershed.

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Coconino
Hualapai

Social Vulnerability Index

1st Decile

2nd Decile

Navajol

Apache

3rd Decile

4th Decile

5th Decile

6th Decile

7th Decile

8th Decile

Yavapai

Yavapai-Prescott

9th Decile

10th Decile

Tonto Apache

Eomffipache



black

Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation,

Phoenix

San Carlos

Gila River

Greenlee

Maricopa

^/VER

Maricopa (Ak Chin)

Graham

Yuma

Exhibit 7. This heatmap displays the broad social vulnerability index across the Verde, Salt and Lower Gila watersheds, by decile.
These scores integrate data from five indicators: the population identified as low-income, the percent minority (non-white),
percent linguistically isolated, percent with less than a high-school education, and the percent vulnerable age group (below 5 and
above 64).

Regions with the greatest watershed health vulnerability in the Salt, Gila and Verde River watersheds
include the series of IIUC 12 regions along and north of the Gila River, ranging from Phoenix through
central Maricopa County, the Middle Verde subwatershed and parts of the Salt River (see Exhibit 8).

Maricopa county is the most populous county in Arizona, with over four million inhabitants, most of
whom reside within and surrounding the city borders of Phoenix. In August 2021, 86% of Maricopa
County was classified as a severe drought region by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration,5 Water management practices in the Upper Rio Verde and along the Salt River to the
west ultimately impact the water flowing downstream towards Maricopa County via the Gila River. This
water is needed to support the substantia! agricultural land use in Maricopa and in Pinal County to the
west.

Hisfotfeal Co'd fl'Vvi vr MarieopaiGtSanty, DrdUght.gov

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The Centrai Arizona Project (CAP) supplies water to neariy 80% of the state's population and significantly
benefits Pinal County and to a lesser extent the population of Phoenix.6 This said, regions within and just
outside of the northern Phoenix city boundary (through which the CAP canal system runs) fall into the top
deciie of most vulnerable areas for watershed health based on natural land cover, soil stability and the
EPA water quality index (Exhibit 8). Although these regions have access to water via the canal system, the
health of these subwatershed is worthy of consideration in future water management planning.
Subwatersheds outside of the Phoenix area with greater watershed vulnerability include those around
Cottonwood near the border between Yavapai and Coconino counties extending to the west and East
from the upper Verde River. Additional watersheds with high vulnerability include the HUC12 regions
surrounding Roosevelt Lake, the largest visible lake along the Salt River in Exhibit 8.

Maricopa

Greenlee

Yuma

Yavapai

Watershed Health
Vulnerability Index Score

| 1st Decile

| 2nd Decile

| 3rd Decile

| 4th Decile

| 5th Decile

] 6th Decile

7th Decile

	| 8th Decile

~ 9th Decile

10th Decile

La Paz

Coconino

Exhibit 8. This map displays the watershed health vulnerability index, which was generated by combining three environmental
indicators: the % natural land cover (N-lndexl) in watershed, Soil stability mean in watershed, and Preliminary Healthy
Watershed Analysis (PHWA) water quality sub-index. The top decile (darker colors) indicate areas with the highest vulnerability,
or the lowest scores for these combined indicators.

^ https://www.caD-az.com/water/cap-svstetn/water-operations/svstem-maD/

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The map beiow (Exhibit 9) shows the crossover between the sociai vulnerability and watershed
vulnerability indices. As with the San Antonio mapping, this allows us to identify some portions of the
subwatersheds that could be considered "hotspots" in need of the most attention regarding water equity
issues.

Yavapai

R/u,

slack

Phoenix

Maricopa

80 Miles

Graham

Yuma

Social and Environmental Vulnerability Crossover

Social Vulnerability Top Decile

Watershed Health Vulnerability Top Decile

Exhibit 9. Top decile crossover between socially vulnerable HUC12 regions and those with the greatest watershed vulnerability
based on the watershed health indicators. Striped HUC12 regions indicate areas of crossover between the HUC12 regions within
the top decile for both indices,

The two indices are closely correlated across the map - areas of high social vulnerability along the Gila
River south of Phoenix and the Salt River east of the city also have high watershed vulnerability index
scores. Additional areas to consider that suffer from watershed vulnerability or social vulnerability are the
Upper Verde subwatershed and areas upstream along the Salt River (e.g., the northern section of Graham
County and the southern regions of Navajo County. These areas fali within the San Carlos and White
Mountain Apache Tribal lands. It will be of particular importance when developing water reuse action
plans to consider tribal communities, especially those that are not served by the CAP system. Policy and
management changes in hotspot areas that focus on human equity are likely to support surrounding
ecosystem health and vice versa. Additionally, the environmental stresses that occur in portions of the
Verde River watershed are likely to adversely impact areas downstream of vulnerable subwatersheds.

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5. Lessons Learned

5A. Lessons Learned from Stakeholder Engagement

Over the course of the project, the project team held iterative discussions on how to improve processes
moving forward within the current timeline, as well as lessons learned for future endeavors tied to water
equity, IWRM, and water reuse. The following section provides a summary of the most pertinent lessons
learned from the start of project development all the way through the stakeholder engagement and
water equity mapping efforts. These points are meant to provide useful feedback to EPA, other Federal
partners, and partners in each location, on how to more successfully advance water reuse and IWRM
efforts through a water equity lens.

•	There is enormous value in investing time and resources upfront to build transparent and
effective relationships with communities on-the-ground for sustainable outcomes. This project
exemplified the amount of time it takes to build trust with community partners for effective
engagement, something which EPA's existing partnership programs (i.e., UWFP and National
Estuary Program) are well-versed in. This project created a space to learn about and provide an
analysis of current barriers and motivators to advance IWRM and water reuse in both localities,
with the long-term objective to enable consensus-based and effective strategic planning in these
watersheds. More time is required to:

1)	build additional trust with community partners;

2)	demonstrate a commitment to meaningful long-term outcomes;

3)	establish the credibility for partners to engage in creative, multi-purpose, multi-stakeholder
planning across traditional siloes;

4)	engage those most impacted by historic water-related inequities and those who may stand to
gain the most from water reuse and IWRM efforts; and

5)	work through existing structures and processes to develop new sustainable approaches to
water planning at the neighborhood, local and/or regional levels.

•	There is a need to develop a clearer definition of 'underrepresented' or 'under-served' groups in
any given location upfront and be clear that using a water equity lens changes the conversation.

For example, in the Verde River watershed rural communities tend to be underrepresented in
state water planning processes, yet in other instances, these communities have louder voices and
greater influence. Participants suggested focusing particularly on low-income neighborhoods,
including Tribes and other communities of color when discussing 'underrepresented' or 'under-
served' groups.

•	The EPA's role may vary depending on how far along stakeholders are in embedding equity into
their work. In San Antonio, equity is part of the City's overarching policy and therefore a
commitment to integrate equity into water planning is shared. In Arizona's Verde watershed,
these conversations are newer, more contested, and playing out differently. In some locations, it
may make sense for EPA to support water equity by probing and asking questions to better
understand what equity looks like and what communities are considered underserved or

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underrepresented, while refraining from taking a prescriptive or directive stance. In other cases,
EPA may need to play more of a supportive role while learning from local experts and efforts.

•	Begin with an assessment to understand what efforts are already underway and to ensure
alignment between Federal goals and local priorities. Federal support is more effective when
building on existing work and when efforts are tailored to address local stakeholder needs, fill
gaps, and scale successful efforts. Prior to selecting locations, and during the early phases of a
project, Federal partners should have clear conversations with UWFP locations about the various
parties' interests, goals, and basic definitions (e.g., water reuse, IWRM, water equity), to ensure
there is mutual understanding and alignment of objectives.

•	Demonstrate a longer-term commitment and communicate the government 'stake' in the issue
or effort. This includes outlining clear, consistent opportunities for continued engagement. Local
water planners may be understandably skeptical of government efforts to encourage or support
them to be 'integrative' or 'equity-focused,' particularly when project timelines are short, and
communities are already doing some of this work. This is exacerbated by what is frequently seen
as agencies 'parachuting in' with new ideas but leaving under-resourced communities without
infrastructure or support for sustaining initiatives over time. Further, with other collaborative
initiatives underway, stakeholders need a clear reason and incentives to engage.

•	UWFPs can play important roles in advancing water equity through IWRM and water reuse
planning. They can provide members with technical assistance and develop cross-cutting
resources (e.g., equity mapping tools), share funding opportunities, offer support and guidance
(e.g., endorsement letters) to help partners secure funding, and serve as a vehicle to
communicate consistent, credible messaging across the watershed. The partnership provides a
venue for reflection, strategic planning, and exchange of best practices to align and maximize
efforts underway.

•	Consider the value of 'equity mapping" as a first step in 'setting the table' among stakeholders,
supporting later developments and improvements upon watershed spatial analysis through the
use of local watershed and infrastructure data. Questions related to water equity can be initially
explored through a stakeholder assessment process that engages a discussion on the
communities that have been historically missing from water planning efforts. Preliminary water
equity mapping can be a useful springboard for early conversations about how different
communities experience water challenges and/or disparities, how to identify or measure these
disparities, how these issues might be addressed through water reuse or other integrated
planning, and what lessons can be learned from other communities regarding potential
approaches and solutions. While tools such as RPS are useful to generate broad snapshots of any
river system in the U.S., maps could become more impactful when paired with local information.

•	Equitable investments in infrastructure, including maintenance of existing infrastructure for
water resource management, should be a top priority for all public and private partners.

Specifically, in the Verde River project location, stakeholders pointed to the disparities in
maintenance of water infrastructure throughout the watershed as a significant equity concern.
Given the high number of septic tanks still being utilized throughout the basin, the replacement
or removal of the septic tanks should be a high priority. Additionally, funding and human capital

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investment could be provided to build capacity in low-income areas to initiate their own small
water projects.

•	Tribes need to be at the forefront of integrated water planning efforts, particularly when focusing
on equitable water management and engagement. The Verde River flows through four Tribal
Nations (Yavapai-Prescott, Yavapi-Apache, Fort McDowell Yavapi Nation, and Salt River Pima-
Maricopa Indian Community). When expanded to the larger scope of the mapping efforts from
this project, the Salt and Gila Rivers flow through two additional Tribal Nations: the Gila River
Indian community and the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian community. Federal and state
partners must support Tribal efforts to promote innovative, integrated water planning and
maximize water reuse in compliance with the Clean Water Act.

•	Promoting inter-agency dialogue (across federal and state agencies) and using water equity
mapping to identify "hot spots" can help prioritize multi-benefit/multi-use projects that advance
equity. Hot spots can inform areas to prioritize for funding, projects, and community
engagement. The EPA and other Federal and state agencies affiliated with the UWFP could
provide facilitation and technical support to advance equity mapping efforts in various ways:

o Continue facilitating meetings to support local efforts to layer the City's equity matrix with
existing water indicators such as those included in the EPA's RPS tool, in coordination with
local water agencies (i.e., SARA and SAWS). Help identify and fill gaps in the data.

o Support the UWFP to identify priority areas and most vulnerable communities in the city and
connect with local, trusted partners in those areas. The Partnership could find ways to
engage those priority communities and broaden representation to include their perspectives
in UWFP meetings.

o Support the UWFP in working with community partners to ground truth data, co-host various
community engagement efforts, and refine equity/watershed maps to better reflect
community lived experiences, priorities, needs, and preferences.

o Provide facilitation and strategic support to UWFP leads to identify partners who can help
fund, design, and implement community-based projects in key areas, based on local
priorities.

o Work with the UWFP to maintain a feedback loop between community, local, state, and
federal agencies through the Partnership meetings. Make space in meetings to share best
practices and provide support communicating, sharing funding opportunities, and scaling
efforts.

5B. Lessons Learned from Mapping with the Recovery Potential Screening
Tool.

The RPS tool is extremely valuable as a public repository of data for 284 social, environmental and
stressor indicators. Given this, it has great potential to supplement IWRM and efforts such as this project,
as it can help to jumpstart the visualization process to improve the understanding of social and
environmental dynamics that impact water equity within and across watersheds. The tool is also

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accessible to the public and downloadable directly from the EPA RPS website.7 Lessons learned through
this project about using the RPS tool to visualize water equity at the watershed level are outlined below.

•	RPS is a comparative tool, meaning that index scores are based on the raw data for the specific
watershed region chosen by the user. The index scores provide valuable insights into water
equity within the selected region.

•	The tool's visualization display capabilities are limited in producing clear visualizations of a given
watershed. The tool has a user-friendly map function that is useful for quickly visualizing
indicators. These maps are low resolution and cannot be used for water equity visualization.
Fortunately, RPS data and results can be readily integrated into ArcGIS to produce higher-
resolution maps that can be used effectively to convey water equity at the watershed and
subwatershed levels.

•	Combining too many indicators to generate an index can lead to a significant amount of "noise."

The RPS tool allows users to incorporate as many social, stressor and environmental indicators as
they choose. However, selecting too many indicators may obscure the relative contribution of
any indicator(s) to each HUC12 index score.

•	Data stored in RPS may not be as recent or as granular as the most recent data collected locally.

Much of the data in RPS is from 2016 to 2019, while some indicators use even older data. Local
agencies or communities may have more recent data that will better represent their communities
and watershed as a whole.

•	Using the techniques developed through the course of this project, the RPS tool could be applied

at any of the other UWFP locations. The data in RPS is easily exportable and can be used with
other software tools such as GIS to create visuals that could range in geographic scale from the
full state to a handful of HUC12 regions. The modular nature of the RPS tool allows the user to
easily select the region of interest and to identify data-driven hotspots within it. The tool,
updated in August of 2021 to include a number of EJ social indicators, provides data from
national data sources. For regions with little local data, RPS may serve as a first step toward
identifying disadvantaged areas and areas that would benefit most from IWRM.

Find state specific RPS tools at: https://www.epa.gov/rps/dowriioadabie-rps-tools-cornparirig-watersheds

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