projects on the Public Facilities and Services Plan planned facilities map does not confer <br />rights to a groundwater source. <br />12. Known and potential groundwater pollution exists in the metropolitan area. Known and <br />potential sources of groundwater pollution include septic tank wastes,, industrial, <br />commercial and residential runoff leakage from sanitary sewer pipes-, leakin 7 from <br />sanitary landfills; agricultural non-point sources s ra 'n and animal wastes • chemical <br />and petroleum spills, and natural contarninazats (arsenic), <br />13. Beneficial uses of •oundwater in the metropolitan area include domestic and municipal <br />water supplies, industrial supplies, and dornestie and commercial irrigation. The value <br />and frequency of these -uses varies anion incor orated urbanizable and nual areas, <br />]Note: findings 12 and 13 were moved from Chapter III-C Environmental Resources <br />Element <br />Policies <br />G.9 Eugene and Springfield and their respective utility branches, EWEB and SUB, shall <br />ultimately be the water service providers within the UGB. <br />G.10 Continue to take positive steps to protect groundwater supplies. The cities, county, and <br />other service providers shall manage land use and public facilities for groundwater- <br />related benefits through the implementation of the Springfield Drinking Water Protection <br />Plan and other wellhead protection plans. Management practices instituted to protect <br />groundwater shall be coordinated among the City of Springfield, City of Eugene, and <br />Lane County. <br />G.11 Ensure that water main extensions within the UGB include adequate consideration of fire <br />flows. <br />G.12 SUB, EWEB, and Rainbow Water District, the water providers that currently control a <br />water source, shall examine the need for a metropolitan-wide water master program, <br />recognizing that a metropolitan-wide system will require establishing standards, as well <br />as coordinated source and delivery systems. <br />Services to Development Within the Urban Growth Boundary: Stormwater <br />Findings <br />141 Historically, stormwater systems in Eugene and Springfield were designed primarily to <br />control floods. The 1987 re-authorization of the federal Clean Water Act required, for <br />the first time, local communities to reduce stormwater pollution within their municipal <br />storm drainage systems. These requirements applied initially to the City of Eugene and <br />subsequent amendments to the Act extended these requirements to Springfield and Lane <br />County. <br />Laurel Ridge Record (Z 15-5) III-G-6 Page 232 <br />