WELO Frequently Asked Questions
WELO FAQs
Design Phase
Before landscape construction:
- Applicant submits a signed Landscape Documentation Package along with their building permit application. This includes:
- Project Information
- Water Budget/Water Use Calculator
- Soil Management Report
- Landscape Design Plan, Plant Legend and Specifications
- Irrigation Plan
- Hydrozone Plan
- Grading Plan
- Agency staff reviews the Landscape Documentation Package and approves the permit, plan check or design review or requests revisions and resubmittal.
Post-Construction Phase
After the permit is approved and the landscape installed:
- Applicant submits a Certificate of Completion which includes:
- Project Information
- Certification that landscape is built per plans
- As-built drawings (if necessary to show major changes)
- Irrigation diagram showing hydrozones
- Irrigation scheduling parameters
- Landscape and irrigation maintenance schedule
- Irrigation audit report
- Soil report (if not submitted during design)
- Verification of implementation of report recommendations
- Agency staff:
- Reviews the Certificate of Completion and accompanying submittals.
- Conducts a site visit using the Landscape Installation Checklist. Site visits should be conducted only after the irrigation audit and repairs are complete.
- Approves or denies final submittal prior to issuing a Certificate of Occupancy (if applicable) or requests revisions and resubmittal.
Yes. WELO provides an optional prescriptive pathway to compliance for projects with less than 2,500 sf of total landscape area. In the ordinance, this is called Appendix D. However, not all jurisdictions allow applicants to use this abbreviated process. If yours does, these are the basic steps:
- Before construction, applicant submits to the local reviewing agency:
- Landscape Design Plan
- Project Information
- Prescriptive Path (Appendix D) Checklist
- Agency staff reviews the submittals and approves or requests revisions and resubmittal.
- At the final inspection, applicant submits to the property owner:
- Certificates of Completion and Installation
- Irrigation Schedule
- Schedule of Landscape and Irrigation Maintenance
- Create a dedicated agency web page that provides your agency's WELO applicability, process and submittal requirements, a copy of the State Model WELO or your agency's adopted WELO, the Reference ET for your city, the WELO Tool Kit and useful WELO Links. Much of the content can be copied from StopWaste’s WELO web page and brochure.
- Be clear about what triggers WELO in your jurisdiction - is it plan checks, design review, permits?
- Introduce applicants to WELO requirements early, such as during entitlements or conditions of approval.
- Help the applicant avoid common mistakes. For example:
- Did they use the right Reference ET for the project’s location?
- Is the ETWU smaller than the MAWA?
- Did they specify compost at 4 cubic yards/1,000 square feet of planting area (unless contraindicated by a soil test)?
- Are low and high water-use plants in different hydrozones and on different irrigation valves?
- Encourage applicants to use the ReScape Rating process to meet WELO requirements. (See next FAQ.)
- After construction, require that an irrigation audit be completed by a certified Irrigation Auditor who is not part of the construction team. This is the best method to ensure the irrigation system is functioning properly.
- Establish a procedure for collecting the data your jurisdiction must report annually to the State Department of Water Resources. If your building or planning department has project tracking software (such as Eden, Accela or Munis), add tabs or fields for the required WELO data points. Or keep a folder with a copy of each applicant’s Project Information so the data can be easily tallied for the annual DWR report.
Yes. Your agency can streamline WELO compliance by accepting ReScape Rated Landscapes documentation as an alternative to WELO documentation.
In this case, the applicant should submit the following items to the reviewing agency:
Pre-construction
- Project Information (same as for the normal WELO process); and
- ReScape Rated Landscape Project Application, which includes the Landscape Scorecard, water budget and ReScape Rater name and contact information.
Post-construction
- Final ReScape Rated Landscape Project Application
- Letter or certificate from ReScape verifying the project is approved as a Rated Landscape
- Certificate of Completion (same as for the normal WELO process)
This table shows WELO submittals that must be signed by a licensed professional.
Unlicensed individuals can only sign documentation for single-family residential projects.
*Landscape contractors can provide these drawings if work is supervised or performed by that contractor.
**The signer of the Certificate of Completion must be the designer of the project’s landscape or irrigation plan or landscape contractor.
All California cities and counties are required to report to the Department of Water Resources by January 31 each year on their WELO implementation. For details and a reporting template, visit DWR's Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance web page.
WELO is updated on a three-year cycle, consistent with the California Building Code. However, the Department of Water Resources is expected to defer the 2020 update and focus instead on implementation. The next WELO update will likely take place in 2023.
- If you are a landscape professionals or property owner: Contact your local WELO reviewing agency (typically the city or county building permit office or in some areas, the water supplier)
- If you work for a public agency in Alameda County: Email StopWaste Program Manager Jennifer West