Water Use Data Feasibility Study

USGS Water Use Data and Research Program

State water agencies interview guide

Water Use Data Feasibility Study

OMB: 1028-0118

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OMB Control # 1028-0118

Expiration Date: xx/xx/xx




US Water Use Data Sharing Feasibility Study

State and Territory Water Agencies Interview Guide


Paperwork Reduction Act Statement: This information is collected to inform the USGS about water use. A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. OMB has approved this collection of information and assigned Control No. 1028-0118.


Public Burden Statement: The public burden for the collection of information is estimated to be 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining data, and completing and reviewing the form. Direct comments regarding the burden estimate or any aspect of this collection of information may be sent to the Information Collection Clearance Officer, USGS, 12201 Sunrise Valley Dr., Mil Stop 242, Reston, VA 20192. Please do not send your form to this address.



Send invitations to study participants by email; include description of the project and team introduction. Schedule zoom or phone call and provide link.

Interview will take approximately 1 hour (45-50 minutes for semi-structured interview and 10 minutes to fill out the online survey) .


Introduction and informed consent (5 min)

  • Introduce ourselves. Provide brief overview of project and intended uses for the interview data.

  • Communicate the measures we will take to protect confidentiality and anonymity.

  • Ask permission to record the interview and take notes and ask if they have any questions.

  • Read the informed consent and get a verbal agreement.

Interview

Introductory questions (5 min) First, we would like to learn about your organization, your role, and your professional responsibilities.

  1. What is your job title and what are your main responsibilities?

  2. How long have you worked at this agency?

  3. How would you describe the mission of your organization and its main functions, especially concerning water resources?

- Interviewer: follow up if not mentioned: Would you say your organization is a state government agency or a non-governmental organization? Does your agency have any regulatory authority regarding water allocation in your State or Territory? What kind of water-related regulatory or planning functions is your agency involved in? What geographic area / jurisdiction does your agency serve?

  • Entire State/Territory

  • County or municipality

  • River basin

  • Water district

  • Irrigation district

  • Other region within a state

[Interviewer: focus on how much of this agency’s focus is on water use / water demand tasks and activities compared to other natural resource/water quality/water availability/other tasks]

Background questions about water use (15 min) Next, we have a few questions about your agency’s role in managing water use data and, more broadly, the role of water use data and information in water management.

4. How would you describe your agency’s role in the collection, compiling, management or dissemination of water use data in this State or Territory?

Interviewer: Prompt/give examples if unclear (e.g., water use data collection, management, estimation, information brokering, aggregation, reporting)

5. Does your agency rely on water use information for any of its goals or functions and if so, could you describe how the water use information is being used?

6. What can you say about comprehensiveness and quality of water use data that your agency manages or uses?

Interviewer: Prompt about water use categories: Does this apply to all types of water use or certain categories?

7. Does available water use data and their quality adequately support your agency’s goals?

Interviewer: Prompt from the answer to Q5: water resource management, sustainability/resilience planning, decision making, etc.) Follow up: If yes, could you describe how it was achieved? If not, what aspects need to be improved?

Questions about data sharing and info exchange (10 min) Next, we have several questions about exchange of water use information and data sharing between different organizations.

8. Are you familiar with any other water management and/or planning efforts in this ST that rely on or would benefit from water use data and especially site-specific water use data?

9. Does your agency have any formal or informal agreements with local, state or federal agencies to share water use data or exchange information about water use?

10. Thinking about water use data or information exchange in this State or Territory, are there any past or ongoing efforts to make water data more open, accessible and standardized?

11. Are there any water use data or information that would be considered sensitive and would have certain restrictions on how it can be shared?



Questions about collaboration and data exchange with USGS (15 min) Now, we have a few questions about your organization’s cooperation with USGS, specifically the USGS Water Science Center.

12. Could you tell me about your organization’s cooperation or collaboration with the USGS Water Science Center with regard to water-use data or information?

Interviewer: Prompt about reporting, successes, and challenges: Do you report water use data to the USGS WSC? Have there been any water or technical knowledge exchange efforts between your agency and the USGS? What aspects of data sharing or knowledge exchange worked well? What has been the most challenging?

13. Could you describe what types of site-specific water-use data, if any, your agency shares with the USGS WSC (or publicly)?

14. Are there any known or perceived risks associated with sharing site-specific water use data with agencies, such as USGS?

Interviewer: Prompt if needed to clarify about risks: You mentioned that X (from 11) water-use data/information is sensitive and thus has restrictions on how it can be shared (if at all) or there could be some concerns about data sharing. Follow up: What have your agency or your USGS partners done to reduce these risks? Are there clear policies or established procedures for sharing sensitive water use data? Do these procedures work well?

15. Could you describe some of the benefits of water use information exchange and data sharing between your agency and the USGS?

Interviewer: Prompt if has not been mentioned: How regionally or nationally integrated water data or modeling efforts may benefit your agency specifically or this State or Territory, more broadly?

16. Can you think of anything that could further enable or streamline water use data sharing and water use information exchange with USGS?

Interviewer: Prompt if unclear: this could be related to data, technical aspects, human resources). Follow up: Can you think of anything that USGS specifically could provide to help your agency with water-use data collection and sharing?

Optional question (if time allows): Thinking of the entire water system, how is water-use data used in broader assessments of basin- or state- level water budgets/management decisions/sustainability planning?


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