New San Diego County Water Authority Director Joins Metropolitan Board

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THE ANGEL–(BUSINESS WIRE) – Vista Irrigation District community leader and board member Marty Miller is one of four delegates representing the San Diego County Water Authority on the board of directors of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

Miller took his place during an extraordinary board meeting last Tuesday (November 23). He replaced outgoing director Michael Hogan, who had served on Metropolitan’s 38-strong board since 2013.

Miller was elected to the VID board of directors in 2008 and represents Vista, a community in northeast San Diego County. He has twice served as chairman of the board of directors of VID and chaired the financial, public affairs, water sustainability, and Warner Ranch committees.

In 2011, Miller was appointed to the Board of Directors of the San Diego County Water Authority, where he serves as chairman of the Working Group on Administration and Finance and Labor Bargaining and a member of the Working Group on Engineering and Operations and Financial Strategy. He is a member of the agency’s Engineering and Operations Committee and previously served on the Imported Water, Legislation, Conservation and Outreach, and Water Planning committees, as well as the San Vicente Energy Task Force, the San Vicente Project Negotiations Work Group, and Small Contractor Public Relations Program and opportunities (SCOOP).

Miller has owned a commercial construction company for 45 years and moved to Vista from his Idaho home in the mid 1980s. He is a member and past president of the Vista Optimist Club and a member of the Rancho Buena Vista Little League Board. Miller has had a long coaching career that included Vista’s Little League baseball team in second place in the Little League World Series in 2005. He graduated from the College of Southern Idaho with a degree in architectural design.

The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California is a state-owned cooperative that works with its 26 cities and retail suppliers to provide water to 19 million people in six counties. The district imports water from the Colorado River and Northern California to supplement local supplies and helps its members develop water conservation, recycling, storage, and other resource management programs.

Note to Editors: Photo by Director Miller is available upon request.

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