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Water news you need to know

A collection of top water news from around California and the West compiled each weekday. Send any comments or article submissions to Foundation News & Publications Interim Director Doug Beeman

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Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Monday Top of the Scroll: California halves Delta water pumping to protect fish

California water managers this week cut in half the amount of water being pumped from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta at the state’s plant near Tracy, saying the main reservoir it serves is nearly full and the water is needed for fish. The reduction is required under the state’s environmental permits for pumping from the fragile Delta, because despite nearly full reservoirs and a robust snowpack, the San Joaquin River watershed had less-than-normal precipitation during the water year which began Oct. 1. … The state’s Banks Pumping Plant lifts water from the Delta to canals and reservoirs that serve San Joaquin Valley farms and Southern California cities. But environmental regulations require pumping to be reduced in the spring months of March, April and May to protect fish, including spring-run Chinook salmon, Delta smelt and longfin smelt, DWR officials said in a news release.

Other California water supply news:

Aquafornia news Border Report

Mexico to make ‘immediate’ water payment to US as Trump threatens sanctions

Hours after President Donald Trump threatened Mexico with additional tariffs over a massive water debt, that country’s president publicly vowed to make a substantial payment soon. Under a 1944 treaty, Mexico must send 1.75 million acre-feet of water to the U.S. from the Rio Grande every five years, and the United States is to pay Mexico 1.5 million acre-feet of water annually via the Colorado River out West. The current five-year cycle ends in October and Mexico, so far, has paid only 512,604 acre-feet of water to the United States — about one-third of what it owes — according to the latest IBWC data published Friday. … On Friday morning, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo said her country doesn’t have enough water to give to the United States but will make payments.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lake Mead will only receive a fraction of this year’s snowpack. Here’s why

Every year, when snow from the Rocky Mountains melts into water, it finds its way into Lake Powell, the country’s second-biggest reservoir. But with each passing season, less snowmelt becomes reservoir water that 40 million people can use to drink, plant crops or satiate their lawns. … Atmospheric demand from climate change is one piece of the puzzle, as Schumacher puts it, as to why federal projections show that runoff into Lake Powell will reach about 67 percent of a historic average this season. Other reasons include dry soils and hotter temperatures accelerating sublimation, the process where solid snow turns only into gas instead of liquid, Schumacher said. Snowpack itself above the reservoir has hovered between around 84 and 91 percent of average in this month’s readings — another poor showing that continues over two decades of Western drought.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news The Washington Post

Lead programs under threat amid layoffs and funding cuts

The entire staff of the lead poisoning office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was included in layoffs at the agency last week. And in recent weeks, state water officials have complained that funding for replacing lead pipes had been frozen or delayed. These actions have alarmed public health experts, who worry that decades of progress in eliminating a persistent and preventable threat could be jeopardized. More than 20 employees from the CDC’s Lead Poisoning Prevention and Surveillance Branch were let go as part of a sweeping staff reduction across the Department of Health and Human Services, where more than 10,000 employees were put on administrative leave. The division played a key role in addressing lead contamination in applesauce pouches and in helping communities across the country curb the threat of lead in schools.

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Study shows oxygen levels dropping in rivers, lakes and streams

Inland waters like rivers, lakes, streams and reservoirs need oxygen to survive, just like we do, but oxygen levels have dropped dramatically since 1900, researchers warn. The reason? Human behavior. That’s according to researchers of the Netherlands’ Utrecht University in their study, published Friday in the journal Science Advances. “More farming, more wastewater, more dams, and a warmer climate — they all change how our freshwater ecosystems function,” said one of the paper’s lead authors, Junjie Wang, in a written statement. Co-author Jack Middelburg, added, “We found that the main causes lay in these direct human activities. First, it turns out that nutrient input through, for example, over-fertilization, is a major driver of this acceleration. Secondly, the longer travel time of freshwater to the sea through the construction of dams and reservoirs has proven to be just as important.” The results of this oxygen depletion are already being felt around the globe, in the form of dying fish, disrupted food chains and poor water quality.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Trump’s order to expand U.S. timber production includes all of California’s national forests

California’s national forests are on the chopping block — literally — in the wake of the Trump administration’s April 5 order to immediately expand timber production in the United States. Last week, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins issued an emergency declaration that ordered the U.S. Forest Service to open up some 112.5 million acres of national forestland to logging. The announcement included a grainy map of affected forests, which did not specify forest names or the amount of impacted acreage in each. However, U.S. Department of Agriculture officials have confirmed to The Times that the order will touch all 18 of the Golden State’s national forests, which collectively span more than 20 million acres.

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Trump’s new way to kill regulations: Because I say so

President Trump this week directed 10 federal agencies — including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Energy Department and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission — to implement a novel procedure to scrap a wide array of longstanding energy and environmental regulations. He told agencies that oversee everything from gas pipelines to power plants to insert “sunset” provisions that would cause regulations to automatically expire by October 2026. If the agencies wanted to keep a rule, it could only be extended for a maximum of five years at a time. Experts say the directive faces enormous legal hurdles. But it was one of three executive orders from Mr. Trump on Wednesday in which he declared that he was pursuing new shortcuts to weaken or eliminate regulations.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Legal Planet

Brief: More state and local attention to financing can advance sustainable groundwater management

… SGMA requires local Groundwater Sustainability Agencies (GSAs) to develop groundwater sustainability plans (Plans) to chart a path for achieving sustainable groundwater management by 2040. Implementing Plans will cost money. However, generating new sources of revenue and repurposing existing ones can be complex. Without careful attention to these challenges, the revenue generation process can be protracted and vulnerable to failure–a concern that early signs of litigation and opposition to GSAs’ efforts to generate revenue suggest. Our new issue brief reports on results from a systematic analysis of attention to financing in a sample of Plans. We developed a rubric for evaluating Plans for adequacy of attention to financing considerations and applied this rubric to a sample of Plans. We also analyzed DWR’s process for reviewing Plans, including its approach to satisfying relevant statutory and regulatory requirements.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news The Center Square

Raw sewage from Mexico sickening Navy SEALs, San Diego residents

San Diego officials say Mexico is continuing to release millions of gallons per day of raw sewage into the city’s waters despite its promises to end the flow that has sickened Navy SEALs and San Diego residents. “Mexico just dumped 6 million gallons of sewage into the Tijuana River — after promising they wouldn’t,” said San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond on X today (Apr. 11). “We are at the mercy of a foreign government that continues to pollute our waters — while we get stuck with the consequences.” Desmond also said Navy SEAL training is often being shifted farther north in San Diego from Coronado, where the training typically takes place, due to the high volume of waterborne illness caused by fecal and bacterial contamination.

Other Tijuana River Valley news:

Aquafornia news KCRA (Sacramento, Calif.)

Map: California lakes with boat restrictions to stop golden mussels

Since golden mussels were recently identified in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, officials introduced new rules for boaters at some waterways in parts of Northern California and the Bay Area. … Federal and California state officials announced Monday a set of new inspection and quarantine requirements for the launch of boats at Folsom Lake and Lake Clementine. Those will take effect starting April 14. This comes after other new restrictions have been put in place at Rancho Seco Lake, Woodward Reservoir and Lake Berryessa, among other water bodies. The state maintains a list of where watercraft inspections are required for certain vessels to combat the spread of golden mussels, zebra mussels and quagga mussels. Because the list may not have the latest information, boaters are urged to contact the agency that manages the water body they plan to visit. See more in the map below.

Aquafornia news Brownstein

Blog: California water statute cannot overcome constitutional balancing—even for fish

… In a published opinion filed on April 2, 2025, California’s Court of Appeal for the Fifth Appellate District considered the interaction between the Fish and Game Code’s requirements for water to keep fish in good condition one the one hand, and the California Constitution’s mandate that water be put to reasonable and beneficial use on the other. … In Bring Back the Kern, et al. v. City of Bakersfield, a group of environmental plaintiffs sued the City, arguing operation of the weirs violated Fish and Game Code section 5937, which requires that a dam owner or operator “allow sufficient water at all times to pass over, around or through the dam, to keep in good condition any fish that may be planted or exist below the dam.” … The trial court granted the injunction. … The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that courts “must always consider reasonableness whenever [they] would direct or adjudicate a particular use of water, even when applying statues that do not expressly incorporate a reasonableness determination.” 

Aquafornia news KBAK/KBFX (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Senator Hurtado proposes bill for floodplain restoration in Central Valley

Senator Melissa Hurtado (D-Bakersfield) held a press conference announcing legislation to support floodplain restoration, enhance flood safety, and improve groundwater recharge in the counties of Kern, Kings, and Tulare. According to a release, the bill, Senate Bill 556, represents a rare example of consensus in California water policy as the farmers, environmentalists, local communities and irrigation districts are supportive the bill. Those who attended the conference include Bakersfield Mayor Karen K. Goh, Kern County Supervisor Jeff Flores, and McFarland Mayor Saul Ayon.

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

New study by three organizations could boost water supply at Lake Mendocino

A new partnership between three organizations will explore options for raising the dam at Lake Mendocino to boost the water supply supporting agriculture and recreation. State and local politicians, tribal officials and representatives from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers met Friday at Lake Mendocino to formalize a cost-sharing agreement for the Coyote Valley Dam General Investigation Study. According to the Mendocino County Inland Water and Power Commission, Lake Mendocino provides drinking water for over 650,000 people in Mendocino, Sonoma and Marin counties and plays a role in flood control. The study, led by a partnership between the commission, the Lytton Rancheria and the Corps of Engineers will assess the prospects of greater water supply and potential federal interest in reducing flood risks. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news Redheaded Blackbelt (Phillipsville, Calif.)

County approves permit for Cannibal Island restoration project

What’s described as a major restoration project in Humboldt County’s Eel River delta area will restore tidal marshes and create a new public trail. Restoration of a 795-acre area of the Eel River estuary gained permitting from the Humboldt County Planning Commission at its April 3 meeting. Under a partnership including the CalTrout non-profit conservation group and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the complex project encompasses and surrounds the estuary’s Cannibal Island area. It includes deepening 5,000 linear feet of existing dikes, replacing failed culverts that separate tidal habitat areas and re-connecting 500 acres of former marsh habitat to tidal action. Also included are construction of “inter-tidal lagoons” and a 6,000 linear-foot earthen levee with two gated culverts to shield agricultural lands from tidal intrusion. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Ashy sediment sits on L.A. beaches after fires. What you need to know

As warmer days approach, many Angelenos eager to once again spread their toes in the sand may find an unwelcome sight along the shoreline: dark, ashy sediment still sitting on beaches from the devastating January firestorm. But residents need not fear the detritus, which is composed of fine ash that swirled together with sand and washed ashore, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced. Tests performed by the L.A. Regional Water Quality Control Board found that the charred silt does not contain wildfire-related chemicals at levels considered to be dangerous to human health, the health department concluded. … Earlier this week, the public health department lifted its final wildfire-related ocean water advisory and declared that beaches in the burn area — from Las Flores State Beach to Santa Monica State Beach — are once again safe for swimming.

Other wildfire runoff news:

Aquafornia news Waterloop

Podcast: Centering people first in water policy with Radhika Fox

Radhika Fox has spent her career at the intersection of people, policy, and infrastructure. In a conversation from the Reservoir Center in Washington, D.C., the former head of EPA’s Office of Water shares how she helped lead the largest federal investment in U.S. water infrastructure, advance PFAS regulation, and expand environmental justice efforts. Radhika reflects on her path to leading federal water policy, shaped by experience at the San Francisco PUC and the US Water Alliance. She explains how EPA launched $500 million in technical assistance to help more underserved communities access federal funding. Radhika also discusses the creation of EPA’s first agency-wide PFAS strategy and the importance of holding polluters accountable. Plus, she shares what she’s working on now—from sector disruption and AI to impact investing and democracy renewal.

Aquafornia news U.S. EPA

News release: EPA meets with water systems during Water Week

Earlier this week, as part of annual Water Week, when water professionals gather to discuss priority issues impacting the industry, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Senior Advisor for Water Jessica Kramer joined a roundtable to discuss the Water Infrastructure Financing and Innovation Act (WIFIA). The WIFIA program provides borrowers with flexible, affordable financing options to support water updates in communities. It funds planning, design, and construction of water infrastructure projects and can finance a combination of projects in a single loan. … Roundtable participants included East County Advanced Water Purification Joint Powers Authority in California, which is using a WIFIA loan to help fund a water reuse project that will meet up to 30% of East San Diego County’s drinking water demand.

Aquafornia news Reuters

Friday Top of the Scroll: Trump threatens sanctions, tariffs on Mexico in water dispute

U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday threatened Mexico with sanctions and tariffs in a dispute over water sharing between the two countries, accusing Mexico of breaking an 81-year-old treaty and “stealing the water from Texas Farmers.” Under the 1944 treaty, Mexico must send 1.75 million acre-feet of water to the U.S. from the Rio Grande through a network of interconnected dams and reservoirs every five years. … The treaty also requires that the U.S. deliver 1.5 million acre-feet of water annually to Mexico from the Colorado River, an obligation that the U.S. has largely fulfilled, although recent deliveries have been reduced due to severe drought, something the 1944 accord allows for. While Mexico sends far less water to the U.S., it has struggled to fulfill its end of the bargain due to a combination of factors including droughts, poor infrastructure and growing local demand.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

The La Niña that never truly was, is over. Here’s what comes next

La Niña has fizzled out, data released Thursday shows. According to the Climate Prediction Center, temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific have returned to near-normal. And, according to a technical definition, La Niña never truly developed.  The outlook for La Niña became progressively weaker over the past half year. In October 2024, experts predicted that La Niña would emerge during the fall. After months of delay, officials announced in January that La Niña conditions had finally arrived, with below-average sea surface temperatures in the Pacific. But those temperatures didn’t hold.  The Climate Prediction Center update calls for neutral conditions — neither La Niña nor El Niño — for the coming months. That means different climate patterns, some of which are harder to anticipate than La Niña, could have outsize effects on California weather in the coming months.

Other La Niña news:

Aquafornia news The Guardian

California’s $59B agriculture industry reels under Trump’s wavering tariffs

… California is the country’s breadbasket, supplying roughly one-third of US vegetables and 75% of its fruits and nuts. But it also exports much of its produce – close to $24bn worth in 2022. This means farmers in the state could lose out significantly as China imposes retaliatory tariffs on American goods. … Already grappling with extreme weather events that have damaged or destroyed crops and water restrictions that added challenges, a spate of Trump policies – including attacks on agricultural research, a funding freeze of billions from the US Department of Agriculture, and crackdowns on migrant workers – have left farmers reeling. … But even as Trump takes grave risks with California agriculture in his attempts to rework global markets, few in the industry have been outwardly critical of his actions. Many growers are instead focusing on their confidence that the president will come through with campaign promises to make more water available for thirsty crops.