Aquafornia

Overview

Aquafornia
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 Director Chris Bowman.

Subscribe to our weekday emails to have news delivered to your inbox at about 9 a.m. Monday through Friday except for holidays.

For breaking news, follow us on Twitter.

Check out our special news feeds devoted to:

Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, the headlines below are the original headlines used in the publication cited at the time they are posted here and do not reflect the stance of the Water Education Foundation, an impartial nonprofit that remains neutral.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Friday Top of the Scroll: California environmental group sues U.S. Forest Service over Arrowhead bottled water operation

A Southern California environmental group is suing the U.S. Forest Service for allowing bottled water company BlueTriton Brands to pipe water out of the San Bernardino National Forest. The nonprofit group Save Our Forest Assn. filed the lawsuit in federal court, arguing the Forest Service violated federal laws by allowing the company to continue piping water from boreholes and water tunnels in the San Bernardino Mountains. The environmental group said the extraction of water, which is bottled and sold as Arrowhead 100% Mountain Spring Water, has dramatically reduced the flow of Strawberry Creek and is causing significant environmental harm. 

Aquafornia news Nature Communications

New study: Storing and managing water for the environment is more efficient than mimicking natural flows

Dams and reservoirs are often needed to provide environmental water and maintain suitable water temperatures for downstream ecosystems. Here, we evaluate if water allocated to the environment, with storage to manage it, might allow environmental water to more reliably meet ecosystem objectives than a proportion of natural flow. We use a priority-based water balance operations model and a reservoir temperature model to evaluate 1) pass-through of a portion of reservoir inflow versus 2) allocating a portion of storage capacity and inflow for downstream flow and stream temperature objectives. We compare trade-offs to other senior and junior priority water demands. In many months, pass-through flows exceed the volumes needed to meet environmental demands. Storage provides the ability to manage release timing to use water efficiently for environmental benefit, with a co-benefit of increasing reservoir storage to protect cold-water at depth in the reservoir.
(The researchers are affiliated with the Public Policy Institute of California, Stanford University, University of North Carolina, University of Essex and Blue Point Conservation Science.)

Related water management articles:

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

San Diego County water rates look poised to go up — but not as steeply as feared. That could create its own problems.

Local water bills might not be going up quite as sharply next year as expected. The [San Diego] County Water Authority’s board tentatively shrank a proposed rate hike for wholesale water from 18 percent to 14 percent on Thursday — despite concerns the move could hurt the water authority’s credit rating. An increase in wholesale rates will force nearly every local water agency to pass on the extra costs to its customers, but just how much gets passed on could vary widely. Some agencies buy less wholesale water than others, especially those with groundwater basin storage or other local water supplies. The board delayed a final vote on the proposed 2025 increase to its July 25 meeting, but a coalition led by the city of San Diego had enough support Thursday to reduce the increase to 14 percent. It would be part of a three-year set of rate hikes that would cumulatively raise rates by more than 40 percent when compounded — if the board also follows through on a 16.4 percent increase in 2026 and a 5.7 percent increase in 2027.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Supreme Court decision leaves more than half of water flowing out of rivers vulnerable, study says

Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the 1972 Clean Water Act should only apply to waters that are navigable year-round, and not to ephemeral streams — waterways that are underground for much of the year, until there is significant rainfall. In doing so, the court significantly rolled back federal environmental protections that had been around for half a century. A new study seeks, for the first time, to quantify the volume of water that was affected by last year’s ruling. According to the paper, published Thursday in the journal Science, ephemeral streams are responsible for roughly 55% of all water that comes from regional river systems in the U.S. In other words, more than half of the water flowing in and out of rivers in the U.S. is no longer under the protection of federal law. This newly opened loophole in the Clean Water Act could have massive implications, the study’s authors say. Waterways are, after all, connected, and pollutants from one stream inevitably make their way downstream. … Some states, like California, have their own protections. But many do not, and have relied on federal law, which gives third parties the right to sue for polluting waterways. Much of the enforcement of the Clean Water Act is done by nonprofits like the Waterkeeper Alliance and Riverkeeper suing polluters. Now, it will be left up to the states to regulate ephemeral streams.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news The Guardian

Kids have a right to water in US schools, but does that water make the grade?

Christina Hecht remembers how water made its way into school lunch law because the process was unusually easy. Back in the mid-2000s, a researcher toured school cafeterias in California and wondered, “What are these kids to do if they want a drink of water?” said Hecht, a policy adviser at the University of California’s Nutrition Policy Institute. At the time, 40% of the state’s schools failed to offer free water in their cafeterias. That fact eventually reached the then governor and former bodybuilder Arnold Schwarzenegger, who moved to pass SB 1413 requiring schools to offer free, fresh water during mealtimes. Advocates then used California’s example to convince US senators working on 2010’s Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA) – a federal package setting nutrition standards and food funding for public schools and childcare centers – to add drinking water to that legislation, too. … Yet experts say that 14 years after the passage of the HHFKA, many schools are still falling short of its potable water requirement.

Aquafornia news The Park Record

Utah water conditions update: Nearly full reservoirs, rushing streams and a healthier Great Salt Lake

It’s officially summer, and the Utah Water Conditions Update is here from the Utah Division of Water Resources, and the headlines are positive. Reservoirs are at 92% capacity, 88% of streams are flowing at normal to above-normal and Great Salt Lake has risen 6.5 feet since its historic low in 2022. According to the report, most of Utah’s snowpack has melted. Streams and reivers and running high, fast and cold, which creates dangerous conditions. The Park Record reported earlier this week that Wasatch County Search and Rescue has been called in to the Provo River frequently in the last two weeks due to recreationists falling in the rushing river, which has picked up due to snowpack melt.

Aquafornia news U.S. Bureau of Reclamation

News release: Reclamation selects Rain Emerson as deputy area manager for South-Central California Area Office

The Bureau of Reclamation today announced the selection of Rain Emerson to assume the role of deputy area manager for the South-Central California Area Office for the California-Great Basin Region. The role will serve as a deputy to the SCCAO area manager and advise on planning, coordinating, managing and directing of program activities. The office encompasses the San Francisco Bay-Delta, San Joaquin Valley, and the south coast area including Santa Barbara and Ventura counties.

Aquafornia news Washington Post

See how this green hydrogen plant converts water into clean fuel

The tangle of pipes at this industrial plant [in Corpus Christi, Texas] doesn’t stand out in this city built around the carbon-heavy business of pumping oil and refining it into fuel for planes, ships, trucks and cars. But this plant produces fuel from a different source, one that doesn’t belch greenhouse pollution: hydrogen. Specifically, hydrogen made from water using renewable electricity, also known as green hydrogen. This process could represent the biggest change in how fuel for planes, ships, trains and trucks is made since the first internal combustion engine fired up in the 19th century. … Turning hydrogen into liquid fuel could help slash planet-warming pollution from heavy vehicles, cutting a key source of emissions that contribute to climate change. But to fulfill that promise, companies will have to build massive numbers of wind turbines and solar panels to power the energy-hungry process. Regulators will have to make sure hydrogen production doesn’t siphon green energy that could go towards cleaning up other sources of global warming gases, such as homes or factories.

Aquafornia news University of California

News release: Climate Action research grants assist Tribal nations with resource management

In 2022–23, the state of California allocated $100 million to the University of California to fund research grants supporting climate change resilience in communities across the state. Three of the California Climate Action Seed Grant-funded research projects are establishing collaborations between academic institutions and Tribal nations to support climate change resilience through tribal resource management. The projects involve investigating pinyon pine forest ecology and cultural values in the Eastern Sierra, monitoring fisheries on the North Coast, and surveying the changing landscapes of California Indian Public Domain Lands.

Aquafornia news The Press

County receives $1.5 million from state to develop Contra Costa Resilient Shoreline Plan

Contra Costa County received $1,499,285 from the California Ocean Protection Council’s Senate Bill 1 Sea Level Rise Adaptation Planning Grant Program, which aims to provide funding for coastal communities to develop plans to combat sea level rise and projects to build resilience along the entire coast of California and the San Francisco Bay, according to a press release from the state. The Contra Costa Resilient Shoreline Plan will create a comprehensive roadmap to address sea level rise across the entire 90-miles of the county’s shoreline with a focus on impacted communities. It will serve a coordinating and organizational role for local plans in alignment with Bay Conservation and Development Commission guidelines and explore natural and constructed infrastructure improvements.

Aquafornia news SF Examiner

East Palo Alto groundwater risks offer vital lessons to San Francisco

New research further magnifies the growing risk rising groundwater poses to San Francisco and other low-lying Bay Area cities. The nonprofit SPUR (the San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association) and the East Palo Alto community organization Nuestra Casa released a study earlier this week analyzing the impacts groundwater rise could have on East Palo Alto. The research centered on the Peninsula city because of its proximity to the water, making it one of the Bay Area jurisdictions most susceptible to groundwater rise. But the findings, researchers said, can be applied to all of the Bay Area’s at-risk cities, including San Francisco. Groundwater is rainwater that is stored underground in soils. It provides 50% of Americans’ drinking water and is a key resource for crop irrigation and agricultural production. But as sea levels rise due to climate change, groundwater is pushed up further towards the surface. The closer the groundwater table gets to the surface, the less capacity the soil has to absorb rain and, consequently, the more likely heavy precipitation will cause flooding, damage infrastructure and mobilize soil pollutants like pesticides and asbestos.

Aquafornia news myMotherLode.com

$42-million TUD wastewater treatment plant overhaul completed

The Tuolumne Utilities District held a ceremonial ribbon cutting marking the completion of the successful overhaul/replacement of the Sonora Regional Wastewater Treatment facility. The project commenced in October of 2021 and the updated operation, on the outskirts of Sonora, now has the ability to treat an average of two million gallons of wastewater per day. The $42-million project replaces an outdated plant built in the 1970s. The project site was strategically contained within the footprint of the existing treatment plant on Southgate Drive.

Aquafornia news U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service

News release: Exploring water solutions for a better future

Scientists at the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Southwest Climate Hub and California Climate Hub have developed a browsable map-based tool that addresses water scarcity in the U.S. Southwest. The Water Adaptation Techniques Atlas (WATA) consolidates over 200 case studies on research and practices that water managers and producers can use to find location-specific and topical information to make informed decisions regarding water management. … water scarcity has become a pressing issue with extremely hot temperatures and severe prolonged droughts in a region already challenged by its arid and semi-arid conditions. As reservoir and aquifer levels drop, information about strategies to adapt to this new reality is urgently needed. WATA provides information based on research from USDA’s Agricultural Research Service and other sources about practices for lessening the gap between water demand and available supply, with an emphasis on cropping and irrigation practices across the Southwest, including Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah.

Aquafornia news Bay Nature

The creek cleanups will continue indefinitely

It’s around 9:30am on the banks of Penitencia Creek in San Jose, and Santa Clara Valley Water is here for creek clean-up. This public agency that provides water to county residents is charged with keeping water sources clean and preventing floods. … Valley Water is getting $3 million in federal funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to ramp up the cleanups across nine of the county’s creeks, and undo other ecological damage—like fixing up human-dug caves and stairways along river banks, or removing rafts of entangled trash that are clogging salmonid streams. But with no long-term housing solution for the people living in the camps, trash and damage tends to reappear rapidly. Most camps are cleaned up on a monthly or quarterly basis. The whole operation (trash compactor, laboring crew, police escort, and all) is as expensive as it looks. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California tribe welcomes beavers back to Tule River after 100 years

A family of beavers — three adults, one subadult and three babies, known as “kits” — were released into the South Fork Tule River watershed on June 12, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said. Two other beavers were released into Miner Creek on June 17. … A decade ago, tribal leaders called for the animals to be returned, driven by traditional Indigenous knowledge about beavers’ importance to the ecosystem — and inspired by the 500-to-1,000-year-old beaver images left at the Yokuts village site known as Painted Rock. In 2022, Fish and Wildlife received state funding to start a restoration program to prepare sites in California for the semiaquatic animals. Beavers aid the environment by building dams that help to keep landscapes well-hydrated and more resilient in droughts and wildfires. That enhanced water retention could also protect the Tule River Indian Tribe’s drinking water supply — 80% of which comes from the river’s watershed, the CDFW said.

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Chaos continues to reign among Kings County water agencies following state action

It’s been two and a half months since the state brought the hammer down on water managers in Kings County for lacking an adequate plan to stem overpumping in the region and the situation is, in a word – chaotic. One groundwater sustainability agency (GSA) has imploded, leaving the county to potentially pick up the pieces. Another doesn’t have enough money in the bank to pay its newly hired manager. One GSA has repeatedly canceled meetings, others appear to be crafting their own plans and one is banking on being exempted as a “good actor,” despite the state’s repeated insistence that there will be no such exemptions in San Joaquin Valley basins now under scrutiny. Oh, and the Farm Bureau is suing the state Water Resources Control Board over its vote April 16 to put the region, the Tulare Lake subbasin, into probation – the first step toward a possible state pumping takeover. All this while a deadline is rapidly approaching July 15 for all Kings County pumpers to register their wells and begin tracking their groundwater consumption.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

California Democrats approve budget closing spending deficit. Why they still want billions from voters

… The budget battle is not over … Legislators are still working out two bond measures that will ask voters in November to allow California to borrow even more money for school facilities and climate change-related programs. Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, on Monday confirmed lawmakers will seek to extend the deadline for adding measures to the November ballot from June 27 to July 3. Lawmakers have sliced budget dollars for climate change and school facilities, an indication they’re hoping to use bond money to fill those holes. The spending plan agreement includes hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts to water storage projects, climate resilience initiatives and dam safety as well as a handful of other related reductions. … Sen. Ben Allen, D-Santa Monica, and Assemblyman Eduardo Garcia, D-Coachella, have climate bonds, both of which seek more than $15 billion for water quality and conservation, wildfire prevention, coastal preservation, clean energy projects and more. 

Related political and water infrastructure stories:

Aquafornia news The Associated Press

Water-rich Gila River tribe near Phoenix flexes its political muscles in a drying West

Stephen Roe Lewis grew up seeing stacks of legal briefs at the dinner table — often, about his tribe’s water. His father, the late Rodney Lewis, was general counsel for the Gila River Indian Community and fought for the tribe’s rights to water in the Southwest, eventually securing in 2004 the largest Native American water settlement in U.S. history. Years later, Stephen would become governor of the tribe, whose reservation is about a half-hour south of downtown Phoenix. Amid his tenure, he’s been pivotal in navigating a water crisis across the seven-state Colorado River basin caused by existential drought made worse by climate change and decades of Western states overdrawing from the river. Lewis, 56, has leveraged the Gila River tribe’s water abundance to help Arizona, making his tribe a power player in the parched region. His fingerprints are on many recent, high-stakes decisions made in the West about the future of the river that supports 40 million people, and the tribe’s influence is only growing.

Related articles: 

Aquafornia news California Department of Water Resources

Blog: Climate Readiness – Using advanced lasers and sonar to determine if Lake Oroville has lost capacity

With California experiencing extreme swings between severe drought to torrential rain, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) wanted to see if the State Water Project’s largest reservoir, Lake Oroville, had shrunk (or lost storage capacity) due to weather swings and almost six decades of service. DWR utilized the latest terrain-mapping technology to determine if there have been any changes in the lake’s volume to optimize how the reservoir is operated and ensure accuracy in estimating California’s water supply availability. … Starting with an airplane-mounted LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) laser system, DWR took advantage of the lake’s historically low water levels in 2021 to first map portions of the basin that would typically be under water during normal years. Then a boat outfitted with multibeam-sonar bathymetry instruments spent weeks in 2022 sending sonar pulses into the depths of Lake Oroville to map its underwater surface terrain. What resulted were highly detailed 3D topographic terrain models of the bottom of the lake, which DWR engineers used to calculate a new storage capacity of 3,424,753 acre-feet, approximately 3 percent less than previously estimated.

Related water technology articles:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

San Diego’s water prices face doomsday increase

Thursday [June 27] is doomsday for water prices in San Diego. That’s when the region’s water importer – the San Diego County Water Authority – debates whether to boost its prices a whopping 18 percent come Jan. 1. The price increase is massive compared to previous rate increases, and the Water Authority’s biggest customer, the city of San Diego, is pretty ticked off. … San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria directed his powerful contingent of 10 water board members to fight the increase. We won’t know how hard they’ll fight until the full 33-member board meets Thursday afternoon to vote on it. Gloria’s administration is building a water recycling project, which costs billions of dollars. Once its built, in 2035, San Diego won’t buy as much water from the Water Authority. But for now, San Diegans are saddled with the cost of building water recycling and purchasing expensive water from outside city boundaries.