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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 Director Vik Jolly

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Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: California Water Leaders application window now open for 2026; Colorado River Water Leader apps coming soon!

Are you an up-and-coming leader in the water world? The application window is now open for our 2026 California Water Leaders cohort, and submissions are due no later than Dec. 3, 2025. If interested in applying, start by checking out the program requirements and look at the frequently asked questions and mandatory dates on the application page. Colorado River leaders, stay tuned: Applications will be opening soon for the 2026 cohort of our biennial Colorado River Water Leaders program.

Aquafornia news The Guardian (U.K.)

‘The city that draws the line’: one Arizona community’s fight against a huge datacenter

A company’s opaque plan to build a huge datacenter outside Tucson, Arizona has roiled the desert city over the past few months, the latest US community to push back as tech companies aggressively seek to build out infrastructure for cloud computing and to power the AI boom. The proposed datacenter, known as Project Blue, would span 290 acres in Pima county. … But since the parcel sale agreement, the proposed center has faced stiff pushback from a community upset over the enormous amounts of water and electricity it would require, and the lack of transparency with which the developers and some in local government have pursued the project.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news California Department of Fish and Game

News release: California Fish and Game Commission — no maximum size limit adopted for striped bass; CESA evaluation coming for one of state’s rarest plants

… The [California Fish and Game] Commission adopted regulations adding invasive non-native mussels, including golden mussel, pond mussel and axe-head mussel, and green crab to the list of live animals restricted from importation, transportation and possession. As part of an emergency regulation, golden mussel was added to the list of restricted species in December 2024 after the discovery of golden mussel in California in October 2024. Golden mussel was first detected in the Port of Stockton and have since spread from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta into other California waterways that receive water from the Delta.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Union of Concerned Scientists

Blog: Ask a scientist — how do we solve California’s water shortage crisis?

California’s megadrought seems as endless as the Mojave Desert. Between killer heat and growing wildfires, the state experiences some of the harshest effects of climate change. Although California is leading in clean energy policies needed to tackle the worst impacts, water management is still a real problem. … Ángel S. Fernández-Bou, bilingual senior climate scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists, has spent part of his career studying the problems facing California’s land, including farms, farmworkers, and people. He has devised several solutions that can protect people and help them prosper. They start, he says, with listening to and respecting community and Indigenous knowledge.

Aquafornia news Sierra Nevada Ally (Reno, Nev.)

To rewild the Truckee River: The Rock-McCarran Flood Project

Danielle Henderson laughs when friends call her a water nerd, but for her, the Truckee River is more than just a job–it’s a living system she’s spent 18 years learning to protect. Henderson is the Natural Resources Manager for the Truckee River Flood Management Authority (TRFMA). For years, she has pondered a particular part of the river corridor, an area now being considered for a major flood mitigation project: The Rock-McCarran Flood Project. … In her role with TRFMA, Henderson is eager to see this project break ground, which will encompass nearly 170 acres of open space that will be revitalized, with river health and flood mitigation at the forefront.

Aquafornia news Phys.org

Map highlights US water rights systems, informs governance

A new thematic map depicting primary water rights systems across the U.S. has been developed by a collaborative team from the Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute, the National Drought Mitigation Center and the Department of Agricultural Economics, all at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. The innovative tool provides a clearer understanding of the variability of surface water and groundwater rights systems, which are crucial for effective water management and policy development by researchers, policymakers and landowners alike.

Aquafornia news KSBW (Salinas, Calif.)

San Lorenzo Valley Water District to protect infrastructure from wildfires

The San Lorenzo Valley Water District is set to begin a project on Oct. 27 to create defensible space around 37 of its water infrastructure sites, aiming to protect water systems from potential wildfire damage. This initiative comes in response to the CZU Lightning Complex Fire in 2020, which burned approximately 80% of the district’s lands and resulted in the loss of about 50% of its infrastructure. … The $170,000 project, funded through a Cal Fire grant, will prioritize protecting key sites, including water treatment plants, pump stations, wells and water intake sites.

Aquafornia news ABC7 (San Francisco)

New California bill will help San Jose curb abandoned shopping carts clogging up city waterways

A new state bill aims to improve cleanup of abandoned shopping carts. Joshua Lopez is with the South Bay Clean Creeks Coalition, a volunteer-based group that works to clear local waterways in San Jose. … Every Wednesday, the group’s volunteers work to restore certain areas off of rivers and creeks. With more than 500 cleanups this year, they’ve pulled out around 2,000 shopping carts. … “These things become like cages to the salmon as they’re coming in. And if there’s not enough water in the waterway, the fish end up getting trapped there,” Lopez said. On Tuesday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill that makes changes to the state’s laws on abandoned carts.

Aquafornia news inewsource (San Diego)

San Diego County’s Otay Water rates going up next year

Southeastern San Diego County residents can expect even pricier water bills due to higher sewer rates that their water agency approved earlier this month. Otay Water District board members unanimously approved gradually increasing sewer rates over a five-year period. Next year’s hike takes effect in January and will raise the cost of sewer service by about 4%, though increases in subsequent years could reach nearly 10%. … Otay Water officials say the new rates are necessary to cover anticipated rising costs for sewage treatment, as well as increases in payroll and construction costs.

Other water rate news:

Aquafornia news ABC10 (Sacramento, Calif.)

California Forever proposes major Suisun City expansion

The Silicon Valley-backed group, California Forever, has unveiled its latest proposal, a massive Suisun City Expansion Plan that calls for annexing more than 20,000 acres east of the current city boundaries. … The Solano County Economic Development Corporation has voiced support for the project, saying it could strengthen Suisun City’s financial future. However, groups like the Greenbelt Alliance have raised concerns. … Some of those community concerns include environmental impacts, the additional water supply needed, and the potential loss of farmland.

Aquafornia news Sustainable Conservation

News release: Sustainable Conservation names Dr. Josette Lewis as next CEO

Sustainable Conservation is pleased to announce that Dr. Josette Lewis has been selected as the organization’s next Chief Executive Officer, following a nationwide search led by the Board of Directors and executive search firm DSG|Koya. Lewis will assume leadership at the beginning of 2026. … She currently serves as Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer at the Almond Board of California, where she oversaw its water stewardship programs and spearheaded the California Pollinator Coalition, a first-of-its-kind partnership among agriculture, conservation organizations, and government agencies to protect threatened pollinator species.

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Pingree presses EPA on withheld PFAS health review

A senior House Democrat is pushing EPA for answers on a delayed report on the health effects of “forever chemicals.” Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine), ranking member on the House Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing EPA, sent a letter Thursday pressing EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin over “a growing pattern of interference with the Agency’s scientific work,” the letter reads. A ProPublica exposé published last week revealed the agency has for months delayed the release of a final toxicity report linking developmental, liver and reproductive risks to the chemical perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA).

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news Ducks Unlimited

Blog: Migration alert — optimism for duck season soars in California due to good habitat, waterfowl numbers

There are so many early arriving white-fronted geese in the Central Valley, it has scientists and waterfowl hunters perplexed. It isn’t unusual to observe whitefronts in small flocks from the Oregon border to the San Joaquin Valley’s Mendota Wildlife Area in late September and early October. What is not normal, however, are the massive flocks that are working dry fields, newly flooded wetlands, and flooded rice fields. The numbers are staggering. What triggered the early migration from the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of Alaska is anyone’s guess, but these coveted geese are migrating en masse. 

Aquafornia news Bay City News Service

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Newsom signs McNerney bill to increase use of recycled water

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Monday that aims to increase the use of recycled water throughout the state. Senate Bill 31 by Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, allows businesses, homes and government agencies to increase their use of recycled water. … The new law takes effect Jan. 1, 2026 and will allow parks to expand the use of recycled water, will reduce restrictions for using it on decorative bodies of water, will protect homeowners’ associations from having to install new plumbing systems when using recycled water and will allow food handling and processing companies to use it for toilets and urinals or for outdoor irrigation under certain conditions.

Other water policy news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California

News release: Metropolitan board appoints Shivaji Deshmukh as agency’s next general manager

Southern California water leader Shivaji Deshmukh will be the next general manager of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the nation’s largest drinking water provider, following a unanimous vote today by the agency’s board of directors. Deshmukh will become Metropolitan’s 16th general manager in its nearly 100-year history, replacing retiring general manager Deven Upadhyay. … Deshmukh comes to Metropolitan from the Inland Empire Utilities Agency, one of Metropolitan’s 26 member agencies, where he has been general manager since 2019. 

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Los Angeles records more than a month’s rain in a day

A storm that was delivering an unusual amount of rain for October had much of Southern California on edge on Tuesday as forecasters and local officials warned it could unleash the type of heavy rain that sends torrents of water and debris down steep slopes in places recently burned by wildfires. But by Tuesday afternoon, it appeared the storm had left the region relatively unscathed. … [R]ainfall had been mostly beneficial, helping to ease drought conditions in Southern California and mitigating the risk of wildfires — for now. … Snow fell in the Sierra Nevada on Monday and Tuesday and was expected to continue into early Wednesday, bringing the first measurable snow of the season.

Other weather and water supply news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kaweah subbasin to get early Christmas present with state vote to remove it from enforcement

Growers and water managers in the Kaweah groundwater subbasin were gratified to see a formal recommendation this week for the state Water Resources Control Board to move the region from enforcement back to state oversight. The Water Board will vote on the recommendation to kick the subbasin back into the arms of the Department of Water Resources at its Dec. 2 meeting. … An issue that remains difficult is that farmers in a large chunk of the Greater Kaweah Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) don’t have surface water and rely heavily on pumping. Meanwhile, surface water imported and recharged by farmers in the East and Mid-Kaweah GSAs, tends to drain toward Greater Kaweah.

Other groundwater regulation news:

Aquafornia news Mountain West News Bureau

Wired, wired West: Data center boom is sparking concerns about energy and water

… Data centers are also straining water supplies, raising questions about scarcity across the dry Mountain West – from the Colorado River and the communities it serves to the Great Basin region, in places like Reno, Nevada, where a data center park one-and-a-half times the size of the city is growing next door. U.S. data centers used 17 billion gallons of water, or enough for 150,000 homes for a year, according to a 2024 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report. That water demand is projected to double or even quadruple within the next few years, according to the federal report.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Phys.org

Scientists train AI to predict river flow across entire US to aid extreme weather and climate impact preparation

A new method for predicting how rainfall contributes to river flow across the entire US has been developed by an international team of scientists. The technique, which combines physics knowledge with advanced artificial intelligence (AI), aims to help decision-makers better prepare for extreme weather and climate impacts. … The model outperformed several traditional hydrologic approaches while also estimating the likelihood of a range of different river-flow events. … Their findings, published in the journal Water Resources Research, could enhance river flow prediction, water management, and climate resilience across the US and beyond.

Other water innovation news:

Aquafornia news Circle of Blue

Solar growth cushions Colorado River hydropower declines

… The [Colorado River] basin, on the whole, is drying. That’s frightful for the 40 million people and 5 million acres that the river supplies with water. But it’s also worrisome for electricity generation. Lakes Mead and Powell, the basin’s two largest reservoirs, are approaching critical levels in which hydropower from their dams (Hoover and Glen Canyon, respectively) would be severely curtailed or altogether cease. …  As the power of flowing water becomes less reliable, they [utilities] are turning to an energy resource that is almost always on in the Southwest during the day: the sun.

Other Colorado River Basin news: