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.
Subscribe to our weekday emails to have news delivered to your inbox at about 9 a.m. Monday through Friday except for holidays.
Please Note:
Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing.
We occasionally bold words in the text to ensure the water connection is clear.
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.
… For the past couple of weeks [a] boat pushed
barges several miles each way up and down the lake, bringing
empty containers deep into the canyon and returning them to
land full of oil-covered debris and refuse. The wreckage in the
water had been flushed into the North Yuba River and stalled
about a mile downstream at the mouth of Englebright Lake in
mid-February after a ruptured pipe at New Colgate Powerhouse
sent a deluge of water and hillside into the river.
… Environmental and Yuba Water Agency workers and
contractors on Tuesday began wrapping up their efforts to
remove debris and oil captured downstream of the powerhouse,
and they expect to complete the job within days.
Nearly 70,000 salmon returned to the Klamath River and its
tributaries, according to a recently released Review of 2026
Ocean Salmon Fisheries. Published by the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (PFMC), the report says a total of 39,860
adult fall-run Chinook salmon returned to spawn in the Klamath
River and its tributaries in the fall of 2025, two years after
dam removal was completed. The salmon return was 205% of the
preseason prediction of 19,417 adults, according to the
document used to help plan West Coast commercial, Tribal and
recreational salmon fishing season alternatives every year.
The Fortuna City Council unanimously voted Monday to approve
the purchase of nearly 244 acres of undeveloped land
along the Lower Eel River — most of which will
be returned to the Wiyot Tribe. At last night’s meeting, the
council approved a purchase agreement for four parcels — 236
acres on the west side of the Eel River and 7.2 acres at
Riverwalk Drive and Alamar Way, behind Eel River Brewery — to
improve public access and preserve riparian habitat along the
Eel River. The land, owned by Troy Elbert Land and Trudy
Marilyn Ehmke, will be purchased using grant funds.
Effective water management and policy play a critical role in
shaping society’s evolving relationship with water. Yet, the
growing impacts of water-related risks worldwide show that many
responses remain ineffective, often leading to unintended
consequences that undermine stated policy objectives. These
contradictions—referred to in the literature as water
paradoxes—occur when well-intentioned efforts to manage water
backfire. This Review argues that researchers should better
characterize these paradoxes, and practitioners must integrate
them in decision-making processes and economic evaluations of
water policy.
Proposals for reopening Turlock Lake to recreation were
approved Tuesday, clearing a hurdle to start seasonal
recreation activities in summer 2027. The Stanislaus County
Board of Supervisors and the Turlock Irrigation District board
both unanimously approved a 10-year joint agreement with the
state to reopen Turlock Lake State Recreation Area. The TID
reservoir was closed to recreation six years ago when a
concessionaire departed. … The county is planning
family-friendly recreation with a waterpark, picnicking,
swimming, fishing and other day-use recreation. The activities
will include nonmotorized boating such as kayaking and
canoeing.
Lake Powell has an issue: More water is streaming out than
flowing in. As of Sunday, Lake Powell’s water
level measured 3,530 feet above sea level. Though this is
higher than it was at this time in 2022 and 2023, officials in
Utah and at the Bureau of Reclamation are worried that
water levels could dip beneath what is required to generate
hydropower. The reservoir is currently 26% full and
could drop to 16% by Sept. 30. By March 2027, Lake Powell’s
elevations could hit 3,476 feet, a record low. … To
stabilize Lake Powell’s water levels, there are two options:
increase the flow by releasing water from upper dams or
decrease the amount of water taken out.
The San Francisco Baykeeper and others sued the federal
government on Monday, accusing it of harming fish protected by
the Endangered Species Act. The Center for Biological
Diversity, Friends of the River and baykeeper claim that
pumping excessive amounts of water from the Sacramento-San
Joaquin River Delta hurts fish like the Central Valley
steelhead, North American green sturgeon and Chinook
salmon. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s operation of the
Central Valley Project affects factors like water temperature
and salinity. Those factors, along with the volume and
direction of the water, cause fish to swim into harmful
environments, the conservation groups say in their suit.
It’s now March in California, which means the wettest stretch
of the water year – December, January, and February – have come
and gone. It’s the time of year when we take stock of the
winter that was, and what that means for our water resources.
… The three biggest reservoirs – Shasta, Trinity, and
Oroville, all in Northern California – are nearly at capacity
and well above average. … Statewide, California’s
snowpack is at 62% of the March 2nd average, and 55% of April
1st average. So essentially, we’ve received half of the snow
we’d expect to get. But even that is somewhat remarkable,
considering the Sierra had its lowest snowpack on record before
the big Christmas week snowstorm.
Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:
GOP lawmakers are pushing several bills to regulate Arizona’s
groundwater, but none would do anything to conserve the state’s
water supply. Democrats and Republicans got close to passing
bipartisan legislation to conserve rural groundwater supplies
over the last few years, but a final deal has never
materialized. This year, GOP lawmakers are instead pushing a
series of partisan water bills, including one that would
protect the rights of Arizona residents and businesses to
continue pumping groundwater. GOP lawmakers’ bills generally
protect the water allocation rights of industries like
agriculture and homebuilding. Conserving groundwater often
means restricting development.
… What looks like prolonged drought may actually be something
more permanent in the Southwest, a shift toward a drier
baseline driven by rising temperatures. Even when rain and snow
return, the landscape holds less water than it once
did. Scientists have a term for this larger shift:
aridification. Unlike drought, which is defined by
below-average precipitation over months to decades,
aridification describes a long-term transformation of the
climate system itself. Warming temperatures increase
evaporation from soils, plants and snowpack, meaning the same
amount of precipitation now produces less usable water.
… Over the long term, aridification favors fast-growing,
non-native species over slow-growing natives adapted to
historic rainfall patterns. Invasive grasses fill the gaps,
increasing fire risk and reducing biodiversity.
The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee will
take up a sweeping legislative package this week aimed at
bolstering weather forecasting and warning programs. Chair Ted
Cruz (R-Texas) and ranking member Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) are
moving quickly to turn around their “Weather Research and
Forecasting Innovation Reauthorization Act,” S. 3923. They
introduced the legislation last week and will bring it to a
committee vote Wednesday. Lawmakers will also consider a
two-year NASA reauthorization, an amended version ofS. 933,
that has the support of both Cruz and Cantwell. The weather
package includes 17 bills meant to strengthen forecasting and
weather warning programs at NOAA.
State officials in California have announced the implementation
of a statewide water-saving plan meant to conserve water
resources amid worsening climate change. … The program, born
out of a successful 2025 bill by state Sen. Anna Caballero,
D-Fresno, would update California’s current water program by
using data from watersheds throughout the state to help close
gaps between water demand and supply. The push to update the
state’s water program comes from concerns that worsening
climate change is depleting the state’s already-sensitive water
supply. … According to the Department of Water
Resources, climate change could cause the state to lose up to 9
million acre-feet of water by 2040.
A new report published by Bluefield Research suggests that the
biggest risk to water infrastructure is not happening on-site
within data center facilities, but rather at electric power
plants. Titled The Water-Power Nexus: How Data Centers are
Reshaping the U.S. Water Landscape, the report explains that
surging electricity demand is shifting water risks upstream to
power generation and impacting communities that never
anticipated becoming “ground zero for AI infrastructure.”
… The report explains that indirect water consumption
linked to electricity generation is expected to nearly double
in the next five years, increasing from 54 billion gallons in
2025 to 91 billion gallons by 2030.
State regulators have reached a settlement with the Goleta West
Sanitary District for the 2024 spill that released more than 1
million gallons of raw sewage into the Goleta Slough and the
Pacific Ocean. Goleta West entered into the settlement
agreement with the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control
Board on Friday, including paying a $1.55 million civil
penalty. Investigators attributed the February 2024 spill to
external corrosion on a section of underground pipe. On Feb.
16, 2024, a broken force main owned by the Goleta West Sanitary
District released more than 1 million gallons of raw
sewage.
Beginning this month, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department will
resume seasonal operations for aquatic invasive species check
stations across Wyoming. These mandatory stations help ensure
watercraft are not bringing invasive species of mussels into
the state’s waterways. “Wyoming is one of few places in the
country that hasn’t detected invasive zebra or quagga mussels
in the water,” Game and Fish AIS Coordinator Josh Leonard said.
“Our agency is working to keep it that way, and make sure these
destructive species stay out of the state’s
waters.” Leonard said any out-of-state boater, as well as
Wyoming residents who have taken their watercraft outside the
state, need to go through the inspection checkpoints.
… In 1994, Los Angeles County’s water quality watchdog made a
troubling discovery: Beneath the Phillips 66 refinery’s Carson
site, there was a lake — of oil. … For more than a
century, after all, the refinery polluted the surrounding
groundwater and air by producing toxic chemicals. … The
regional watchdog, the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality
Control Board, ordered Phillips 66 to clean up the lake by
pumping out the toxic waste and treating contaminated water.
Those remediation efforts continue to this day. … But
there is still no estimated date, [Los Angeles Water Board
spokesperson Ailene] Voisin said, for when the cleanup effort
will be done.
The Southern Nevada Water Authority has asked a Clark County
District Court judge to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that grass
removal led to thousands of valley trees dying. You may
remember that several local residents sued the agency and
argued the SNWA’s grass removal mandates lack proper legal and
constitutional oversight. The lawsuit argues that only 10% of
trees in the Las Vegas Valley survive after grass removal and
that the policies have created a “valley-wide graveyard of
trees” that would take decades to recover. According to
court records filed last week, the SNWA states the plaintiffs
in the case were already paid to have grass removed, so they
“cannot complain about prospective nonfunctional grass
designations.”
February storms brought fresh snow to the Sierra Nevada, but
California’s snowpack remains far smaller than average during a
winter that has brought record warmth across much of the West.
California water officials said Friday that the Sierra snowpack
is at 66% of average for this time of year. … California
relies on the Sierra snowpack for about 30% of its water. But
extreme warmth across the West this winter has meant more
precipitation falling as rain, not snow — a symptom of global
warming, which in recent years has been pushing average snow
lines higher in the mountains and changing the timing of
runoff.
Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:
A simple bill on the Colorado River Authority of Utah has been
amended in a sign that negotiations are not going well. House
Bill 473, sponsored by Rep. Scott Chew, R-Jensen, started
simply by moving the Colorado River Authority of Utah from
underneath the Governor’s Office and over to the Utah
Department of Natural Resources. But language has been
added into the bill to bolster its authority to stick up for
Utah’s interests in the ongoing high-stakes negotiations over
the river that supplies water to more than 40 million
across the West. Rep. Chew told members of the Senate
Natural Resources Committee that it was done because
negotiations between the seven states along the Colorado River
have not yielded a new agreement.
… Urban water agencies that get Central Valley Project
supplies from the Sacramento and American rivers are set to
receive 100% of their contracted water. Irrigation water
service contractors — or agricultural water users — on the
Sacramento River are also getting their full contracted
amounts. Jim Peifer, executive director of the Sacramento
Regional Water Authority, said he views the allocation as a
positive sign of water supply conditions this year, with no
shortages expected for the region. Peifer, however, warned that
conditions can change from year to year.