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.
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Facing a future with less water, the country’s largest
agricultural water district is turning from growing nuts,
vegetables, fruit and beef to a new crop: solar power.
Westlands Water District, which supplies some of California’s
driest farmland, is making plans to convert some 200 square
miles of it — an area roughly the size of Detroit — into what
would be the largest solar installation in the world. Under
pressure, Westlands, more usually known for its ties to former
President Donald Trump and for fighting aggressively for every
extra drop of water it can get, is diversifying both
economically and politically.
On Oct. 2, about a year-and-a-half after the Pajaro River levee
failed, flood agencies broke ground on the
long-awaited Pajaro River Flood Risk Management Project. The
five-year, $599 million project sets out to protect the river
valley and its tributaries from 100-year storms, by
constructing stronger levees and working on improvements to the
area. Following the celebration, the environmental watchdog
group LandWatch commissioned a report from EcoDataLab … to
get a better sense of whether the levee improvements would
protect potential housing development within the floodplain.
The resulting Pajaro River Flood Risk Report, released earlier
in October, focuses on whether the project’s design
sufficiently accounts for future climate impacts, assessing the
area under both typical and extreme weather scenarios. The
report concludes that, with proper levee maintenance, the area
is suitable for housing development.
Through a new type of water treatment technology, officials in
Lake Elsinore have been injecting oxygen into the city’s
historic lake to treat the water and improve the local
ecosystem. In February, Lake Elsinore installed its first
Nanobubble Barge, built and operated by Moleaer Inc. The barge
injects “nanobubbles” into the lake, which helps remove
contaminants like algae toxins, pathogens and other harmful
material. After seeing improvements to the water quality, the
City Council approved the purchase of two more barges,
officials announced.
County supervisors on Tuesday approved a groundwater pumping
reduction plan for an area in Stanislaus’ West Side in hopes of
preventing intervention from the state. The Delta-Mendota
Groundwater Subbasin is considered to be critically
overdrafted, according to the California Department of Water
Resources, raising concerns about ground subsidence near the
Delta-Mendota Canal and California Aqueduct. Affected parties
in the Delta-Mendota groundwater subbasin, in west Stanislaus
and Merced counties, developed six coordinated groundwater
sustainability plans, which were deemed incomplete by the state
after a two-year review and declared inadequate after
amendments were submitted to address deficiencies in 2022.
Faced with a perceived three-strikes rule, the local agencies
decided to work with a consultant on a single plan for reduced
pumping, along with well metering and monitoring, which was
approved by Stanislaus supervisors Tuesday.
Facing a future with less water, the country’s largest
agricultural water district is turning from growing nuts,
vegetables, fruit and beef to a new crop: solar power.
Westlands Water District, which supplies some of California’s
driest farmland in the Central Valley, is making plans to
convert some 200 square miles of it — an area roughly the size
of Detroit — into what would be the largest solar installation
in the world. The move marks both an economic and political
diversification for a district usually better known for its
ties to former President Donald Trump and for fighting
aggressively for every extra drop of water it can get.
A series of USGS interactive maps have recently been published.
The maps identify locations and levels of mercury contamination
resulting from historical gold mining California’s Sierra
Nevada. … Many may not know that mercury was used by miners
during the California Gold Rush to extract gold. Using a
process called amalgamation miners would combine mercury with
gold ore to form a gold-mercury amalgam. The mercury was then
removed by heating. After the mercury had evaporated, pure gold
was left behind. However, this method had severe environmental
consequences.
The federal government plans to give Rancho Palos Verdes $42
million to finance buyouts for the homeowners hardest hit by
the ongoing landslides in the Portuguese Bend area, with the
properties eventually converted into lower-risk open
space. … The announcement of the buyout program follows
some of the first positive news in months about the landslide.
City officials reported this month that the rate of land
movement had decelerated as much as 80% in some
locations compared with the month prior, primarily due to
new, deep dewatering wells that the city installed from August
to October. The wells have pumped out millions of
gallons of groundwater that drives the area’s landslide
movement.
San Diegans across the political spectrum worry a changing of
the guard at the White House could bring major upheaval to the
federal agency on the frontlines of the Tijuana River sewage
crisis: The International Boundary and Water Commission or
IBWC. The president of the United States appoints the IBWC
leader and a post-election shake up could add uncertainty to
the already precarious state of one of San Diego’s largest
pollution problems. Treating millions of gallons of sewage
spilling from Tijuana into San Diego is just one among myriad
IBWC water management responsibilities along 1,255-miles of the
U.S.-Mexico border. … With little recourse to hold
Mexico responsible for the contamination, San Diegans
historically pinned blame on the IBWC. But since President Joe
Biden appointed Maria-Elena Giner to the top post in August of
2021, most agree she’s done a good job – despite a very low bar
– and don’t want to see her go.
The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory
for a small portion of the Lake Tahoe shoreline Tuesday
morning, warning of lake-effect snow. Up to 3 inches of snow
was expected near Emerald Bay in El Dorado County, with the
advisory in effect until 11 a.m. The weather service reported
“sections of Highway 89 between Meeks Bay and the junction with
Highway 50 are slick and hazardous.” Weather service
meteorologist Amanda Young said lake-effect snow around Lake
Tahoe is infrequent and only occurs when there is a significant
temperature difference between the lake water and the air
above. Lake-effect snow is most common in fall, when the lake
is still warm, or in midwinter when air temperatures fall to
the teens or single digits.
The two hurricanes that walloped the southeast recently—Helene
and Milton—caused extensive damage and loss of
life, with Helene becoming the second-deadliest hurricane in
the last 30 years. Although thousands of miles away, these two
hurricanes serve as reminders about flood management in
California. … California storms can be just as intense and
destructive as hurricanes. Although hurricanes are not part of
California’s natural disaster portfolio, people sometimes
forget that California has its own equivalent in atmospheric
rivers (ARs). These storms—which often carry as much water as
the Amazon River up in the atmosphere—originate in the
subtropical Pacific Ocean and deliver prodigious amounts of
rain and snow to California. Although ARs do not pack the
high-speed winds of hurricanes, their precipitation intensities
match what we’ve seen in Helene and Milton.
Residents, boaters, anglers and river lovers had their first
say on the overall relicensing application for Southern
California Edison’s power plant above Kernville and they
uniformly demanded more water be put back into the upper Kern
River. Commenters to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
urged it to reject Edison’s proposed minimum stream flows in
its draft license application and adopt a proposal by the Kern
River Boaters that uses an analysis of the Kern River done by
the California Environmental Flows Framework (CEFF) at
University of California, Davis. It’s time, commenters wrote,
for regulators to give back enough water for the Kern River to
support native cold-water trout, wash down sediment and provide
for more consistent public recreation.
Lake Powell, a vital water source in the Colorado River Basin
that serves 40 million people, has suffered from severe drought
in recent years. Though water levels have recovered from
historic lows, the lake may never be full again, and the
reasons go beyond just climate change and record temperatures.
One often-overlooked factor affecting water availability is the
extensive forest cover throughout the basin, according to Gene
Shawcroft, the Colorado River commissioner of Utah.
The Environmental Protection Agency has largely recovered from
many of the staff exits and budget cuts that occurred during
the Trump administration and, in some ways, has swiftly
rebounded. It has banned toxic pesticides, strengthened
chemical safety protections and imposed strong climate
regulations. Enforcement of pollution laws, which had plummeted
under the Trump years, is starting to climb back up. But with
next week’s election looming, the agency charged with
protecting the environment faces more uncertainty than at any
other time since its creation more than 50 years ago.
… The agency … issued the first-ever limits in
drinking water of PFAS, the “forever”
chemicals linked to cancer and other health problems that are
present in the tap water of hundreds of millions of Americans.
Chemical and manufacturing groups have sued, arguing
the E.P.A. exceeded its authority.
When you imagine a ripe, juicy peach, you might not picture it
growing in a red rock canyon. Centuries ago, however, tribes in
the Four Corners cultivated vast orchards of an heirloom
variety called the Southwest peach. … [Reagan] Wytsalucy, a
plant scientist with the Utah State University extension in San
Juan County and a member of the Navajo Nation, said this peach
was a vital part of the Indigenous diet and trade
economy for hundreds of years. Accounts from Spanish
missions describe sprawling orchards grown by Pueblo Indians as
early as the 1630s. The Southwest peach is smaller and less
sweet than what you find at the supermarket. Its flavor also
varies based on which part of the region it’s from, she said.
Some taste like melon. Others have a hint of cinnamon.
Traditionally, Navajo people would dry peaches to preserve them
for the following year, and one tree could feed a whole family.
As a Canadian company is working to restart one of Utah’s old
uranium mills, federal officials are considering new steps
toward cleaning up radioactive waste at another — showing the
continuing toll of the last surge of uranium development in the
state. … The BLM announced last week that Rio Algom
Mining has developed a proposal to increase
groundwater monitoring at the former Lisbon
Valley Uranium Mill, and the agency is inviting the public to
comment on the draft environmental impact assessment of the
plan. … As millions of tourists drive through Moab every year
to enjoy its singular redrock landscapes, they can see what
looks like a construction site on the banks of the
Colorado River. A sign identifies it as the
“Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action Project,” commonly
referred to as “UMTRA.” The site is another remnant of the
historical uranium milling and mining that has poisoned people
and places across the American Southwest.
Flocks of birds have returned to the shallow waters along
Highway 99 south of Yuba City where fields of rice grew weeks
before, a sure sign that harvest is over and winter is near.
Like most crops throughout the state, by this point in the
year, the rice fields of Montna Farms have been harvested and
stored. Testing of the farm’s medium grain rice has come back
at a typical, high quality, said Jon Munger, Montna Farms vice
president of operations. But it remains to be seen whether this
summer’s heat wave in the Sacramento Valley affected the
quality of rice planted and harvested later in the season.
CalTrout, alongside our state, federal, Tribal, and NGO
partners, launched a comprehensive monitoring program on the
river to track how fish will respond to dam removal and record
fish migration through the former dam sites, informing the
success of dam removal and long-term restoration efforts.
“It’s been over one hundred years since a wild salmon last swam
through this reach of the Klamath River” said Damon Goodman,
Mt. Shasta/Klamath Regional Director for California Trout. “I
am incredibly humbled to witness this moment and share this
news, standing on the shoulders of decades of work by our
Tribal partners, as the salmon return home. While dam removal
is complete, recovery will be a long process. This individual
represents the beginning of the next chapter of recovery for
Klamath River fish and for the communities that depend on the
watershed.”
There is no life without water — therefore access to water
might be considered a human right. However, that has not always
been the case in American water law. A new book explores of
case laws and evolving concepts in how water is governed,
encompassing topics such as climate change, tribal rights and
technologies for accessing water in areas where it is rapidly
disappearing. “Water Law: Concepts and Insights, 2nd Edition”
was co-written by Robin Kundis Craig, Robert A. Schroeder
Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Kansas;
Noah Hall of Wayne State University and Robert Adler of the
University of Utah. “We were lamenting how there were no good
water law books for students in the east. They were primarily
focused geographically on the west, so we decided to write our
own,” Craig said. “We wanted to get into how water law
intersects with common and environmental law. It’s not strictly
a case book, but we updated it, largely for human rights focus
that has been added for water.”
Pyramid Lake in northwest Nevada, just over the California
border, took on the appearance of a spooky witch’s brew several
weeks before Halloween, with striking swirls of green that were
visible from space. The colorful bands in the popular
125,000-acre lake, about 35 miles northeast of Reno within the
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe Reservation, came courtesy of
cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae. … Also on
the rise in California in recent years, cyanobacteria can
produce toxins that pose serious health risks to
people and animals — including the thousands of
recreation-goers and their pets who visit Pyramid Lake each
year.
As Northern California enters its traditionally wet season, the
city of Sacramento is reminding residents that watering rules
will be adjusted starting Friday, Nov. 1. Starting on that day
and continuing through Feb. 28, businesses and homes are
permitted to use their sprinklers just once a week and the
watering must be during the weekend. … “On average, your
landscape needs about 80% less water per week in November than
it does during the peak of summer in July,” the city writes.
“Rainfall is often sufficient to keep lawns healthy.”