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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 Chris Bowman.

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Aquafornia news KRCR - Redding

Congressman LaMalfa talks Sites Reservoir as project gains $67.5 million investment

The Sites Reservoir project is getting more federal funding. Officials with the U.S. Department of the Interior announced on May 30 that the Biden-Harris Administration is investing $242 million toward projects aimed at offering clean, as well as reliable, drinking water in Western communities. From this funding, $67.5 million will be offered for the Sites Reservoir project in Colusa and Glenn counties. The initiative will add up to 1.5 million acre-feet of new water storage west of the city of Maxwell, on the Sacramento River system.

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Aquafornia news Modesto Bee

First female GM resigns at Turlock CA Irrigation District

Michelle Reimers is resigning as general manager of the Turlock Irrigation District after four years in the job. The water and power utility announced the decision, effective June 21, in a news release Friday. Reimers was its first female GM and had started there as a public information officer in 2006. “She does not have anything specific that she is moving to right away and is looking forward to exploring new ways in which she can impact the water and power industries,” said an email from Constance Anderson, communications division manager.

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Aquafornia news SJV Water

Counting groundwater: The devil is in the details

A lengthy complaint alleging secretive, self-dealing on the part of a prominent farmer and board member on a key Tulare County groundwater agency slogged through a Fair Political Practices Commission investigation over the past four years resulting in, essentially, a slap on the wrist late last month. Eric L. Borba, former chair of the Eastern Tule Groundwater Sustainability Agency, was found in violation of the state’s disclosure rules at the Commission’s April 25 meeting for not listing his ownership in several ditch companies including the value of those water assets. He was ordered to revamp his Form 700s, which public board members and executives must file each year, and pay a $5,400 fine. The Form 700s now list Borba’s ownership, through a variety of entities, in five area ditch companies. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Wildfire scorches 14,000 acres, prompting evacuations in the Central Valley

A wind-driven wildfire in San Joaquin County reached 14,168 acres by Sunday night, prompting evacuations in some areas, officials said. The Corral fire near the city of Tracy, east of San Francisco, is 50% contained, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The blaze was reported late Saturday afternoon near the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Site 300, southwest of Tracy. The Environmental Protection Agency describes Site 300 as a “high-explosives and materials testing site in support of nuclear weapons research.” The EPA said operations at the site, which began in the 1950s, “contaminated soil and groundwater with hazardous chemicals,” and long-term cleanup is ongoing.

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Aquafornia news SJV Water

Money available for wetland owners, applications closing soon

There’s a new opportunity for private wetland owners to make money from their land. The BirdReturns program pays wetland owners to flood their land and provide habitat for birds in the Central Valley. The program offers seasonal participation and is currently accepting applications for fall participation. Applications close on June 9.  The program is funded through a $15 million grant from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife which will keep the program running through 2026.  The program, “aims to fill in all the other gaps throughout the rest of the year when, in the natural cycle, there would be habitat for birds,” said Ashley Seufzer, senior project coordinator for Audubon California.  This is the second year of the fall program. In the past, there have been participating landowners in the San Joaquin Valley but the number changes every season, said Seufzer. 

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Berkeley, Albany to test parks for evidence of radioactive waste

Officials in Berkeley and Albany are moving forward with plans to test two popular bayside parks — César Chávez and the Albany Bulb — for evidence of radioactive material possibly dumped decades ago by the former Stauffer Chemical Co. plant in Richmond.  Richmond has been dealing with radioactive material and other hazardous waste left by Stauffer for decades, but Berkeley and Albany officials were warned only this year that the company may have also discarded tons of industrial waste into landfills that have since been covered over and converted to the bayshore parks. The planned testing in both cities will include uranium, thorium and the banned pesticide dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), on the advice of the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board, according to reports from both cities. 

Aquafornia news California Trout

Blog: Ghost-hunting for salmon and steelhead in Santa Cruz

Monitoring salmon and steelhead is like ghost-hunting. Despite declining population numbers, these spawning salmonids still run in the memories of communities along coastal California streams. These fish support the livelihoods of diverse people including tribes, commercial fishers, and recreational fishing businesses. Claire Buchanan, Bay Area Senior Project Manager, captured the sentiment when she said “steelhead are like ghosts” as she described how they often migrate up and down creeks undetected under the cover of darkness and murky waters after storms. In the Santa Cruz Mountains, at the southern edge of where salmon spawn along the West Coast, sightings of critically endangered coho salmon are rare and sightings of threatened steelhead are even less frequent. Conservationists are working to conjure more of these fish back into the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Aquafornia news Marin Independent Journal

Marin water utilities boost rainwater harvesting incentives

Marin County’s major water providers have raised rebates for rainwater catchment systems because of county funding. The Marin Municipal Water District and the North Marin Water District are offering customers with the systems rebates of 75 cents per gallon of water — 25 cents more than before. The offer is supported by $20,000 in funding from the Marin County Stormwater Pollution Prevention Program. The grant marks a collaboration between Marin County and the water utilities to encourage residents to save water. Collecting rainwater to use for irrigation also helps protect the area from potential flooding during storms, and prevents pollutants collected through water runoff from entering bodies of water.

Aquafornia news Milk Producers Council

Blog: Water blueprint for the San Joaquin Valley builds momentum

When the state of California began to implement and enforce the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act some nine years ago, it became clear that without change, there will not be enough sustainably available groundwater to support all of the irrigated acres that are currently in production. With that decline in agriculture, the businesses, communities and tax base that depends on those farms would be very negatively impacted as well. This reality prompted a wide variety of interests in the San Joaquin Valley to form a “coalition of the willing” that came to be known as the Water Blueprint for the San Joaquin Valley (Blueprint). The dairy industry was one of those interests. Over 90% of California milk production is located in the San Joaquin Valley, much of which is designated by the State as “critically overdrafted.” On behalf of Milk Producers Council, I have been involved with the Blueprint from the beginning. Here is an update on the progress of the Blueprint.

Aquafornia news Living on Earth

Listen: US-Mexico Water Treaty

Amid extreme drought affecting Rio Grande tributaries, Mexico is struggling to make water deliveries to Texas as required by an 80-year old treaty. Martha Pskowski is a reporter with Inside Climate News and spoke with Living on Earth’s Paloma Beltran about how the situation is linked to climate change and farmer livelihoods in both the US and Mexico.

Aquafornia news Engineering News-Record

US high court to weigh San Francisco water pollutant limits challenge

The nation’s high court has agreed to hear a water quality case next year that will examine U.S. Environmental Protection Agency authority to impose new wastewater discharge requirements on utilities that are based on conditions without specific numeric limits.  San Francisco wants the U.S. Supreme Court to review a July 2023 opinion by judges from the federal appeals court in San Francisco that affirmed agency authority to include broad language prohibiting the pollution and placing conditions on the city’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. Those conditions included requiring the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission to update its long-term control plan for managing combined-sewer overflows. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Water bill cut by 90% after L.A. family swaps grass for native plants

Looking out the front windows of their northeast L.A. home, Kyle Anido and Katie Cordeal say their front yard is barely recognizable from a year ago when it was a lawn. “It’s crazy to see how lively the garden is now,” says Anido, a 37-year-old camera operator. “There is so much bee activity.” … The couple estimates they paid around $14,900 for the transformation, including the design, labor, plants, trees and mulch. After removing 1,150-square-feet of lawn in the front yard and the parking strip, their $5,750 turf replacement rebate from the Department of Water and Power brought the total down to $9,150. Over the past year, the couple also saw their water bill decrease by 90%. “Our June/July 2022 water bill was $210.99,” says Cordeal. Their bill for June/July 2023 water was $24.28, including the extra water used to establish the 1-gallon plants.

Aquafornia news Active NorCal

College students could face disciplinary action after trashing Shasta Lake

Forest Service officials reported that it took six hours and 17 trash bags to clear the mess left by approximately 3,000 students from both UC Davis and the University of Oregon. The students are accused of littering the beaches and surrounding areas of the popular lake with cups, drink cans, pool floats, and other items, despite being asked to clean up after themselves. Deborah Carlisi, a detailed recreation staff officer for Shasta-Trinity National Forest, stated that staff had provided trash bags and requested that the students pack out whatever they brought in. “Some students used them. Some students didn’t,” Carlisi said. She noted that the worst part is the trash that has sunk to the bottom of the lake, which cannot be cleaned up until water levels drop later in the summer. 

Aquafornia news Manteca Bulletin

Opinion: Woodward’s water vision

The completion of Woodward Reservoir 114 years ago has been a godsend to South San Joaquin Irrigation District as well as the cities of Manteca, Lathrop, and Tracy. It has played a key role as an in-district safety net to help SSJID to weather droughts in much better shape than many other water purveyors in California including Tri-Dam Project partner, the Oakdale Irrigation District. The reservoir that holds 36,000 acre feet of water or enough for just over three complete districtwide irrigation runs is off stream as opposed to Tri-Dam reservoirs at Goodwin, Tulloch, Beardsley, and Donnells as well as the Bureau of Reclamation’s New Melones Reservior. New Melones  holds up to 600,000 acre feet for OID and SSJID as the result of the original Melones Reservoir built by the two districts  being inundated to build it.
-Written by Manteca Bulletin editor Dennis Wyatt.

Aquafornia news Colorado Sun

Friday Top of the Scroll: Winter snowpack recedes earlier than usual in southern Colorado

Southwestern Colorado is left with 6% of its peak snowpack earlier than usual this season in part because of a rare, sudden and large melt in late April.  Snow that gathers in Colorado’s mountains is a key water source for the state, and a fast, early spring runoff can mean less water for farmers, ranchers, ecosystems and others in late summer. While the snow in northern Colorado is just starting to melt, southern river basins saw their largest, early snowpack drop-off this season, compared to historical data. For Ken Curtis, the only reason irrigators in Dolores and Montezuma counties haven’t been short on water for their farms and ranches is because the area’s reservoir, McPhee Reservoir, had water supplies left over from the above-average year in 2023. “Because of the carryover, the impacts aren’t quite that crazy bad,” said Curtis, general manager of the Dolores Water Conservancy District. 

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Aquafornia news Modesto Bee

Modesto supplier gets few takers for excess river water

Above-average storms have allowed the Modesto Irrigation District to offer Tuolumne River water to nearby farmers who normally tap wells. It is getting few takers. The program is designed to boost the stressed aquifer generally east of Waterford, just outside MID boundaries. The district board on Tuesday debated whether to drop the price to spur interest, but a majority voted to leave it unchanged. The discussion came amid a state mandate to make groundwater use sustainable by about 2040. MID does not have a major problem within its territory, which stretches west to the San Joaquin River. But it is part of a regional effort to comply with the 2014 law. This includes out-of-district sales of Tuolumne water in years when MID’s own farmers have plenty. That was the case in 2023, one of the wettest years on record, and this year thanks to storage in Don Pedro Reservoir.

Related groundwater article: 

Aquafornia news SF Gate

Troubled California lake turns so green it’s visible from space

California’s Clear Lake has been taken over by so much algae that its emerald waters are now visible from space, photos show. The satellite images, taken by NASA in mid-May, indicate that the eutrophic lake may be infested with blue-green algae, or cyanobacteria — single-celled organisms that can become potent enough to poison humans and animals, according to the United States Geological Survey. County officials wrote that, overall, algae is integral to the freshwater lake’s health and aquatic ecosystem. More than 130 different types of species have been identified thus far, but three problematic blue-green algal species have been known to bloom there in the spring and late summertime. These harmful species can cause skin irritation, along with gastrointestinal and neurological symptoms, officials said.

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Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: July Headwaters Tour filling up quickly; save the dates for Water Summit, NorCal Tour in the fall

As we head into summer, don’t miss your chance to explore the statewide impact of forest health on water resources on our Headwaters Tour July 24-25! We’ll venture with experts into the foothills and mountains of the Sierra Nevada to examine water issues that happen upstream but have dramatic impacts on water supply and quality downstream and throughout California on our 

Save the dates for:

  • Northern California Tour, October 16-18: Explore the Sacramento River and its tributaries through a scenic landscape while learning about the issues associated with a key source for the state’s water supply. Registration opens June 12!
  • Water Summit, October 30: Attend the Water Education Foundation’s premier annual event hosted in Sacramento with leading policymakers and experts addressing critical water issues in California and across the West. More details coming soon! 
Aquafornia news Maven's Notebook

Are farm fields a hidden source of microplastics?

…  the fields that grow our food are filthy with plastic waste — the direct result of modern farming’s increasing reliance on the signature material of the Anthropocene. Whether incidentally littered onsite or directly diffused into the soil via polymer-coated chemical pellets, plastic is now embedded both in agricultural practices and the tilled earth itself. It leaks into waterways, might be poisoning our food, and is virtually unregulated.  Nobody knows what to do about it. “Now we have it, and it’s the devil … it’s a global menace,” says Tom Willey, a retired certified organic farmer in the San Joaquin Valley who reluctantly used plastic sheet “mulch” for about 20 years ago on his farm near Madera. … From Modesto to Manteca, from Davis to Petaluma, and throughout the Delta and North Bay regions, plastic sheeting for hoop-style greenhouses and groundcovers are seen in fields beside public roads and waterways, sometimes strewn in windblown rags and tatters, waiting for disposal.

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Aquafornia news CBS - Los Angeles

Lake Casitas reaches full capacity again for the first time in 25 years

After more than two decades, Lake Casitas, a vital water source for the Ojai Valley and parts of Ventura County, has reached full capacity, to the delight of California residents who lived through the drought.  Phone lines were buzzing Thursday at Casitas Boat Rentals as the news spread that the lake is currently at its fullest since 1998. “It’s a really good feeling to know California is healing from all the drought we’ve had,” says Kim Sanford of Ventura. … Just two years ago, during the worst of the drought, the lake level dropped to below 30 percent capacity. However, two rainy winters have completely transformed the situation. The Casitas Municipal Water District emphasizes that despite the lake holding roughly a 20-year supply of water, conservation remains a top priority.

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