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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 Sky Hi News

County commissioners sign letter of support for Colorado headwaters project

During the Grand County Board of County Commissioners meeting on Oct. 1, the commissioners approved signing a letter of support for the Bureau of Land Management’s application for funds from the Bureau of Reclamation. The BLM is seeking funds for a project that affects a half-mile of land on the Fraser River referred to as the “Fraser River Canyon site,” a 2-mile section of the Colorado River at Blue Valley Ranch southwest of Kremmling referred to as the “Confluence Recreation Area site” and nine parcels of land managed by BLM along 1.7 miles on the Colorado River near Kremmling, referred to as the “Junction Butte sites.”

Aquafornia news California Water Association

News release: California Water Association and Generac awarded $50M DOE GRIP grant to bring clean energy resilience to Calif.

The California Water Association (CWA) [Oct. 21] announced it has been selected as the beneficiary of a prestigious $50 million grant award, to reach $100 million with matching funds, from the Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships (GRIP) program under the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to accelerate electric grid resilient projects. The grant program will be implemented across CWA members’ local utility service areas in partnership with Generac Power Systems. The aim of the grant is to advance clean energy solutions across water utility infrastructure to enhance grid reliability, conserve resources, and protect air quality for communities throughout California. In collaboration with Generac, diverse union contractors, local community-based organizations (CBO,) and workforce development partners, CWA member water utilities will install clean battery storage systems at water treatment sites across the state. These microgrids will allow water utilities to utilize reliable, clean energy solutions to deliver uninterrupted water service, even during extreme heat and other stressors to the state electric grid.

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, California)

Butte County launches program to repair wells damaged by wildfires and drought

Butte County has launched a Drought Resilience Outreach Project (DROP) to assist residents with wells that have been damaged by recent wildfires or drought. The county administration said that the DROP would allow qualified residents to get their damaged wells repaired at little to no cost. Funding for this project comes from the State Water Resources Control Board. Applications for the program are being accepted throughDecember 31, 2024, with applications being reviewed in January. … For those accepted into the program, well repairs or replacement is expected to begin in April 2025.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Monday Top of the Scroll: Los Angeles investigating lead-tainted drinking water

Days after the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency visited a Los Angeles public housing project with lead-contaminated water, the agency ordered drinking water systems nationwide to replace every lead pipe within 10 years. … But in Los Angeles — where the discovery of contaminated water in public housing in Watts has shocked officials — the EPA mandate is unlikely to result in immediate change.  When [EPA Director Michael Regan] joined Mayor Karen Bass on a visit to the 700-unit Jordan Downs complex this month, he suggested the brain-damaging element could be from household plumbing — a critical risk in older homes. It’s a possibility that highlights the difficulty of eliminating the threat of lead in California drinking water. Although the new EPA rule targets lead service lines connecting homes to water mains, it doesn’t address plumbing inside the building that can still pose a risk, such as lead soldering, brass fixtures and interior mains.

Related drinking water article:

Aquafornia news The Desert Sun (Palm Springs, Calif.)

Lithium developer illegally drained wetlands near Salton Sea

The developer of the nationally lauded but controversial Hell’s Kitchen geothermal and lithium extraction project near the Salton Sea illegally drained 1,200 acres of fragile wetlands by dumping dredged fill nearby, according to a settlement agreement announced on Thursday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The work was performed on leased Imperial Irrigation District land as part of Controlled Thermal Resources’ Hells Kitchen pilot project west of Niland — on hold due to an unrelated lawsuit — which aims to produce 49.9 megawatts of steam power and 20,000 tons of lithium annually. The project is the first stage of much larger planned production of the mineral, which is used in everything from commercial solar projects to to smart phones.

Aquafornia news Insurance Business America

California launches first-ever community-based flood program

The California Department of Insurance (CDI) has announced the launch of a community-based flood program that will provide payouts if floodwaters reach a predetermined level. The initiative, which is the first of its kind in the state, is part of broader efforts to address increasing flood risks driven by climate change, according to a report from AM Best. The program is set to begin in Isleton, a small town in Sacramento County with fewer than 1,000 residents, according to US Census Bureau data. The town was selected due to its location in a 100-year floodplain, making it particularly vulnerable to flooding, according to CDI. The new flood program will function separately from existing insurance policies and is intended to supplement current coverages. In the event of a significant flood, the program will provide “relatively small” payouts to residents.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Klamath River salmon spotted far upstream in Oregon after dam removal

Less than two months after the removal of dams restored a free-flowing Klamath River, salmon have made their way upstream to begin spawning and have been spotted in Oregon for the first time in more than a century. Biologists with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that they found a single fall-run Chinook on Oct. 16 in a tributary of the Klamath River upstream of the spot where J.C. Boyle Dam was recently dismantled. State biologists in California have also been seeing salmon in creeks that had been inaccessible since dams were built decades ago and blocked fish from reaching their spawning areas.

Other fish articles:

Aquafornia news Orange County Register

Cleanup of Phillips 66 refinery sites could take years, LA water board says

The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board said Friday that “significant amounts of contamination” exist on the 650 acres that make up Phillips 66 refinery sites in Wilmington and Carson, and that it will probably take “years to clean up” the soil and groundwater. Phillips 66 announced Wednesday, Oct. 16 that it would close the refineries connected by 5 miles of pipeline by the end of 2025. The Houston-based energy giant also hired a pair of real estate firms to develop potential uses for the land. “There is a large amount of pollution in soil and groundwater at the Carson and Wilmington facilities,” a spokeswoman for the LA Water Board said via email. “However, there is ongoing soil vapor and groundwater clean-up and significant amounts of contamination are presently being removed at both facilities.” The agency, in a roundabout manner, said the site cleanup would be monitored carefully.

Related water contamination article:

Aquafornia news California WaterBlog

Lessons from the California environmental flows framework and opportunities for Chile

Managing waterways for ecosystems with minimal loss to existing water uses is increasingly difficult. As we’ve discussed in the first two blogs in this series (here and here, now with Spanish language translations), California and Chile both struggle with this challenge. Both are mostly dry regions with deep economic and human dependence on water and very disrupted and vulnerable native ecosystems. Both also face the dual challenges of droughts and floods. For the last year, an international collaboration on environmental flows between Chile’s Universidad del Desarrollo (UDD) and Universidad de Talca, and the University of California, Davis (UCD) focused on these common issues to draw lessons from California’s experience. … The project supports further investigation of a functional flows approach for Chilean watersheds, implemented through a collaborative portfolio of water management instruments. This blog summarizes the findings of the research group. 

Aquafornia news Marine Independent Journal

Marin creek protection ordinance stirs new criticism

Dissatisfaction is rising about development restrictions along San Geronimo Creek that were approved by county supervisors in 2022. The county Planning Commission is set to hear an appeal on Monday from a San Geronimo Valley property owner who has been ordered to move or demolish several accessory structures that were built without permits within a restricted area close to the creek. “This is the first test case that highlights some of the challenges with the ordinance and how we may need to work with it and make some allowances for existing developments to remain,” said Breeze Kinsey, who operates CivicNet, a planning consultancy, together with his father, former Marin County supervisor Steve Kinsey. The regulations also might have played a role in a failed effort by the Two Valleys Community Land Trust to create five affordable dwellings at 6956 Sir Francis Drake Ave. in Forest Knolls.  

Aquafornia news WaterWorld

OCWD upholds authority to manage groundwater basin

The California Court of Appeal ruled in favor of Orange County Water District’s (OCWDs) authority to manage the Orange County Groundwater Basin in the case Irvine Ranch Water District v. Orange County Water District et al. The announcement of the legal victory was made by OCWD on October 11, 2024, following the court’s decision on October 7, 2024, to uphold OCWD’s authority to manage the basin.

Related news release:

Aquafornia news Colorado Newsline

Eagle County, environmental groups file Supreme Court briefs opposing Utah oil train project

Colorado’s Eagle County and a coalition of environmental groups are urging the U.S. Supreme Court to reject what they called an attempt to “dramatically remake” federal environmental law by the backers of a controversial oil-by-rail project in eastern Utah. First proposed in 2019, the 88-mile Uinta Basin Railway would connect Utah’s largest oil field to the national rail network, allowing drillers there to ship large volumes of the basin’s “waxy” crude oil to Gulf Coast refineries — with the vast majority of the traffic routed through Colorado. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

There’s another plan for a tech utopia in California — this time in Wine Country

Months after a coalition of billionaires hit pause on its plans to build a walkable city in rural Solano County, another tech-centric group is moving forward on its dream to create their own community near Wine Country. The proposed enclave, called “Esmeralda,” would spread across 267 acres just southeast of Cloverdale in Sonoma County. Though the site is now a vast tangle of oak-studded grassland by Highway 101, industrial yards and a municipal airport, Esmeralda’s developers envision it as a future tech utopia with the look of a rustic Italian village. Their still-gestating plan provoked excitement — and suspicion — online and off.

Related development and water resource article:

Aquafornia news AgNet West Radio Network

UC ANR Project to help underserved farmers in SoCal with land ownership

San Diego County is home to more than 5,000 small farms, but fewer than 2% are owned or operated by Black, Indigenous, or people of color, according to the 2022 Agricultural Census. For many marginalized communities, historical inequities have limited access to land and farming opportunities. … Byron Nkhoma, a Zimbabwean farmer in Ramona, leases land to grow vegetables under his operation, Hukama Produce. Since starting in 2015, he has faced two ownership changes, raising concerns about the stability of his lease. … Nkhoma applies sustainable farming practices, such as drip irrigation and composting, to improve soil health. Through CALE, Hukama Produce receives technical support for conservation, grant writing, and tenure-building strategies.

Aquafornia news Berkeleyside

East Bay parks director Elizabeth Echols runs unopposed

The East Bay Regional Park District Board election won’t be on your Berkeley ballot in  November, but as incumbent Elizabeth Echols heads into her second full term as director unopposed, Berkeleyside felt it was important for you to hear directly from her. That’s why we’re publishing this candidate questionnaire…. Over the next century, projected sea level rise between 15 and 55 inches will impact the district’s 40 miles of San Francisco Bay shoreline and 15 miles of Delta shoreline, increasing erosion and destroying the wetlands that protect coastal infrastructure like levees, piers and docks, according to a district report. …  We asked Echols about what she’s accomplished since taking office in 2020, how she feels the district should improve access to parks and to spell out her top priorities for her coming term. Answers have been edited for length and clarity.

Aquafornia news The South Pasadenan

Measure SP: South Pasadena is at a crossroads

As South Pasadena prepares for the upcoming November 5 election, residents are set to vote on Measure SP, a significant local ballot measure that could reshape the town’s landscape and housing policies. The measure seeks to modify the current 45-foot building height limit in specific areas of the city, which has been in place since 1983, and allow for greater flexibility in housing development. … South Pasadena, like much of California, has faced water shortages and rising water costs during extended droughts. The addition of more housing units will increase demand on already-strained water resources, with no clear plan in Measure SP on how the city will handle this added burden. Critics argue that the measure leaves too many financial and infrastructural questions unanswered, adding uncertainty about how these developments will be managed long-term.

Aquafornia news Politico

Friday Top of the Scroll: Calif. water regulators move toward permanent salmon protections in 2 rivers

California water regulators took a step Wednesday toward requiring permanent protections for endangered salmon in two far Northern California rivers where farmers and environmentalists have long fought over water supplies. The State Water Resources Control Board voted to complete a report setting out the scientific justification for permanent in-stream flow minimums on the Scott and Shasta rivers, a prerequisite before it can establish the requirements. ”The resolution is a step that can be used to move us forward, and what has been a lot of work, long time coming,” said the water board’s chair, Joaquin Esquivel.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

A weak La Niña could bring dry conditions to parts of Southwest this winter, NOAA says

A weak La Niña is forecast to appear this winter and affect weather patterns across the country, likely bringing drier-than-average conditions in much of the Southwest and wetter-than-average conditions in the Pacific Northwest, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The outlook is uncertain, however, for much of California, where NOAA experts predict there are equal chances of below-average, average or above-average winter precipitation. “For California, there was quite a bit of uncertainty,” said Jon Gottschalck, chief of the Operational Prediction Branch at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. “Drought is not favored to develop in California at the current time, but it’s something we will be watching very closely as we go into the winter, because La Niña events do sometimes have a dry signal, especially in Southern California.”

Related weather articles:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

Denver’s Gross Reservoir expansion violates law, federal judge rules

Denver Water’s permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the ongoing expansion of Gross Reservoir violates the Clean Water Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, according to a ruling Wednesday from a U.S. District Court judge.  Senior federal judge Christine Arguello did not order Denver Water to stop construction in Boulder County, which has been underway since 2022, but said the environmental plaintiffs have a right to relief from any damage that will occur to surrounding land and forest once the dam closes and the expanded pool rises. … “It’s huge. Put that in capital letters,” said Save the Colorado founder Gary Wockner in an interview. “It’s a stunning victory for the Colorado River, for the people of Boulder County and Grand County,” Wockner said. “Boulder County, because of where this massive project was being built, and in Grand County, because their rivers were going to be further drained. And it’s a victory for the rule of law.”

Related Colorado River blog:

Aquafornia news Legal Dive

Supreme Court case could weaken Clean Water Act

A deeply polarized Supreme Court heard arguments October 16 involving San Francisco’s challenge to the EPA’s water pollution standards. Under the Clean Water Act, San Francisco must have a permit to ensure that its discharge of untreated sewage into local waterways does not hurt water quality or people’s health. The city claims, however, that the EPA’s generic prohibitions impose unclear requirements that fail to tell permit holders how to control sewage discharges. … Among the trade groups backing San Francisco are those representing companies in extraction industries, like mining and oil drilling, and others that can produce waste that needs to be discharged, like farming. Representing the Biden administration, Assistant Solicitor General Frederick Liu pushed back on that argument. “To be honest, these standards are much more specific than a general tort regime,” Liu said. He added that San Francisco’s problems were of its own making in asserting that the city had not provided information about its own sewer system to the EPA for the last 10 years despite requests from the agency.

Related articles: