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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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  • 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.
Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Colorado River states face last-ditch effort to agree on shortages

Negotiators for the seven states that share the shrinking Colorado River met in Salt Lake City but could not agree on a deal to split up the water, Arizona’s lead negotiator said. … Talks that ran through most of the week don’t seem to have improved the outlook for a water pact. “I didn’t see enough progress,” Arizona Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke said on Friday, Jan. 16, “or any major progress” suggesting a deal is imminent. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has invited all seven governors and their negotiators to meet in Washington in late January, Buschatzke said. … Interior officials declined to comment or confirm a date for the meeting.

Other Colorado River negotiations news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Contract for $6 billion Sites Reservoir advances amid protest, labor concerns

For decades Sacramento Valley farmers and water agencies throughout California have championed the need for another reservoir to bolster the state’s water supply. But deciding who should build it, as of late, has become more controversial, complicated by pushback from local labor unions. … Surrounded by protesters, the Sites Project Authority board and Reservoir Committee members voted [Friday] to finalize a contract with Barnard Construction Company to build dams, roads and bridges for the reservoir expected to hold 1.5 million acre feet of water for residents throughout the state.

Other dam and infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Colorado Public Radio

Winter drought continues to deepen across Colorado, threatening spring water supply

The entire state is in a snow drought, with conditions expected to deepen due to record-breaking warm winter temperatures. Colorado’s snowpack is the lowest on record for this time of year, and major river basins are running at about 50 percent to 75 percent of normal. Much of the northwestern part of the state, including Pitkin, Eagle, Grand and Summit counties are in deep drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, which forecasts the dry spell to deepen across the Western Slope in the coming weeks. … Still, the state [of Colorado] is faring better than surrounding states when it comes to winter precipitation. Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico have received only about 20-30 percent of the average snowfall by this time in January. 

Other snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news inewsource (San Diego)

A new Tijuana River sewage spill, hours after feds announce millions in aid for pollution

The same week politicians in Congress and the State House announced progress on a decades-old pollution crisis in the Tijuana River Valley, officials also announced a major new spill. The U.S. International Water and Boundary Commission notified the public Friday morning that Mexican officials reported a failure at the Insurgentes Collector wastewater system Thursday night that will cause 11.5 million gallons of sewage and chemicals to spill into the Tijuana River daily, pending repairs. … Alex Padilla said [Thursday] they had arranged nearly $3.5 million in federal aid for a dredging project to remove sediment, trash and debris from Smuggler’s Gulch to reduce pollution and flooding in local communities.

Other sewage spill news:

Aquafornia news Herald and News (Klamath Falls, Ore.)

Klamath Water Users Association calls new water framework ‘a path forward’ for Basin

In what the Klamath Water Users Association is calling “a major step toward securing the future of the entire Klamath Basin,” the Bureau of Reclamation has completed a reassessment of how the Endangered Species Act is applied to the Klamath Project. “Following bipartisan federal legislation in early 2025 and updated guidance from the Department of the Interior, this reassessment takes a detailed look at over 150 water supply contracts and analyzes where Reclamation does and does not have discretion over water deliveries under existing contracts,” the KWUA stated in a news release.

Other Klamath River Basin news:

Aquafornia news The Orange County Register (Irvine, Calif.)

As EPA ponders Clean Water Act, activists say business eclipsing environment

The long-term health of the ocean off the coast of Southern California, and the health of the region’s freshwater streams and rivers and lakes, soon could hinge on the Trump administration’s definition of a single word: ditch. The Environmental Protection Agency is in the midst of sorting out which of the “waters of the United States,” or WOTUS – the creeks, streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, wetlands, oceans, and, yes, in a few cases, ditches – should still be protected from pollution by the Clean Water Act of 1972. At least some of the proposed new rules could result in more pollution in Southern California’s vast network of paved flood control channels, which soon could be viewed by the federal government as “ephemeral ditches.” 

Other Clean Water Act news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Has a gas station near you closed? This California law may be why

… As of Jan. 1, California is mandating that underground fuel tanks have two protective shells to prevent soil or groundwater contamination. The single-walled cylinders at the Bay Farm station are considered archaic and possibly hazardous, prone to leaks like the one that recently caused a major road closure in Burlingame. … According to the State Water Resources Control Board, California has fewer than 650 single-walled tanks left in the ground. … In due time, state water board leaders assure that all of California’s underground gas supply will be doubly secured, their outer layers girded for earthquakes, extreme weather or natural deterioration.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Budget analysts tells San Diego how to help shrink county water rate hikes

Budget analysts for San Diego say city officials should demand big changes at the cash-strapped County Water Authority, including a thorough re-thinking of its entire operations and urgent action on out-of-state water sales. The recommendations come with the city facing cumulative water rate hikes of 90% over six years, and the water authority predicting it will need to increase the rates it charges the city and other local agencies 100% to 150% by 2035. Those hefty rate hikes could possibly shrink substantially if the water authority limits large capital projects, reduces operating expenses and finds a way to “right size” its water supply, according to the city’s independent budget analyst.

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Two years after historic flooding, San Diego is still trying to fix its stormwater system. Is it enough?

… Since the Jan. 22, 2024, flooding, the city’s Stormwater Department has made progress clearing its storm channels, including performing repeated maintenance on channels in Southcrest and Mountainview that were overwhelmed in 2024. But the city is restricted by a general lack of funding for stormwater maintenance. Nearly half of its channel segments and infrastructure — including in the Los Penaquitos watershed, San Diego River watershed and Tijuana River watershed — haven’t been maintained in at least 15 years, according to recent city records.

Other flood infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Sky-Hi News (Granby, Colo.)

Bennet, Neguse continue calls for review of Uinta Basin Railway project over concerns of potential for oil spills

U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet and Rep. Joe Neguse are continuing their calls for a comprehensive review of the Uinta Basin Railway, a project that would ship crude oil along the headwaters of the Colorado River. … Bennet, Neguse and environmental groups have raised concerns that the project could increase the risk of a train derailing and spilling oil into the Colorado River headwaters. … “These trains would run for over 100 miles directly alongside the headwaters of the Colorado River — a vital water supply for nearly 40 million Americans, 30 tribal nations, millions of acres of agricultural land, and a main driver of our state’s recreation and tourism industries,” the lawmakers wrote.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Coachella Valley Independent (Cathedral City, Calif.)

History: The Salton Sea has gone from massive accident, to resort destination, to pollution threat, to potential lithium bonanza

The Salton Sea, 35 miles long and between nine and 15 miles wide, is the largest lake by surface area in California. Its history is complex—and an anomaly in the natural world. Today’s Salton Sea lies 228 feet below sea level, on the site of the much-larger ancient Lake Cahuilla. Peaking at 40 feet above sea level, Lake Cahuilla encompassed much of the Imperial, Mexicali and Coachella valleys, most recently between 500 and 1,000 years ago. With evaporation and no outlet, over the years, Lake Cahuilla dried up, leaving a huge 2,000-square-mile desert sink—from the Gulf of California to the Banning Pass. A horizontal dark band from the earlier shoreline is easily spotted along the cliffs near today’s Salton Sea.

Aquafornia news Yale Climate Connections

Blog: Sea otters are California’s climate heroes 

… In sheltered estuaries like Elkhorn Slough, a coastal inlet where freshwater meets seawater just inland from Monterey Bay, researchers have found that sea otters can help keep underwater sea grass meadows and nearby marshes intact. Around a hundred otters now make their home in the slough, one of California’s last great coastal wetlands. … The connection runs through the food web: Otters eat crabs. When crab numbers drop, tiny grazers like sea slugs survive and multiply. … That keeps the meadows healthy even in estuaries loaded with pollution from fertilizers and other runoff. … When shore crab numbers explode, the crabs burrow into marsh banks and chew on plant roots. … By eating those crabs, otters slow the loss of marsh edges that protect nearby communities from flooding and storm surge.

Other wildlife news:

Aquafornia news

Aquafornia honors Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Dear Aquafornia readers,

Aquafornia is off Monday, Jan. 19, the federal holiday honoring the civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

We will return with a full slate of water news on Tuesday, Jan. 20. In the meantime, follow us on X/Twitter for breaking news and on LinkedIn for Foundation-related news.

Aquafornia news High Country News (Paonia, Colo.)

Friday Top of the Scroll: Congress passes environmental funding without Trump’s deep cuts
But the bipartisan effort still trimmed climate research and fails to solve agencies’ chronic underfunding

The U.S. Senate passed a limited spending package on Thursday that will largely fund several science- and land-related agencies, including the Department of Interior, the U.S. Forest Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, at current levels. … The biggest blow to the West, climate science and the nation’s health and safety, however, are potential cuts to the National Center for Atmospheric Research, based in Boulder, Colorado. The center, often called NCAR, creates the modeling and analysis that underpins the weather forecasting people around the world depend on for their lives and work. 

Other EPA and environmental funding news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Much of the West is having its warmest winter on record — and it’s fueling a snow drought

… A lack of snow — known as a snow drought — grips much of the West as a result of the unusually high temperatures, even as winter reaches the midway point. Snow cover was less extensive than any Jan. 14 on record across the West, according to satellite-based measurements. … In California, the snowpack is proportionally worse below 6,500 feet than atop mountain peaks. While most Sierra ski resorts are at high elevations, low-elevation snow is critical for the ecosystem and water resources because it accounts for a larger area. … Drought conditions, while much improved in California, plague a third of the West, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. The most extreme drought is concentrated in the headwaters of the Colorado River, which drains into Lake Powell and Lake Mead.

Other drought and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

One Colorado River option doesn’t require state input. And it could still crash the system.

… As Colorado River rules near expiration, the federal government published Jan. 9 a long-anticipated menu of options for how to replace them and manage the overstressed river basin going forward. … But only one of the possible management plans shows what the Bureau of Reclamation currently has the legal authority to do without approval from the seven basin states, according to the report. And the state negotiators have been at an impasse for nearly two years. That option, called the basic coordination alternative, calls for moderate water cuts in the driest years and would only work for the short term, according to the 1,600-page draft report, called an environmental impact statement, or EIS.

Other Colorado River news:

Aquafornia news California Ag Today

Proposed budget draws mixed reviews from farmers

Earlier this month, Governor Gavin Newsom released his proposed budget, and according to the California Farm Bureau, it shows strong commitment to wildfire response, climate resilience and water infrastructure, but leaves gaps for agriculture and rural communities. Farm Bureau President Shannon Douglass says farmers and ranchers are eager to help lead on wildfire prevention, but notes that funding for proactive strategies on working lands remains limited. … While she welcomes investments in flood protection, groundwater recharge and drought resilience, she says infrastructure alone will not deliver results unless projects are paired with regulatory efficiency so they can move forward.

Other California budget and water news:

Aquafornia news Westside Connect (Newman, Calif.)

Rep. Gray unveils sweeping water package aimed at boosting storage, cutting red tape for Westside communities

Representative Adam Gray (CA‑13) has introduced a sweeping federal water package designed to accelerate long‑delayed infrastructure projects, expand storage capacity and streamline permitting — a proposal that could reshape water reliability for Westside communities that have long been at the center of California’s water crisis. The End the California Water Crisis Package, unveiled last week, includes three bills: the Central Valley Water Solution Act, the WATER Act and the Build Now Act. Together, they aim to modernize California’s water system by authorizing new storage projects, improving federal coordination and imposing enforceable timelines on environmental reviews that often stall construction for years. 

Other water infrastructure news: 

Aquafornia news NBC 7 (San Diego)

$3.5M secured to address pollution in Tijuana River Valley

Rep. Juan Vargas, D-San Diego, Thursday joined Sen. Alex Padilla, D-California, in announcing they had secured nearly $3.5 million to help address pollution and trash in the Tijuana River Valley. The money was secured through the Community Project Funding process and is intended for a project to dredge the Smuggler’s Gulch area and remove waste, debris and accumulated sediment. … The decades-long process to clean the area has been exacerbated in recent years due to multiple consecutive years of beach closures in the South Bay due to elevated bacteria levels as a result of sewage and wastewater runoff.

Other wastewater news:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal (Nev.)

$500K committed for tree planting in Las Vegas heat islands

The Southern Nevada Water Authority minted a deal to put up to $500,000 toward tree planting in the Las Vegas Valley amid community concern that mandated grass removal is killing off existing canopy. … The deal comes three days after four valley residents filed a lawsuit against the agency over its ban on “useless grass,” or grass that a committee has deemed must be removed before the end of this year, when a state law passed in 2021 takes effect. In the complaint, Las Vegas arborist Norm Schilling wrote that the required removal of grass directly under trees, contributing to the disturbance of root systems, has resulted in the demise of some 100,000 trees and has caused roughly $300 million in damage across the valley.

Related articles: