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Aquafornia
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 Writer Matt Jenkins.

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Aquafornia news KLAS (Las Vegas)

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Lake Mead expected to drop nearly 33 feet by June 2028, and that’s not even the worst-case scenario

A critical year is ahead for the nation’s two largest reservoirs, with no relief after a record-low snowpack and a continuing drought. A comment posted on the Colorado River Basin’s Facebook page Wednesday morning might have said it best: “Not enough water in the Monsoons to help. There’s only 2 things that can save Mead and Powell right now: 150 percent Colorado Rockies snow pack for 5 consecutive years, or God himself.” Projections released Wednesday show Lake Mead dropping to the lowest levels seen since Hoover Dam was built in the 1930s, falling to 1,035.86 feet in November. That’s about 6½ feet lower than Lake Mead’s level today at noon — 1,042.52 feet. Lake Mead is the nation’s largest reservoir, but it’s currently at 27% capacity.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Water-saving San Diegans’ bills won’t go up as steeply as feared. Here’s why.

A court ruling is prompting San Diego to propose new water rates that eliminate discounts for conservation — requiring rate hikes for low-volume users and cheaper water for high-volume users. But the rate hikes for low-volume users are smaller than previously estimated, because plaintiffs in the court case agreed to a $40 million settlement — despite the courts awarding them $118 million. Another factor allowing the city to soften the proposed hikes: Costs for wholesale water are shrinking, thanks to the County Water Authority securing deals to sell excess supply to water agencies in Riverside County. The court ruling against the city is having a major impact across California by casting doubt on the rate structures of all water agencies that reward conservation — nearly every water agency in the state.

Related:

Aquafornia news The Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.)

Prop 45, major CEQA overhaul, commands 73% support in new poll

A ballot measure that would overhaul one of California’s most powerful and controversial environmental laws has a commanding lead less than three months before voters begin casting ballots in the statewide November election. Proposition 45, which would make substantial changes to the California Environmental Quality Act, has the support 73% of likely voters, with 24% opposed and 4% undecided, according to a poll released Wednesday evening by the Public Policy Institute of California, a nonpartisan research group in San Francisco. If approved by a majority of voters, the measure would set a 365-day limit on environmental reviews for a range of projects, including new reservoirs, desalination plants, forest thinning to reduce wildfire risk, apartments, housing subdivisions, roads, bridges, public transit, hospitals, solar farms, wind farms and battery storage facilities. 

Related:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

‘Fiscal cliff’ for drinking water fixes: Californians with bad tap water could have a longer wait

The state program that helps bring solutions for Californians with contaminated drinking water is facing a major drop in funding. At a meeting in Sacramento last week, state officials presented estimates that grant money to help communities get clean drinking water, including by drilling new wells or connecting to nearby water systems, could fall from $941 million in the current fiscal year to about $103 million in 2027-28. Both state and federal funds are going away. Some at the meeting called it a looming “fiscal cliff.”

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news UC Irvine

News release: As snowpack shrinks, Sierra Nevada mountain ponds undergo dramatic change

On a summer afternoon in the Sierra Nevada, a mountain pond can look calm and still, reflecting granite peaks and alpine sky. But beneath the surface, these small, shallow waters are anything but stable. In fact, they are among the most thermally variable aquatic ecosystems on Earth, with water temperatures sometimes swinging more than 20°C (68°F) in a single day. According to new research published in the journal Ecosphere, the force driving much of that variability begins months earlier: winter snowfall. The study found that snowpack largely determines how mountain ponds function during the summer, influencing water temperature, nutrient levels and the abundance of tiny aquatic animals that support the rest of the food web.

Related:

Aquafornia news WyoFile

As data centers flood Wyoming, water pollution fouls good faith

The contamination of a Cheyenne water system by a Meta data center underscores the worries residents have about more than two-dozen data centers that are and could be consuming Wyoming’s energy, water and landscape. Water officials announced in June that they had traced an unusual and dangerous bacterium called Cupriavidus gilardii, which can sicken people, to an industrial user first identified by the Wyoming Tribune Eagle as a contractor for a Meta data center. Pinpointing the source of contamination came months after the discovery of the bacterium in late February. … As Wyoming communities grapple with a surge of rural zoning changes to enable construction of data center computer warehouses and offices, the pollution raises questions about developers’ and tech companies’ assurances.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Arizona’s San Pedro River facing historically dry conditions

Recent monsoon rains helped boost flows in the San Pedro River, but the benefits are only temporary in the midst of a historically dry year. The river, which flows about 140 miles through southeastern Arizona, has been threatened by myriad factors including climate change and nearby groundwater pumping. In late June, an important registering station along the river registered zero flow. The Charleston gage, near Sierra Vista, showed the river as completely dry. Joanne Roberts, board president of the nonprofit Friends of the San Pedro River, said that it went dry due to a combination of factors — prolonged drought, climate change, mining and other human uses. She said the river had only gone dry one or two times in recorded history.

Other drought news around the West:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Pixley Irrigation District ‘hacking’ incident still under investigation

Investigators are still trying to determine who hacked into the controls for Pixley Irrigation District’s main turnout off of Deer Creek last month.  A gate got stuck in “manual” mode when it should have operated remotely in automatic mode.  Pixley’s water resources superintendent Kirk Masters called the incident a “hiccup” that was discovered on June 22, the first day of the district’s summer water run. Masters reported it at Pixley’s July 9 board meeting and said the problem was rectified within two hours.  Masters said in his report that he was told it was Iranian hackers, but that has not been confirmed. … This incident comes on the heels of an Iranian hacker group attempting to gain access to California Water Service’s operational systems in Bakersfield, Visalia and Chico. 

Aquafornia news SFGate

Mojave pipeline approved despite warning it will ‘drain the desert’

A decades-old plan to move 1.25 million acre-feet of groundwater out of the Mojave Desert has cleared a major federal hurdle after the Trump administration approved a 50-year permit to convert a dormant oil and natural gas pipeline into a water conduit stretching roughly 162 miles across Southern California. … The U.S. Bureau of Land Management limited its environmental review to the pipeline conversion, excluding groundwater pumping and its potential effects on the aquifer, springs and wildlife. The agency said withdrawals would occur on private property under state and local oversight and were outside its regulatory authority. That distinction lies at the heart of the latest fight over Cadiz: The BLM reviewed the pipeline crossing federal land but not the groundwater pumping needed to supply it, or the wider impacts of that pumping on the Mojave ecosystem. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news The Coast News Group (Encinitas, Calif.)

Local group continues efforts to raise Lake Hodges water

As the water level at Lake Hodges remains low, neighbors fear what could happen if a wildfire tears through their valley again, as it did nearly two decades ago — this time with a much smaller water barrier to slow the spread. Efforts continue to urge the City of San Diego, which owns Hodges Dam, to raise the lake level from 280 to 295 feet. … Four years ago, the city completed a risk assessment for Hodges Dam that found its risk score exceeded industry standards. … According to the city, the report concluded that lowering the lake to no more than 280 feet was necessary to reduce “potential life loss in the event of a dam failure.” … Paul Bernstein, whose home overlooks the lake, along with Del Dios Town Council President Kevin Kidd and Councilmember Brian Caldwell, believes the city’s analysis, which led to the lower water level, was flawed and failed to consider important upstream impacts that would result if the lake level dropped.

Aquafornia news Abridged – PBS KVIE (Sacramento, Calif.)

Golden mussels are spreading fast. Water managers may have a new way to fight back

Since invasive golden mussels arrived in California a couple of years ago, officials up and down the state have scrambled to come up with solutions to their rapid spread. For months, state and local water agencies tried things like hot water treatments and scraping of docks. … For the most part, efforts to eradicate the newly established species fell short. Instead, statewide water managers leaned on prevention and education, hoping to stem the movement of mussels between bodies of water by imposing boat hull inspections and cleaning protocols at lakes and reservoirs. Recently, though, a water district in Kern County used a copper treatment to effectively kill golden mussels that had established themselves locally. Officials said the move, which worked on full-grown mussels and ones that had not yet attached, represents a tool for water managers in the battle against the destructive species. 

Aquafornia news Western Outdoor News (San Clemente, Calif.)

The wait is over: Sacramento River salmon fishing returns after 4 years

There are a few locations where anglers congregate shoulder-to-shoulder to toss spinners in search of salmon, and for the first time since 2022, bankies will have the ability to wear out a shoulder and avoid flying hooks starting July 16 from the Carquinez Bridge east to the Woodson Bridge on the Sacramento River. … There was a season on the Mokelumne, American, and Feather Rivers in 2025, but the main river, the Sacramento, was off limits due to the extremely poor salmon returns to the upper river in 2022. This year’s returns on the Sacramento are also threatened by water releases out of Shasta Dam. In addition to the Sacramento River, inland anglers will enjoy a full season on the Feather, American and Mokelumne rivers. For the Central Valley, the general fall-run salmon fishing season will open on July 16 and close on Dec. 16.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news The Salt Lake Tribune

$1B Moab Mill Site cleanup effort expected to complete in 2029

A billion-dollar cleanup at one of Utah’s most popular recreation destinations is almost complete, and a new report hints at what might be in store. The U.S. Government Accountability Office spent a year auditing the Moab Mill Site, a Cold War-era uranium processing facility sandwiched between the Moab, the Colorado River and Arches National Park. …  The Moab Mill Site operator dumped processed rocks in an unlined tailings pond, which contaminated the surrounding groundwater with uranium and ammonia, threatening the nearby Colorado River. … As of this year, according to a report released Wednesday, the government has removed 16 million tons of tailings, loading them on rail cars at the Moab site and shipping them 30 miles away to a landfill near Crescent Junction specifically designed to house the tailings.

Aquafornia news NBC4 (Los Angeles)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Federal government helping add water to Lake Mead, SoCal water agency says

In an effort to address the historic-low water level at Lake Mead, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California Tuesday approved an agreement with the federal government to help add water to the reservoir. On Tuesday, Metropolitan’s Board of Directors approved an agreement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which will provide the agency up to $65 million to keep up to 200,000 acre-feet of its Colorado River supplies in the lake this year. … The board also approved two other agreements with the Quechan Tribe and Bard Water District, allowing the federal government to fund the addition of up to 19,000 acre-feet of conserved agricultural water to Lake Mead annually in 2027 and 2028.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

California lawmakers seek more transparency on data center water use

As artificial intelligence fuels a new wave of data center development across California, lawmakers are grappling with how to support the growing industry while protecting the state’s limited water supplies. Two bills moving through the Legislature would give state and local officials a more complete picture of data centers’ water demands. AB 2469 would require developers to disclose projected water use before local governments approve new facilities, while AB 2619 would require operators to report actual water use annually once the facilities open.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Lake Powell Chronicle (Miami, Ariz.)

The rise of tribal water power in Arizona

… Following the Bureau of Reclamation’s release of its formal Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the post-2026 operational guidelines, the state [Ariz.] is locked in a strict era of limits. Under federal fallback models analyzed in the EIS, Arizona faces structural water cuts that could gut its Central Arizona Project allocation by as much as 77 percent. Because Arizona holds the most junior water rights on the river system, it must take the brunt of the reductions first. The resulting crisis is fundamentally shifting the state’s economy, forcing a direct collision between traditional legacy industries and a booming tech sector, while engineering a historic transfer of socio-political power back to Native American tribes. 

Other Arizona water supply news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

California I-5 commuter city can’t stop megadevelopment

A massive and much-anticipated housing development tied up in litigation could potentially be back on again in a small town that borders the Central Valley and Bay Area. The question remains, however: Will there be enough water for it and the surging population nearby?  … In 2024, local water agencies adopted the Delta-Mendota Subbasin Groundwater Sustainability Plan, which included Patterson. … [T]he city of Patterson decided to single out the Keystone Ranch development and attempted to impose the cost of building a groundwater recharge facility on the development, then later denied the project wholesale on April 1, 2025. The California Department of Housing and Community Development, or HCD, found that the city’s review of the project is inconsistent with the state housing agencies.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Smart Water Magazine

California voters rank water among top priorities for next governor

A new statewide survey shows that water reliability and affordability have become a defining issue for California voters ahead of the state’s November 2026 gubernatorial election. The poll, conducted by FM3 Research for the Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA), a group representing approximately 470 public water agencies that together deliver about 90% of the water used across the state, found that 77% of likely November 2026 voters are more inclined to support a candidate who makes water a priority, a view shared across the political spectrum. Support for a water focused candidate reaches 83% among Democrats, 77% among independents and 67% among Republicans, according to the memo.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kern County extends local mussel emergency declaration

Local water districts have spent $7.3 million, and counting, trying to eradicate the rapidly spreading invasive golden mussel, according to a report delivered during the Kern County Board of Supervisors July 14 meeting. Water districts are expecting those costs to balloon to $36 million a year, according to a report by the County Administrative Office. The board approved extending its local emergency declaration by another 60 days regarding the mussels and renewed pleas for the Governor’s office to declare a statewide emergency. … San Joaquin and Sacramento counties have also declared local emergencies. The Kern County Water Agency and Friant Water Authority both also have task forces to monitor the spread of the mussels, which have been found in those agencies’ critical infrastructure.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

Potter Valley update: North Coast residents split on dams, united against Southern California

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission took its public comment period on the Potter Valley Project in Ukiah over two days in June. Comments were made in private, behind a closed door. Press was barred and recording forbidden. The transcripts of those comments were released Monday, 20 days after the first session, over 43,000 words, more than 70 speakers. … Janet Johnson drove down from Laytonville with a friend who had come to testify, and spent the evening where the public was made to spend it — in the waiting room, outside the closed door, unable to hear any of it. She was blunt about who she thought was on the other side of that door. They were “carpetbaggers scamming our water,” she told The Voice. As it turns out, according to the written testimonies, almost nobody disagreed with her. They just couldn’t agree on anything else.