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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 News & Publications Director Chris Bowman.

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Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, 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 KSL News Radio

Rainfall in August nearly double Utah’s average

Utah saw well-above-normal levels of rainfall in August, helping state water levels after a dry summer.  Nearly double the amount of normal rainfall fell in Utah’s mountains and valleys last month according to data from the National Water and Climate Center. That water helped maintain reservoir levels at 77% capacity statewide.  Jordan Clayton, the Utah Snow Survey supervisor, said the summer started out dry, but August turned things around. According to Clayton, rainfall has kept the soil wet and helped with reservoir water preservation. Reservoir levels are expected to decrease slightly through September, and then increase again when the colder months arrive.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Sun

Customers sue a water district, amid drought and surging demand

Nearly two years ago, officials with the Pine-Strawberry Water Improvement District seemed on the verge of finding a solution to their water woes.  Located between Phoenix and Flagstaff, the water infrastructure of these two rural unincorporated communities of roughly 3,000 in Gila County was failing. … It spent millions fixing leaky pipes and failing wells. But if the community was to grow, it needed a new, more reliable source of water. In Pine-Strawberry, the community, like many rural areas around the country, is entirely reliant on groundwater, and the easiest solution would be to drill a new deep well. A hydrologist identified multiple locations they could choose from, but the district’s board members determined they were too expensive and would be too difficult to build on. Instead, the water district bought a house in a subdivision and in the summer of 2023 and began digging a new deep well. Then its customers sued the district. 

Aquafornia news KPBS

Listen: San Diego farmers tackle climate change challenges

San Diego County is home to more than 214,000 acres of agricultural land. Avocados, lemons, oranges and a variety of vegetables are grown in the county. This week, during NPR’s Climate Solutions Week, we look at how San Diego County farmers are adapting to climate change with local growers Daniel and Paula Coxe, who grow avocados in Fallbrook, along with Amy Quandt, a San Diego State University professor who has surveyed farmers on the subject.

Related agriculture news:

Aquafornia news FishBio

Blog: The downstream dash: Insights into green sturgeon migration strategies

… Recently, the transitional journey from freshwater to brackish environments was studied in juvenile green sturgeon using acoustic telemetry. Tracking sturgeon movement in the Sacramento River allowed the researchers to better understand what might be influencing the migration of these mysterious fish (Poytress, Polansky, & Gruber, 2024). The data gathered by this study improves understanding of the habitat transitions and migration patterns of juvenile green sturgeon, information that is vital for developing management strategies to best support the recovery of this threatened fish species.

Aquafornia news Lake County Record-Bee

Lake County residents have been angry with Yolo County’s rights to the water in Clear Lake for many years

As we move into the fall months a number of people are curious about how far down Yolo County can draw the lake. The lake level is currently at 3.6 feet on the Rumsey Gauge. Clear Lake historically reaches its lowest level during the months of October and November. Yolo County can take the lake level down to a plus-1 foot on the Rumsey Gauge. … Since Yolo County could draw an unlimited amount of water from Indian Valley Reservoir, it didn’t need as much water from Clear Lake. Of course, that doesn’t tell the whole story. Evaporation takes about three feet off the lake annually and if the weather is hotter than normal, it can be even more. Adding to the water draw is that homes around the lake can legally take an unlimited amount of water from the lake for their lawns and gardens. 

Aquafornia news California Water Impact Network

News release: Proposed Central Valley Project Operations Plan: Time to undo Trump’s damage and put ratepayers, tribes, communities, and the environment first

A Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation on the continued operation of the federal Central Valley Project (CVP) favors corporate agricultural profits over the interests of ratepayers, tribes, and the environment and pointedly ignores state groundwater law. The CVP is a massive federal system of reservoirs, aqueducts and pumping stations that delivers water from the Trinity River in Northwest California and Central Valley rivers to San Joaquin Valley agricultural operations and some California cities. The CVP is operated in coordination with its state analogue, the State Water Project (SWP). The CVP and SWP annually provide a small number of corporate farmers a volume of water equal to the total water usage of California’s 40 million residents.

Aquafornia news Phys.org

Study: Managing aquatic plants: Why doing nothing is also an option

Aquatic plants in lakes and rivers are important refuges for animals, bring oxygen into the water and remove nutrients. However, they are not universally popular: some people find them a nuisance when swimming or doing water sports, and they also change the hydrology of aquatic systems. When aquatic plants grow in large numbers, they are often removed. Researchers involving the Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) have conducted field experiments in six freshwater ecosystems in five countries to investigate why such mass developments occur and what the consequences of removing them are. The evaluation of different management approaches showed that the “do nothing” option can also be considered when dealing with aquatic plants.

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: The California towns where safe drinking water is out of reach

In a major milestone, state regulators announced in July that nearly a million more Californians now have safe drinking water than five years ago.  But across the state, the problem remains severe: More than 735,000 people are still served by the nearly 400 water systems that fail to meet state requirements for safe and reliable drinking water. Latino farm communities struggling with poverty and pollution are especially hard-hit.  About three-quarters of the failing systems in California have violated state or federal standards for contaminants that are linked to serious health problems, such as cancer and effects on developing babies, according to a CalMatters analysis of state data. Among the most pervasive contaminants are arsenic, nitrate and a chemical called 1,2,3-trichloropropane, or 1,2,3-TCP. Combined, elevated levels of these chemicals contaminate more than 220 failing systems serving nearly half a million people.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

State budget cuts having ‘profound’ impact on water agencies from state to local levels

The impacts from California’s financial problems are starting to be revealed as some water agencies are implementing serious cutbacks.  During its August board meeting, staff at the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board announced they are trimming the operations budget by 5% because of state budget cuts.  Meanwhile, San Joaquin Valley groundwater managers are wary, expecting far less grant funding for projects. California is in the throes of a $68 billion budget deficit largely because of declining revenue from 2022-2023. While the state will pull from reserves for spending, that is not a sustainable solution and spending cuts are necessary. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California nears ‘30×30′ conservation goal

Four years after unveiling an ambitious plan to conserve 30% of California’s lands and coastal waters by 2030, state officials on Monday announced that they are closing in on that target. … California also made progress toward the goal through its first-ever ancestral land return effort, which provided $100 million in grant funding for the return of roughly 38,950 acres to Indigenous communities. Among the recipients were the Hoopa Valley Tribe, which received funding to help reacquire about 10,300 acres of their lands in the Klamath River watershed that were formerly being managed by a timber trust. … Additionally, the state’s effort to transform more than half of its 100 million acres into multi-benefit landscapes that can absorb carbon and combat climate change will help reach the 30×30 goal, officials said. Those targets, known as nature-based solutions, include millions of acres that will be managed to reduce wildfire risk, protect water supplies and enhance biodiversity, among other outcomes.

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Mass fish die off in the suddenly dry Kern River prompts state investigation

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is looking into the mass fish die off in the Kern River after the City of Bakersfield cut flows on Tuesday in order to do weir maintenance. “CDFW takes all instances of fish mortality seriously and is investigating what has occurred on the Kern and how it may relate to the authorizations that the City has from CDFW for work on the Kern,” wrote Julie Vance, regional manager of the agency’s central region, in an email. She provided SJV Water with a copy of a permit obtained by Bakersfield in February this year to replace the weir at Coffee Road and noted “…we are unclear at this time if the river drying is related to this project or some other work.” That project is separate from maintenance and sediment removal projects at Bellevue Weir across from the Park at River Walk on Stockdale Highway.

Aquafornia news KUER

Utah has a $276M bet on farms to save Colorado River water. How’s it going?

South-central Utah is not your typical farm country. To the eye, there appears to be more red rock than green fields. To make a go of it, farms often huddle around the precious few rivers that snake across the sun-baked landscape. That’s the case for rancher Andy Rice, who raises hundreds of hungry goats and sheep in the Garfield County town of Boulder — population 227 — just outside Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. There’s no mistaking how dry it is. The area averages less than 12 inches of annual precipitation. … This ranch draws water from Boulder Creek that would otherwise be on its way to Lake Powell. Between drought and competition for the Colorado River, however, Rice knows that Utah’s water supply faces a precarious future. That means ranches like his will need to find ways to cut their water use to survive. … That’s why Rice applied for funding from Utah’s Agricultural Water Optimization Program — a big money push to help farmers and ranchers modernize their irrigation.

Other Colorado River stories:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

7 takeaways from the seemingly endless fire season

… The Line fire and others feed on a “whiplash” between very wet conditions and extremely hot conditions. “It’s arguably the worst climate sequence for the wildfire in Southern California,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles. For the past two years, wet conditions have caused vegetative growth that quickly dried out during the coastal heat wave that began last week. Fire intensity and behavior is a function of how much fuel is available to burn, so a rapid loss in moisture can create a feast for wildfires. The phenomenon is so new, Dr. Swain said, science could require a new term to articulate. That’s because climate change makes it increasingly likely there will be back-to-back seasons like these of extreme rain, followed by extreme heat, that could worsen fire conditions.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Modesto Bee

Six GOP congressmen ask why parts of Valley have water cutbacks in time of relative plenty

A congressional panel wants to know why water is short in parts of the San Joaquin Valley despite above-average reservoir storage this year. Six Republican lawmakers, and zero Democrats, took part in Friday’s hearing of the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries. It happened in a conference room at the Hotel Mission de Oro in tiny Santa Nella, Merced County. The members criticized fish protections that reduce pumping from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to as far south as Kern County. They also urged new and enlarged reservoirs to store more water from wet years for use in dry ones.

Related article:

Aquafornia news NPR

Climate change could change the way you shop for wine

… In the face of climate change, wineries around the world are innovating. New technology is being installed to keep the grapes cool during heat spells. A handful of wineries are going a step further. They’re experimenting with new grapes, ripping out high-value cabernet vines to plant varieties from hotter climates. The goal is to find heat-tolerant grapes that blend well with cabernet, potentially making up for the flavors that cabernet could lack when temperatures get even hotter. While many bottles labeled cabernet are already blended with other grapes in small amounts, winemakers may need more flexibility in the future. ”We know we have to adapt,” says Avery Heelan, a winemaker at Larkmead Vineyards in Calistoga, Calif. “We can’t just pretend that it’s going to go away, because all we see is each year it’s getting more and more extreme.”

Aquafornia news The Hill

Southern California representatives call for federal state of emergency amid transboundary pollution crisis

U.S. House representatives from Southern California on Monday called for a federal state of emergency declaration, with hopes of bringing urgent relief to a region coping with toxic, transboundary air pollution. Democratic Reps. Juan Vargas, Sara Jacobs, Mike Levin and Scott Peters pressed for urgent action “in light of new findings that alarming levels of noxious gas are emanating from the Tijuana River” in a letter sent Monday to President Biden and California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). … The representatives were referring to an unrelenting crisis impacting the city of Imperial Beach and its neighbors, which have for years been the cross-border recipients of wastewater laced with chemicals and pathogens. This unfettered flow, which results from insufficient treatment in Mexico, ends up in California via ocean plumes and the Tijuana River Watershed.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune

Positive results from Clean Up The Lake’s recent pilot study: a promising outlook for reservoir health

In a recent update that’s good news for local water bodies, Clean Up The Lake (CUTL), in collaboration with The Martis Fund, has wrapped up a pilot research project with encouraging results. The study, which took place from June 26 to July 3, involved underwater surveys and cleanups in Stampede and Boca Reservoirs. The results show very low levels of litter and no troubling infestations of aquatic invasive species (AIS). During the pilot project, CUTL’s volunteer dive team carried out eight survey dives, assessing 1.76 miles of underwater terrain. The team removed a total of just 20.57 pounds of litter, which consisted of 100 individual items. The results indicate minimal litter accumulation despite potential collection zones influenced by dams, human activity, and wind patterns. The only AIS observed were the signal crayfish, known locally as ‘crawdads,’ with no significant concerns regarding other invasive species commonly seen in the region.

Aquafornia news Construction Briefing

Can California’s $20B water construction curb a climate change catastrophe?

Historically, most of Californians’ drinking water has come from the mountains; a complex series of water utility infrastructure including dams, levees, intakes, and outflows routes melted snowpack through the water system to homes, businesses and farms. But California officials said climate change has exacerbated the already fragile water conveyance system, and the existing infrastructure has been delivering less water than prior years. As a result, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) and its State Water Project (SWP), are planning a colossal conveyance infrastructure project at a value of more than $20 billion. The scheme, dubbed the Delta Conveyance Project (DCP), will add new and upgrade existing water transmission facilities and install 45 mi- (72km-) worth of concrete tunnels through a regional river delta in between the state capitol of Sacramento and the City of San Francisco. 

Aquafornia news Monterey Herald

Board to vote on final environmental assessment for Carmel Lagoon Project

The Monterey County Board of Supervisors will vote at their Tuesday meeting on moving forward with the next steps of the Carmel Lagoon Project which aims to help prevent flooding in the area. The supervisors will be tasked with approving the final Environmental Impact Report for the project Tuesday, which includes constructing a wall and adding extra protective measures to safeguard the beach. The recommendation also includes seeking funding for the design, construction and ongoing maintenance for the project and continuing to work with other county departments to implement a home elevation project for houses within the floodplains. The controversial project has been met with pushback from homeowners who don’t want views obstructed and financial challenges, as the project in total is likely to cost millions. 

Aquafornia news American Rivers

Blog: The Klamath Dam removals: A story of people and possibility

… We live in a world where we are experiencing seemingly insurmountable crises that threaten our way of life every day: human-caused climate change, biodiversity loss, and racial injustice. While we know people are causing these crises, it feels harder to believe that people can similarly act to solve these crises. The solutions feel too big and too complicated to achieve given the deep differences we perceive in one another.  But if there’s one thing I’ve learned in my time working in the Klamath, it’s that no matter what my preconception of others have been, we all share a core of humanity. When we come together and name the feelings and values we share, rather than categorizing our differences, we can accomplish amazing feats.