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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 FOX13 (Salt Lake City, Utah)

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Cox, other governors summoned to DC for Colorado River talks

Governor Spencer Cox said he and his fellow governors of states along the Colorado River have been summoned to Washington D.C. to try to negotiate an agreement. ”I will be going back to D.C., I think towards the end of next week; all the governors are going to be getting together with the Department of Interior to have a discussion there,” Gov. Cox said. … FOX 13 News reached out to the governors offices in several states to see if they intended to participate in the talks. Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon’s office confirmed he would attend. So did Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo’s office. … Utah’s governor also expressed support for an idea to pay California to build more desalination plants along the Pacific Coast in exchange for Colorado River water shares upstream.

Other Colorado River news:

Aquafornia news KQED (San Francisco)

After king tides swamp Marin, San Rafael weighs billion-dollar defenses against the Bay

… Climate scientists have long warned that when storms ride on top of high tides, bayside Marin County will flood and cause chaos, especially in low-lying areas like San Rafael. … Flooding experts predict that the changing climate will turn today’s king tides into the everyday tides of the future. They want Marin County to learn from the recent disaster and to install better pumps, engineer new seawalls and even pilot out-of-the-box ideas like floating homes. … The city’s flatlands are shaped like a bowl, protected by makeshift levees — some constructed with plywood, cement or asphalt — and pumps that are already struggling.

Other flood infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Outside Magazine

A $10 billion data center is slated for Horseshoe Bend

Developers in Arizona are planning to build a $10 billion data center next to Horseshoe Bend, an iconic viewpoint along the Colorado River. The 500-acre parcel, located a mile from Horseshoe Bend, was previously protected for outdoor recreation. … A petition to stop the data center’s construction has already netted over 1,800 signatures as of this publication. The document cites concerns over water consumption and contamination, pollution, and an “unsightly blight that will detract from the scenic beauty.” … These servers generate immense heat, and keeping them cool requires a large amount of water, the bipartisan think tank Environmental and Energy Study Institute writes.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Nevada Current

Warm temperatures hamper snowpack formation in Nevada

Snowpack in Nevada is off to a grim start as high temperatures have prevented snow packs from forming, despite high precipitation. Snowpack in Nevada and the Eastern Sierra – a major source of water for the Truckee River in northern Nevada – are below normal at 74% of median for the time of year. While precipitation in December was well above normal, warmer than normal temperatures mean that has not translated to robust snowpacks throughout much of the state. … The decrease in snowpack across Nevada was largely a result of above normal temperatures melting snowpack away, according to Nevada State Climatologist Baker Perry.

Other snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

World enters the era of global ‘water bankruptcy,’ UN scientists warn

Dozens of the world’s major rivers are so heavily tapped, they often run dry before reaching the sea. More than half of all large lakes are shrinking, and most of the world’s major underground sources are declining irreversibly as agricultural pumping drains water that took centuries or even thousands of years to accumulate. In a report this week, U.N. scientists warn that the world has entered a new era of “global water bankruptcy.” … The report points to the Colorado River and its depleted reservoirs, on which California and other western states depend, as symbols of over-promised water. … These problems are compounded by climate change, which is upending the water cycle and bringing more severe droughts and floods.

Other drought news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Water agency cross connections create conflict for Kings County supervisor

… Adding groundwater sustainability agencies (GSAs) under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) has only multiplied the many cross connected lines, in some cases creating conflicts. Joe Neves, who serves as a Kings County Supervisor, as well as a director on both the Mid-Kings River and South Fork Kings GSAs decided that was his case and announced Jan. 15 he was offloading his position on the Mid-Kings board. Serving on both boards was “incompatible,” Neves said at South Fork’s Jan. 15 meeting. His resignation came after Neves voted to approve a letter from South Fork opposing Mid-Kings’ draft pumping allocation policy, though he had approved the policy as a member of Mid-Kings’ board.

Other groundwater news around the West:

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

California invests $10 million to restore salmon and steelhead habitats

In a significant move to bolster California’s salmon population, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) has allocated over $10 million in grants to 16 projects aimed at restoring, enhancing and protecting salmon and steelhead habitats across the state. … Among the funded projects, the Upper Klamath River Design and Planning Project was awarded $739,196 to the Mid Klamath Watershed Council. The project will develop a 100% level fisheries restoration design on 7 miles of Beaver Creek. … The FRGP is now accepting concept proposals for the 2026 grant solicitation. 

Other habitat preservation news:

Aquafornia news ABC10 (San Diego)

Smuggler’s Gulch cleanup underway as trash piles up near Tijuana River Estuary

We’ve been following the ongoing pollution crisis in the Tijuana River Valley, and today, we’re zeroing in on a spot that’s drawing a lot of attention: Trash piled up in Smuggler’s Gulch, just feet from where stormwater flows straight into the estuary. … During heavy rain, the creek bed turns into a roaring river. When that happens, trash gets swept downstream and straight into the Tijuana River Estuary and, eventually, the ocean. … This part of the Tijuana River Valley is a complex network of streams and creeks all feeding into the estuary. County officials say trash booms can only do so much, especially when flooding moves fast and carries heavy debris.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Lake County News (Lakeport, Calif.)

County officials offer sewage spill area residents well testing and repair updates 

Close to 100 community members impacted by a massive sewage spill in the northern part of the city of Clearlake attended a town hall on Wednesday evening to hear the latest about efforts to test wells and help residents try to get back to normal. Wednesday marked 10 days since a 16-inch force main operated by the Lake County Sanitation District ruptured in the area of Robin Lane in Clearlake, spilling an estimated 2.9 million gallons during the 38-hour period of time in which repairs were underway. … [Environmental Health Department Director Craig Wetherbee] said monitoring will be long-term — for years — but the response itself won’t last that long. If there is more rain, he said it could cause more contamination, with the bacteria mobilized in the soil.

Other wastewater news:

Aquafornia news Coyote Gulch

Blog: The tale of two sumps — the Salton Sea and Ciénega de Santa Clara

Most of you have heard that California’s Salton Sea would not currently exist were it not for the nearly 1 million acre feet of agricultural runoff that’s drained into it every year. … Meanwhile 132 miles south in Sonora another body of water has formed from American-made runoff, and it’s also a paradox. Ciénega de Santa Clara is technically a brackish water wetland consisting of marshlands and lagoons, and its classification as “anthropogenic” stems from the fact that it was inadvertently created by, and entirely sustained by human engineering. This “human engineering” began in 1965 after the U.S.Bureau of Reclamation rerouted approximately 100,000 acre feet of salty runoff from the Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation District away from the Colorado River and 13 miles into Mexico.

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

California Water Service awards $186,000 to aid fire departments

California Water Service has announced the recipients of its seventh annual Firefighter Grant Program, awarding more than $186,000 to nine fire departments across its service areas. The grants aim to enhance rescue and emergency services by funding critical resources and equipment. … The grants will cover a range of needs, from laryngoscopes for pre-hospital emergency care to ventilation fans and gas detection equipment. … These grants are part of Cal Water’s philanthropic giving program and do not impact customer rates. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news CNN

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: The world has entered a new era of ‘water bankruptcy’ with irreversible consequences

The world has entered “an era of global water bankruptcy” with irreversible consequences, according to a new United Nations report. Regions across the world are afflicted by severe water problems: Kabul may be on course to be the first modern city to run out of water. Mexico City is sinking at a rate of around 20 inches a year as the vast aquifer beneath its streets is over-pumped. In the US Southwest, states are locked in a continual battle over the how to share the shrinking water of the drought-stricken Colorado River. The global situation is so severe that terms like “water crisis” or “water stressed” fail to capture its magnitude, according to the report published Tuesday by the United Nations University and based on a study in the journal Water Resources.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Utah News Dispatch

Colorado River talks: States are still at odds but working toward a 5-year plan

With just weeks to decide how to share the Colorado River’s shrinking water supply, negotiators from seven states hunkered down in a Salt Lake City conference room. … The states moved forward on a deal for two-and-a-half days, then went back by almost as far as they’d come, [Utah chief negotiator Gene] Shawcroft said. … Shawcroft reiterated Tuesday what he and his counterparts from the other Colorado River states have said in recent months: They don’t have a deal, but they do have a commitment to keep talking and meet their upcoming February deadline. 

Other Colorado River negotiations news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Big storms needed to make up for Colorado’s record low snowpack

Colorado’s snowpack is at a record low, and the longer that continues, the harder it will be to make up the deficit before the end of winter, water managers say. … This year, the state has about 58% of its normal snowpack — the lowest on record for this time of year. … The northwestern combined basin is part of the larger Colorado River Basin, which spans the Western Slope and extends across six other states and into northern Mexico. If critically dry conditions continue, one of the basin’s massive reservoirs, Lake Powell, could drop so low that it would not be able to generate hydroelectric power by December, according to the Bureau of Reclamation. 

Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Water first destroyed, and will now rebuild, the historic town of Allensworth

Starting nearly 118 years ago, arsenic-laced groundwater and dry wells all but killed the hopes of California’s only town founded and governed by African Americans, many of them formerly enslaved. On Tuesday, residents of Allensworth celebrated a new well that will finally bring clean, abundant water to the town that was beset by water troubles soon after it was founded 1908 by Col. Allen Allensworth. … The new well, along with an arsenic treatment system and 500,000-gallon storage tank, are being paid for through a $3.8 million grant from the Water Resources Control Board’s Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience (SAFER) program. 

Other water quality news:

Aquafornia news The Las Vegas Review-Journal (Nev.)

House Democrats demand investigation into Nevada’s Thacker Pass water deal

Democrats in Congress are demanding that the Trump administration investigate a top official at the Interior Department who is accused of violating ethics standards with a $3.5 million water deal for a Nevada lithium mine. In a Tuesday letter to the Office of the Inspector General, Reps. Jared Huffman, D-Calif., and Maxine Dexter, D-Ore., referenced new evidence that they feel could implicate Karen Budd-Falen, the Interior Department’s third in command. The House Committee on Natural Resources and Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations ranking members are focused on the Budd-Falen family’s water sale to the controversial Thacker Pass lithium mine in Northern Nevada in 2018.

Other water and mining news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Water rule rollback stokes affordability concerns

As President Donald Trump pledges to help lower costs for Americans, his administration’s plan to reduce protections under the Clean Water Act is fueling new concerns about water affordability. The administration is racing to finalize a rule that will chip away at federal oversight for millions of acres of streams and wetlands. Those resources play an important role in filtering pollutants out of drinking supplies and absorbing rainwater during floods — at no direct cost to consumers. Trump administration officials say their proposal will provide clarity for farmers and landowners and ease costs for businesses. Yet local officials who oversee sewer systems and water treatment plants say the changes could shift costs to them, putting pressure on water bills at a time when millions of Americans struggle to pay them.

Other Clean Water Act news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

California awards $10m+ to restore salmon and steelhead across the state

… The California Department of Fish and Wildlife has awarded more than $10 million to 16 projects aimed at restoring, enhancing, and protecting salmon and steelhead habitat across the state. The grants are part of Governor Gavin Newsom’s broader Salmon Strategy for a Hotter, Drier Future, which focuses on rebuilding fish populations as climate pressures intensify. Funding was distributed through CDFW’s long-running Fisheries Restoration Grant Program, supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and the Inflation Reduction Act. Together, those programs target migration barriers, degraded rivers, and lost rearing habitat throughout California watersheds.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news KPBS (San Diego)

Latest Tijuana sewage spill highlights ‘urgent need’ to end crisis

After millions of gallons of raw sewage spilled into San Diego through the Tijuana River, federal officials said Monday the toxic flows had stopped. The U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC), which oversees the treatment of some of Tijuana’s wastewater north of the border, said the spill began Thursday night. The cause: a major sewage pipe collapse in eastern Tijuana. … Last week’s spill is the latest of many over the past decade and amid infrastructure repairs happening on both sides of the border. But those who live and work in the South County communities affected by the sewage pollution said they feel like reprieve is far from coming.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news The Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Water, air, power are among the environmental costs of AI technology

… Arizonans are watching it [AI] transform their desertscape firsthand, especially in newly-minted tech hubs like Phoenix, where previously empty, dusty lots have turned into data centers. But developers are clashing with neighbors who don’t want them next door. Residents of this water-strained state worry their wells will run dry. … AI uses water in two primary ways: on-site for cooling computer servers and off-site at the power plants that provide data centers with electricity. … In Arizona, a hotter climate that relies on intensive cooling, facilities processing GPT-3 requests used the same amount of water as in a 17-ounce water bottle per 16 queries, more than the national average. 

Other data center water use news: