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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 Los Angeles Times

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: ‘It’s an injustice’: Shrinking state funds could slow fixes for Californians with toxic water

In a neighborhood flanked by grapevines and orange groves on the east side of the San Joaquin Valley, people cannot drink the water from their faucets because it’s contaminated. Residents in the area north of Porterville, many of them farmworkers, have been discussing a solution, which they expect will require running pipes to connect to the nearby city system. But the clean water program that has been one of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s major initiatives, bringing solutions like these, is significantly cut in his latest proposed budget. … Newsom’s latest proposed budget estimates that the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund will provide about half of what it provided last year for the Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund — $68 million compared with $130 million. 

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Star (Tucson)

Judge halts new Arizona groundwater-saving program

For the second time in two months, a Superior Court judge has blocked separate efforts by the Arizona Department of Water Resources to limit groundwater pumping in the rapidly growing Phoenix area. On Tuesday, Judge Scott Blaney of Maricopa County tossed out a rule that established an ADWR program allowing cities and other water providers to approve new development in areas the state believes are short of groundwater if they replace 25% of the groundwater they use with an alternative water supply. This follows Blaney’s April ruling that overturned ADWR’s 2023 decision to stop allowing new homes to be built in much of the Phoenix area that rely on groundwater. In both cases, Blaney ruled that the state agency exceeded its legal authority, as spelled out in the 1980 Groundwater Management Act and subsequent regulations.

Other groundwater news around the West:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

White House to tap California water expert for Bureau of Reclamation

President Donald Trump is poised to nominate a Western water and agriculture expert with deep ties to California’s Central Valley farm industry to lead the Bureau of Reclamation. The administration intends to nominate Aubrey Bettencourt to the post overseeing the Interior Department’s Western water programs, a White House official confirmed. It’s a move that sidesteps the seven-state brawl over the drought-withered Colorado River that has given the Trump administration a litany of political headaches and led to the withdrawal of the administration’s first nominee for Reclamation, a long-time Arizona water hand who had drawn opposition from powerful Republican officials in Utah and Wyoming.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Source New Mexico

New Mexico county adopts yearlong data center moratorium

The Socorro County Board of Commissioners unanimously adopted a yearlong moratorium on data centers and related infrastructure projects Tuesday evening after residents for months opposed a Canadian tech CEO’s proposal to build a data center and solar array on 10,000 acres of nearby land. … [Green Data CEO Jason] Bak proposed a massive solar array to power the data center and said it would rely on technology called atmospheric water generation to pull moisture out of the air and convert it into usable water, rather than draining local aquifers. … In the months since Bak first unveiled his proposal, residents have packed the room at City Council and New Mexico Tech town hall meetings to oppose the project, often contending that the solar array could harm the surrounding desert environment and that the water technology was not a proven solution.

Other data center water use news around the West:

Aquafornia news KNAU (Flagstaff, Ariz.)

Unease trickles into the Grand Canyon rafting community as water levels dwindle

It’s late May at Lee’s Ferry, the starting point for rafting trips down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. … There’s the smell of spray-on sunscreen, the buzz of excited crowds, and — beyond that — the extrasensory vibrations of a tinge of collective anxiety. Anxiety, because the water level in the river is on the lower side of normal for this time of year. Because a historically dry winter in terms of snowpack in some parts of the West means less water in Lake Powell, and less water released into the Colorado River by Glen Canyon Dam. Because, aside from the millions of people who rely on the river system for water and hydropower, there’s an entire river rafting economy in the Grand Canyon that does not know what to expect going forward.

Other water and snow recreation news:

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

On the Eel River, the most hated fish is a California native — but a stranger nonetheless

Every summer a line of volunteers in masks and wetsuits floats down the South Fork Eel, shoulder to shoulder across the current, counting the one fish almost everyone on the river wants gone. They are counting Sacramento pikeminnow, and this is the 11th year they’ve done it. The Eel River Recovery Project runs the dive every summer. … The pikeminnow is the most reviled animal in the Eel. Someone dumped it into Lake Pillsbury in 1979 — a bait-bucket introduction, illegal — and by 1986, it had spread through the whole basin, its numbers climbing into the millions. A torpedo of a fish, it eats juvenile salmon and steelhead on a river fighting to bring those runs back. … Here is the part that complicates the hatred: the Sacramento pikeminnow is not an invader. It’s a California native. 

Other fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news South Tahoe Now (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.)

How clear is Lake Tahoe? Most recent clarity report released

For decades, the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center has been tracking the clarity of Lake Tahoe with a white disc known as a Secchi disk, lowered into the depths of “Big Blue.” For nearly 60 years, their findings have been released annually in the Lake Tahoe Clarity Report. The most recent report, which contains the data from 2025, was released on Tuesday. The 2025 report shows that the annual average clarity remains at a plateau, neither significantly improving nor declining compared to previous years. The annual average was 69.2 feet in 2025. That is 7 feet clearer than last year’s average of 62.3 feet, but not statistically different from recent years, mostly due to a continuing trend of relatively low clarity during summer.

Other Lake Tahoe news:

Aquafornia news Colorado Public Media

A new state law targets decades-old practice of ‘buy and dry’ water transfers out of the Arkansas River Basin

There’s a new [Colo.] state law aimed at reducing soil erosion caused by the transfer of water rights out of the Arkansas River Basin. Once effective next year, it will require revegetating the land with native plants before water can be used elsewhere. Municipalities and developers often purchase and move irrigation water away from agricultural areas, often known as “buy and dry.” … During the hearings for the bill, [Colo. state Sen. Cleave] Simpson said there’s an unintended consequence. “If you make it incrementally just a little bit harder in Division Two (the Arkansas River Basin) to transfer water rights from ag to municipal, guess where they go to look for other transfers: the Rio Grande Basin, the Colorado River Basin, and the South Platte where maybe the barriers and the obstacles are a little less intrinsic and cumbersome.”

Other Colorado water supply news:

Aquafornia news ABC15 (Phoenix)

Monsoon 2026 outlook: Why Arizona could see a wetter, hotter summer

Monsoon season is Arizona’s stormiest time of year. Each June into early July, our predominant winds shift out of the south as high pressure builds near the Four Corners. That shift in the winds brings in moisture, which rises to form towering thunderstorms in the heat of the day. The monsoon season officially begins on June 15 and runs until September 30. During that time, thunderstorms often form in the heat of the day, bringing heavy rain, lightning, damaging winds, dust storms, and flooding. Not all monsoons are the same, though. Some years, our monsoon season is hot and dry, while other years are not as hot and very rainy. … The NOAA Climate Prediction Center has odds favoring a wetter-than-normal monsoon across Arizona this year.

Other weather and water forecast news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Community advocates, industry experts share public health concerns at PFAS conference in Tucson

The Environmental Protection Agency recently announced efforts to roll back limits on certain PFAS, or forever chemicals, in drinking water. That’s one of the topics of discussion among researchers and community advocates this week at the National PFAS Conference at the University of Arizona. … Many attendees shared concerns that federal and state regulators aren’t doing enough to address PFAS contamination in the environment. … The use of firefighting foams at Davis Monthan Air Force Base has led to groundwater contamination in Tucson. PFAS chemicals have also been detected in public water systems statewide. Participants from across the country shared similar stories from their own communities. In the last year, the EPA cut its Office of Research and Development and has proposed limiting federal protections for drinking water.

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review Journal

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Aubrey Bettencourt is Trump’s pick to lead Bureau of Reclamation as Lake Mead plummets

The White House has made its pick to lead the federal agency that manages water and dams in the American West, a Trump administration official confirmed Monday. If confirmed by Congress, Aubrey Bettencourt, a third-generation California farmer in the Central Valley, will lead the Bureau of Reclamation during a historic time of interstate conflict and record drought along the Colorado River. … During the first Trump administration from 2017 to 2021, she was deputy assistant secretary of water and science at the Interior Department, the parent agency of the Bureau of Reclamation. … Most recently, Bettencourt served as chief of the Natural Resources Conservation Service, the private lands conservation agency leg of the Agriculture Department, until she stepped down in May. 

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

Could the Tijuana River help get Arizona more water?

Arizona is desperate for water. So much so that its taxpayers are willing to invest in treating Tijuana’s sewage so it’s drinkable. How would that help Arizona? The state would ask Mexico for some of its Colorado River water in exchange. That’s a plan proposed by EPCOR, a private Canadian water utility. The Arizona state legislature granted $1 billion to the Water Infrastructure Finance Authority of Arizona, or WIFA, to jumpstart projects that could make new water, like the one proposed in the Tijuana River Valley. Under the proposal, Arizona could help build a wastewater-to-drinking water facility (like the one San Diego is building called Pure Water) at the federally-owned South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant or the city-owned South Bay Water Reclamation Plant. 

Other Arizona drought news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Q&A: EPA water chief Jess Kramer talks AI, MAHA and more

The Trump administration is “keenly aware” of Americans’ concerns about water and artificial intelligence data centers and wants the industry to embrace technologies like reusing treated wastewater, according to a senior EPA official. But Jess Kramer, who leads EPA’s water office, also defended the administration’s pledge to help make the U.S. “the AI capital of the world,” arguing that the technology is already driving conversations at the agency. “Being the AI capital of the world, utilizing that as a tool, and utilizing [it] to the best of its ability, I think that’s a great goal,” Kramer said in an interview last week. “I don’t think there’s anything short-sighted about that. I think it has driven a lot of conversations.” 

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Santa Monica Mountains’ last steelhead trout survived the Palisades fire — and even had babies

Scientists feared the Santa Monica Mountains’ last remaining steelhead trout were dead, smothered by debris flows unleashed by the Palisades fire. But the endangered fish surprised them: A team of biologists recently spotted 30 of the rare trout — and 21 babies — in Topanga Creek. … [T]he steelhead here are endangered, at both the state and federal levels. Once, they swam in most streams of the Santa Monicas, but their numbers plummeted amid overfishing and coastal development. Increasingly frequent wildfire has further stressed their habitat. Topanga Creek, a biodiversity hot spot, is home to their last known population in the mountains that stretch from the Hollywood Hills to Point Mugu in Ventura County.

Other fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news Redheaded Blackbelt (Phillipsville, Calif.)

In a push to connect rural California, broadband drilling fouled southern Humboldt’s waterways

On the evening of June 2, a Southern Humboldt resident looked at Redwood Creek from the Seely Creek Road crossing and knew something was wrong. The water was white — not muddy the way it gets after rain, but opaque, for miles. … What happened next revealed something bigger than a single spill on a rural creek. The white water running through Southern Humboldt was connected to one of the largest infrastructure investments California has ever made — a $3.25 billion effort to bring high-speed internet to communities that have gone without it for years. And at the end of a long chain of contractors and subcontractors, someone had apparently been dumping thousands of gallons of drilling waste on private land, with apparently not enough planning for where it would go.

Other water pollution news:

Aquafornia news Yale Climate Connections

Second-warmest spring in U.S. history

The period of March through May 2026 ranked as the second warmest spring in records going back to 1895 for the contiguous U.S., according to NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). Across the past 131 years, only 2012 had a warmer spring, said NCEI in its monthly analysis released on June 8. The nationwide average temperatures for both spring 2012 (56.17 degrees Fahrenheit) and 2026 (55.79°F) are both more than 1.5°F above any rivals in the 131-year database. Spring 2026 was the hottest on record for Arizona, Colorado, Texas, and New Mexico. … The March heat wave dissolved any hope of a respectable snow season for large parts of the western United States. … The lack of remaining Southwest snowpack means runoff will be limited this summer, only worsening the situation.

Other climate change and water news:

Aquafornia news KUNR (Reno, Nev.)

Can a burned desert watershed bounce back? Nevada restoration efforts offer clues

After a wildfire, rivers and streams can take years to recover. Native plants and wildlife are often crowded out by invasive species in the aftermath. But in Nevada’s Virgin River watershed, a collaboration between federal agencies and conservation groups is pointing to early signs of recovery. The work is unfolding in a remote stretch of desert in southern Nevada, where the tributary winds through a system that eventually feeds into the Colorado River, a critical water source for millions across the Mountain West. … The habitat supports rare species, including the Southwestern willow flycatcher, and fish, such as the Virgin River chub. … [T]he effort is only the first step in a longer restoration process that includes invasive plant removal and water management improvements designed to slow runoff and increase soil absorption.

Other water and wildfire news:

Aquafornia news Public Policy Institute of California

Blog: Agriculture and water use on California’s tribal lands

In a report and fact sheet released last month, we analyzed the development and current status of Tribal water rights in California. …  Of the 103 federally recognized Indian reservations in California, only about 20 consistently host irrigated agriculture, and most of these are relatively small-scale (less than 100 acres). In an average water year, about 15,800 acres are irrigated on Tribal reservations (about 0.2% of statewide irrigated acreage), including by non-Tribal residents. Irrigated acreage tends to decline slightly during drought years and rebounds during wet and normal water years. Water demands for this agriculture amount to about 60,000–70,000 acre-feet per year (about 0.2% of total statewide applied water).

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.)

Public is invited to free training on how to protect Lake Tahoe from golden mussels, other aquatic invasive species 

On Tuesday, June 9, a team of Tahoe’s protectors will lead a training on how to protect the Lake’s blue waters from the threat of aquatic invasive species as part of California Invasive Species Action Week. The morning event will take place at Valhalla Tahoe in South Lake Tahoe, is open to all, and free to attend. … Golden mussels, an environmentally harmful and highly invasive species, are spreading rapidly across California. Just days ago, a boat unknowingly carrying golden mussels was stopped at one of Tahoe’s boat inspection stations before it could launch on the Lake. This summer is a critical time for paddlers, anglers, and beachgoers to be aware of AIS and to Clean, Drain, and Dry their equipment before entering the water.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Monday Top of the Scroll: The West’s water war arrives in Washington

The high-stakes brawl over the drought-stricken Colorado River comes to Capitol Hill this week. The Trump administration’s top Western water official is set to appear before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Wednesday as the Interior Department is preparing to wrest control of the waterway later this summer. The department already invoked emergency authorities in April when it became clear that the river would see the lowest flows on record this summer, threatening the ability to produce hydropower and release water out of one of the country’s largest reservoirs, Lake Powell. … Scott Cameron, Interior’s acting Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, last week said the department plans to release a draft plan for operating the waterway unilaterally in the “mid-to-late summer.”

Other Colorado River management news: