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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 Chris Bowman.

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Aquafornia news Civil Eats

How climate change is challenging desert farming techniques

 … By most measures, the Imperial Valley is not a great place to grow food. Yet carrots, cauliflower, sweet onions, honeydew, broccoli, and alfalfa all grow here, incongruous crops that spread across half a million acres of cultivated land. … Given the lack of rain in the region, Ronald Leimgruber says he has “about seven” different irrigation projects on his farm, where he grows an array of crops, including carrots, lettuce, watermelon, and hay. Leimgruber, a third-generation farmer whose grandparents helped build the All American Canal, estimates he has spent millions of dollars on various water conservation techniques over the years. Some of that spending was subsidized by the federal government; some came out of his own pocket. He’s not sure it was worth it, especially because the government does not fund the upkeep of new systems.

Aquafornia news Steamboat Pilot & Today

Blog: Natural curtailment in the Colorado River Basin

The Colorado River Basin is in the midst of a 23-year drought. Reduced precipitation, mostly in the form of snow in the western mountains, has caused water administrators at the federal, state and local level to seek ways to cut back usage. But many of us in the high country do not need water managers to tell us to reduce usage. Mother nature kindly, or unkindly, does that for us.  With limited storage at higher elevations, snowpack is the source for virtually all water on the West Slope. As the Basin experiences a steady decline in precipitation, West Slope water users, especially irrigators, find that in many years, they are subject to “natural curtailment.” Less snowpack means less water.   

Aquafornia news The Oregonian

First salmon in over a century return to Oregon’s Klamath Basin after dam removals

Salmon have officially returned to Oregon’s Klamath Basin for the first time in more than a century, months after the largest dam removal project in U.S. history freed hundreds of miles of the Klamath River near the California-Oregon border. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife confirmed the news on Oct. 17, a day after its fish biologists identified a fall run of Chinook salmon in a tributary to the Klamath River above the former J.C. Boyle Dam, the department said. The fish likely traveled 230 miles from the Pacific Ocean, officials said, after four dams were removed to ensure their safe passage. It’s the first confirmed salmon to return to the Klamath Basin since 1912, when the first of four hydroelectric dams was constructed along the river, the department said.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Mono Lake Committee

Blog: The Mono Lake decision turns 30

On September 28, 1994, the California State Water Resources Control Board voted unanimously to approve Decision 1631, amending the water licenses of the City of Los Angeles in order “to establish fishery protection flows in streams tributary to Mono Lake and to protect Public Trust resources at Mono Lake and in the Mono Lake Basin.” … Board member Marc Del Piero pronounced: “Today we saved Mono Lake.” Remarkably, not one of the parties that participated in the hearing process that led to D1631 appealed the decision—most notably, not even the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (DWP). D1631 provided water for the lake and streams. At the same time the Mono Lake Committee had helped to secure water solutions for Los Angeles that included conservation programs and millions of dollars in state and federal funding to develop local supplies. A decades-long water battle had ended with all parties agreeing to stop fighting and move forward to implement the solution.

Aquafornia news AgNet West Radio Network

USDA workshop sets research roadmap for tackling PFAS challenges in agriculture

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Agricultural Research Service (ARS) recently outlined steps toward addressing Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) contamination in agricultural soils and waters. In collaboration with the University of Maine and the Center of Excellence for Environmental Monitoring and Mitigation, ARS hosted a three-day workshop with over 150 experts to develop a research roadmap for handling PFAS, a persistent environmental contaminant affecting agricultural operations.

Aquafornia news MyNewsLA.com

LA board OKs final budget for Santa Ana River signage project

The Board of Supervisors Tuesday signed off on the final budget for a signage project along the Santa Ana River Trail, covering most points on the segment that traverses Riverside County with guideposts, relying on a federal allocation to pay for it. … The initial project budget was $1 million, but Regional Parks & Open Space District officials determined the full amount would not be required, so the board revised the final budget at a slightly lower sum in accordance with updated figures. “The signage program project aims to enhance the quality of life for Riverside County residents and Santa Ana River Trail users by maintaining clean, safe and equitable outdoor recreational opportunities,” according to documents posted to the board agenda.

Aquafornia news MendoFever

Unpacking Mendocino’s water politics: Inside the MCIWPC’s October meeting

Covering water issues in Mendocino County is like fitting together a jigsaw puzzle. Limiting the geographic area to the Ukiah Valley, Lake Mendocino and the Upper Russian River, there are over a dozen water agencies that are involved in local water use policies. We decided to catch up with the MCIWPC, as we have not been covering these meetings. … In 2017 Congressman Jared Huffman proposed to solve the problem of how to heal the ecology of the Eel River Basin, while at the same time ensuring water security and habitat protection for people living in the Russian River basin, by organizing a Two Basin Solution Partnership. ERPA has been formed to ultimately own, operate and fund the new diversion facility which is needed to attain the envisioned Two Basin Solution. The Boards of the local water agencies, NGOs, and state and federal authorities have been wrestling with this problem for years.

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

San Diego’s unrivaled biodiversity explored in new PBS Nature documentary

… Thanks to its unique geographical intersection of ocean, mountains, deserts, wetlands and urban development, San Diego County is recognized as the most biologically diverse county in the continental United States, according to the Nature Conservancy. That’s the subject of “Nature — San Diego: America’s Wildest City,” which premieres at 8 p.m. Wednesday on PBS stations and the PBS app. A giant-screen version of the film, titled “Wild San Diego,” will follow on Nov. 22 for a seven-year engagement at the San Diego Natural History Museum. … The film looks at a handful of wildlife species that are not only native to San Diego County but that also have either adapted to, or been hurt by, the presence of humans, who arrived in this region 12,000 years ago and have increased 500-fold in number to 3.3 million over the past 100 years. The greatest influence humans have had on wildlife, the documentary says, is how we manage our water resources.

Aquafornia news Valley Ag Voice

Opinion: The problem with misrepresenting science

Delta smelt has cost valley farmers, rural communities, and residents in Southern California significant quantities of water.  Since water supplies have been restricted to protect delta smelt starting in 2008, no estimate of the water cost has been produced, but it is very likely that the total number exceeds 10-million-acre feet. The cost to replace that water is in the order of $5 billion.   Delta smelt are a small, native fish, found only in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and westwards to the Napa River in salinity that ranges from slightly salty to one third that of sea water. They were listed as threatened in 1993 and the status was later changed to endangered. Since 2017, they have no longer been found in long-running fish surveys in which they were once abundant. Their protection under the Endangered Species Act is warranted.  
—Written by Scott Hamilton, president of Hamilton Resource Economics

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: New California water permit seeks to balance water delivery with environmental protections

A new operating permit issued Monday for California’s state water project is expected to help protect fish and ensure almost 30 million people can access a reliable water supply. … The incidental take permit is required under state law to protect endangered and threatened fish species like the Chinook salmon. … Composed of over 700 miles of canals, pipelines, reservoirs and hydroelectric facilities, the state water project both stores and delivers clean water to some 27 million Golden State residents, along with 750,000 acres of farmland. A series of planned actions and tools intended to reduce and offset potential impacts to fish species are linked to the new permit. They include tidal marsh and floodplain restoration projects supporting spawning, better fish passage in essential migration areas and support for hatchery production activity.  

Related articles:

Aquafornia news POLITICO

Why the election might not matter for California water

Former President Donald Trump and Gov. Gavin Newsom want you to believe they’re on opposite ends of the spectrum on California water. But their policies aren’t drastically different — and both lean toward the Republican-leaning farmers of the Central Valley. On the campaign trail, Trump has promised to force Newsom to turn on the faucet for water-strapped farmers if he is elected. Meanwhile, Newsom finalized rules [on Nov. 4] that insulate the state’s endangered fish protections from federal changes. But he’s also advancing controversial proposals to store and move around more water, a perennial ask of the agricultural industry, and easing pumping limits meant to protect an endangered fish in order to send more water south to parched farms. Newsom’s positioning has put the otherwise green-leaning governor squarely on the foe list for environmental groups and garnered him credit from unlikely sources.

Other election-related water articles:

Aquafornia news Imperial Valley Press (El Centro, Calif.)

IID’s system conservation implementation agreement raises concerns at county level

The Imperial County Board of Supervisors is expected Tuesday to approve a letter to express its concerns about the Imperial Irrigation District’s 2024-2026 System Conservation Implementation Agreement. … The IID Board of Directors approved a significant conservation agreement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) to leave up to 700,000 acre-feet of water in Lake Mead, by conserving up to 300,000 acre-feet of water a year through 2026. In exchange for the conservation agreement, the IID will receive millions in federal funding for the implementation of conservation programs … This agreement also unlocks the balance of other funding for Salton Sea mitigation efforts; however, the County is concerned that due to the lack of direct engagement and consultation from the IID during the negotiations process with USBR, other potential health and economics impacts related to agricultural water conservation were not considered nor addressed in the agreement or with the associated funding.

Aquafornia news The New York Times

A record number of states are in drought

Almost the entire United States faced drought conditions during the last week of October. Only Alaska and Kentucky did not have at least moderate drought conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, a record in the monitor’s history. The past four months were consistently warmer than normal over a wide swath of the country, said Rich Tinker, a drought specialist with the National Weather Service. But in June, while roughly a quarter of the country was dry to some degree, he said, now 87 percent of the nation is.

Other drought/weather articles:

Aquafornia news POLITICO

Both parties have let fester a worsening water pollution situation at the Mexico-California border

California Gov. Gavin Newsom visited the U.S.-Mexico border on Monday — but not for the reason you’d expect. The border crisis that drew the Democrat wasn’t immigration, but sewage. For nearly a century, billions of gallons of sewage have been pouring into Southern California from Mexico, making coastal communities near San Diego the victim of a crisis few people know about. The problems have disrupted daily life around America’s eighth-largest city, affected military operations and exposed how generations of politicians in Mexico and the U.S. have failed to provide sanitation on both sides of the world’s busiest border.  

Aquafornia news Deseret News (Salt Lake City)

What is the lifespan of the Glen Canyon Dam?

In 1963, the Glen Canyon Dam was built. It created Lake Powell Reservoir, which straddles Utah and Arizona, to ensure a water supply for the lower Colorado River basin states and Mexico. Over the past six decades, it has also become a recreation destination for millions. The dam has experienced its fair share of unexpected trauma, threatening river flow levels, depleting water storage and exposing sediment. Sediment is the walled molded mud that contains the Colorado River. It’s always been there, but historic droughts like those in 2002 and 2020 have caused the lifeline of the West to drop to alarming levels, exposing the mud. Before the water is potable, it’s brown and murky. … Why should we care? Because the mud is being trapped above the dam, depriving the river below, and suffocating it above.

Other Colorado River articles:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

Supreme Court fight over Uinta Basin Railway centers on NEPA

A showdown over the reach of environmental reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act is set for December before the U.S. Supreme Court.  At the center of the showdown is the 88-mile Uinta Basin Railway, which intends to connect oil fields in northeastern Utah to the national rail network so far-flung refineries can access the Uinta Basin’s waxy crude. The Surface Transportation Board in 2021 approved the railroad after conducting a two-year, 1,700-page Environmental Impact Statement review under the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA.  The railroad would direct an additional 5 billion gallons of Uinta Basin crude in 2-mile long trains along tracks along the Colorado River from Grand Junction to Winter Park and then through metro Denver en route to refineries on the Gulf Coast. The project has stirred vehement opposition among environmental groups, politicians and communities along the railroad, with concerns focused on spills and wildfires. 

Aquafornia news Civil Eats

Why Utah is bucking one of the west’s oldest water rules

The whole state of Utah, like many western U.S. states, is in the thick of it. Utah recently emerged from its driest 20-year period since the Middle Ages, while the Great Salt Lake, an iconic landmark of the West, is on course to dry up completely in a matter of years, not decades. … But amid climate change, drought, and increased demands for water, Utah is trying to change the system, bucking one of the oldest water rules in the western U.S. As it does in other Western states, Utah’s water policy fits under a principle of “beneficial use,” which declares that water rights holders must use their water for beneficial purposes, such as agriculture, or give up those rights. … These water rights are incredibly important right now for states and tribal nations along the Colorado River, which winds its way out of the Rocky Mountains, through the desert Southwest and (almost, under the right conditions) into Mexico.

Aquafornia news SFGate

A completely useless dam in Malibu is finally coming down

Most drivers on Malibu Canyon Road pass right by the hulking, useless 100-foot-tall dam without even realizing it’s there. But if they pulled off onto the right turnout, walked about 15 feet and peered over the edge, they’d glimpse it: a huge gray dam entirely filled with sediment. … [Russell] Marlow compared Malibu’s Rindge Dam to the four Klamath dams on the northern edge of California, which were finally dismantled this year in the world’s largest dam removal project. It wasn’t easy; the Klamath dams only came down after decades of advocacy by tribal communities. Those dams caused the decline of Chinook salmon, by degrading water quality and blocking migratory routes. Like the Klamath dams, the Rindge Dam has caused decades of negative impacts to fish like the Southern California steelhead, plus other impacts to the broader watershed.

Aquafornia news Redding Record Searchlight

Salmon return to Klamath River after dam removal, biologists say

Just a month after completing work to remove four dams on the Klamath River, fish and wildlife officials in California and Oregon said they have already spotted a salmon upstream of the locations where the dams once blocked the fish from migrating. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said a fall-run chinook salmon was found in a tributary stream west of Klamath Falls, Oregon, on Oct. 16. That fish reached Spencer Creek after migrating some 230 miles upstream from the Pacific Ocean. State and federal fisheries officials, along with representatives from Native American tribes, have begun extensive monitoring along the Klamath River to see how the fish have reacted after the dams were destroyed, and whether they are migrating upstream past where the four dams were once located.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news The San Diego Union-Tribune

Can toxic algae blooms be predicted? La Jolla scientists think so

… As part of a study funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Bradley Moore, a professor of marine biology, marine chemistry and geochemistry at Scripps Oceanography, worked to determine how domoic acid is produced with the hope of creating a predictive model. Now, a team of researchers from SIO, La Jolla’s J. Craig Venter Institute and other organizations appear to have done it. In September, the group published a study on predicting harmful algae blooms that contain high levels of domoic acid by tracking a single gene that serves like a canary in a coal mine — an early detector of danger. The study provides new insights into the mechanisms that drive harmful blooms and offers potential ways to forecast and mitigate their effects.