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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 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 The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Colorado lawmakers reject data center environmental regulations

Colorado lawmakers abandoned a last-minute effort Monday to pass environmental regulations for data center development in the state. … The bill, also sponsored by Rep. Kyle Brown, D-Louisville, would have required data center companies to pay the full cost for the power needed to run their facilities. It also would have ensured that data centers don’t blow the state’s greenhouse gas emission reductions targets, intended to stave off the worst effects of climate change. Data center companies would have had to compete for two available 15-year sales and use tax exemptions per year, on criteria like clean energy and participation in grid resiliency programs. They would have also been judged on the quality of jobs created, community benefits and investments and water efficiency.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Newsom water board pick drew opposition ahead of Bay-Delta vote

Environmentalists and a salmon fishing group unsuccessfully lobbied a California Senate committee to reject Gov. Gavin Newsom’s reappointment of a veteran State Water Resources Control Board member last week, as tensions over the board’s upcoming vote on a controversial update to water policy for the Sacramento and San Joaquin watersheds spilled into the gubernatorial appointment process. Gov. Gavin Newsom nominated Dorene D’Adamo to her fourth term on the board earlier this year, ahead of an expected September vote on the Bay-Delta Plan. … D’Adamo has been a voice on the board for powerful interests such as the agricultural industry and urban water districts interests, her opponents charged at a May 6 hearing of the Senate Rules Committee.

Other Delta news:

Aquafornia news CBS Sacramento (Calif.)

Sacramento region reaches new long-term agreement to balance water use and future growth

The debate over Sacramento’s water has been going on for decades. From farming to urban uses, it’s a natural resource that is in high demand, especially during droughts. On Monday night, a celebration was held to announce that a new signed agreement in place to make sure there’s enough water in the future. Ashlee Casey with the Sacramento Water Forum said that opposing groups including environmentalists, developers, farmers and cities have all reached an agreement on how to best use water that’s released from Folsom Dam and flows down the American River. … Water usage is outlined in a 334-page document that will guide the region over the next 25 years.

Aquafornia news SFGate

Water levels at Lake Powell, Lake Mead could go dangerously low

Spring is a critical time for the Colorado River Basin watershed, when snowmelt flows into major reservoirs. But after a hot and dry winter, the state of spring runoff is grim, especially at Lake Powell, where forecasters are predicting the lowest water flows ever recorded. The Colorado River Basin Forecast Center expects 800,000 acre feet of water to flow into Lake Powell in the period between April and July this year. That’s just 13% of the 30-year average, between 1991 and 2020. What’s more, about half of that water has already showed up to Lake Powell, thanks to a record-breaking warmup in March that triggered an early runoff, said Cody Moser, senior hydrologist at the Colorado River Basin Forecast Center, in a webinar on Thursday. 

Other snowmelt and drought news around the West:

Aquafornia news Utah Public Radio

A coalition wants to stop this southern Utah pipeline project

… [A] coalition of counties, ranchers, and water advocates in Utah and Nevada is appealing federal approval of a groundwater pipeline project in southern Utah. The group is challenging the Bureau of Land Management’s March 2 approval of the Pine Valley Water Supply Project — a proposed 66-mile pipeline in the high desert near the Nevada border. A timeline for construction has not been finalized. The project is designed to move groundwater to the Cedar City area, where officials say population growth and development are increasing demand. Opponents argue the federal review fell short, saying the agency relied on flawed science and failed to fully consider impacts on aquifers, rural water supplies, and groundwater-dependent ecosystems.

Aquafornia news Organic Produce Network

California water crisis forces record farm acreage fallowing

California growers are taking an increasing amount of agricultural land out of production every year because of lack of available irrigation water to grow those crops. And there is likely little argument that laws and regulations play an outsized role in that equation. Statewide, the debate revolves around where the fault lies and what solutions can assure the largest and most productive agricultural region in the United States, and probably the world, remains in that lofty position. … [California Farm Water Coalition Executive Director Michelle] Paul said that as SGMA regulations are being written and implemented, growers have to manage their own acreage knowing they will have less water in the future.

Other agriculture news:

Aquafornia news The Guardian

Trump officials cancel rule that made conservation a ‘use’ of public lands

The interior department is canceling a rule that put conservation on equal footing with development, as Donald Trump’s administration eases restrictions on industries and seeks to boost drilling, logging, mining and grazing on taxpayer-owned land. The 2024 rule adopted under Joe Biden was meant to refocus the interior department’s Bureau of Land Management, which oversees about 10% of land in the US. It allowed public property to be leased for restoration. … Bobby McEnaney with the Natural Resources Defense Council said repealing the rule “means less protection for the clean drinking water, less protection for endangered wildlife that depend on healthy habitat, and less accountability when corporations leave these landscapes damaged and degraded.”

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Looking to DNA for answers as climate change outpaces California wildlife’s ability to evolve

Evolution works over millennia. Climate change is moving far faster. That mismatch is killing some of the planet’s most vital ecosystems, including California’s towering redwoods and the seagrass meadows along its coast, both of which store vast amounts of carbon and support complex webs of life. Marine heat waves, record wildfires and coastal development are pushing these systems beyond their limits as climate change, driven by emissions of fuels such as oil and gas, accelerates. An estimated 1 million species face extinction, many within decades, largely due to human activities such as habitat destruction, pollution and overuse of natural resources, according to a 2019 report by a United Nations-affiliated intergovernmental scientific body.

Aquafornia news Santa Cruz Sentinel (Calif.)

John Laird bill to expedite Pajaro River flood protection projects passes Senate

A bill to accelerate flood protection projects along the Pajaro River made further traction as the California Senate passed legislation to expand contracting tools available to the Pajaro Regional Flood Management Agency Thursday. Senate Bill 1055 — authored by Sen. John Laird, D-Santa Cruz — aims to authorize the agency to utilize additional methods to expedite construction, including job order contracting, design, build, best value and construction manager/general contractor contracting. It also seeks to expand the number of contracting tools available to the agency from three to seven, help reduce project costs, accelerate construction timelines and improve project delivery for levee maintenance and flood control improvements.

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mason Valley Fish Hatchery could lose water rights without court intervention

Two Nevada agencies are in court over a water rights decision that could have major implications for a state-run fish hatchery in rural Lyon County during times of drought. The Nevada Department of Wildlife has maintained a permit to pump 861.5 acre-feet of groundwater for its Mason Valley Fish Hatchery for decades, representing one of 13 permits that contributes about 15 percent of the facility’s water supply. The hatchery is north of Yerington, about 60 miles southeast of Carson City. Now, after its water rights permit was canceled and later reinstated by the state engineer’s office due to a lapse in paperwork, the wildlife department worries for its ability to produce tens of thousands of trout each year to stock bodies of water in western Nevada.

Aquafornia news Fresnoland (Calif.)

Fresno approves $5m San Joaquin River trail extension west of 41

… The Fresno City Council on Thursday authorized an application for $5.1 million in state climate-bond money toward a long-planned extension of the Lewis S. Eaton Trail into the River West area along the San Joaquin River. The grant — a fraction of the project’s roughly $23 million construction estimate — now goes to the San Joaquin River Conservancy’s board, which votes Wednesday on whether to award it. … Beyond the Highway 41 underpass lies a 358-acre stretch of public land along the San Joaquin River — a riverine patchwork of grassland, ponds, riparian woodland, legacy gravel-mining pits and fenced stormwater basins. … River West would extend the existing Eaton Trail roughly 2.4 miles to Spano Park — giving Fresno residents much-needed access to all that beauty. 

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

Mountain View water pipe disinfected, free of harmful bacteria

The city of Mountain View is moving closer to restoring clean water to nearly two dozen households that have been without the resource since late April. The “super-chlorination” of a pipe serving 21 households on Drucilla Drive and Carla Court has been completed, the city said in an update Monday afternoon, adding that tests indicated it has been “properly disinfected,” with no coliform bacteria present. … The disruption started April 24, when a cement slurry mix came into contact with a water main during an upgrade and replacement project near the intersection of Bonita Avenue and Cuesta Drive. The city initially shut off service to some 67 households.

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Monday Top of the Scroll: There’s a new plan for managing the Colorado River. Here’s what you should know

… After more than a year of deadlock in talks between the seven states that share its water, the Lower Basin states of Arizona, California and Nevada have proposed major cutbacks to their take on the [Colorado] river. Those cuts, along with other tweaks to the management of major reservoirs across the West, would last through 2028, buying time for states to get back to the negotiating table and work on a longer-term plan. The plan is not formal yet, and would need sign-off from the federal government before going into effect. … So what are the details of the proposal, and what happens next? KJZZ spoke with experts around the region to break it down.

Aquafornia news WyoFile

‘Terrible’ water year prompts emergency order for livestock

Recognizing “very dry conditions,” the state’s [Wyo.] water boss Tuesday declared an emergency to allow ranchers to more easily get water to their stock. State Engineer Brandon Gebhart gave local water supervisors the authority to move what’s known as the “point of use” of water that sustains livestock. Four district supervisors can now authorize the shift in water use with a simple form instead of requiring more burdensome changes to permits at state offices in Cheyenne. The emergency authorization came as the state faces a dire summer, Gebhart told legislators and members of the Water Development Commission on Wednesday.

Other drought impact news around the West: 

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

Invasive species discovered at drinking water treatment plants in San Jose

For the first time, golden mussels, an invasive species of tiny mollusks that can rapidly reproduce and cause millions of dollars in damage to pipes, drinking water plants, irrigation systems and dams — sparking growing concerns across California — have been found in Santa Clara County. Last month, a juvenile golden mussel was discovered in the raw water intake area at the Penitencia Water Treatment plant near Alum Rock Park in San Jose. A few weeks later, in late April, an adult was found in a raw water strainer at the Santa Teresa Water Treatment Plant in San Jose’s Almaden area. … [T]he discovery of the diminutive invaders has alarmed local officials, who say they must now install equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars at some district facilities to remove them.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Water a big question for proposed AI data center in eastern Kern desert

Assurances that a “highly efficient hybrid cooling system” will keep a proposed AI data center from sucking up all the water in the already overdrafted Indian Wells Valley fell flat with residents who’ve bombarded the state with negative comments on the proposal. The proposed RB Inyokern Data Center being championed by R&L Capital, Inc. would only use up to 50 acre feet a year to keep its whirring data halls cool, according to an application filed with the California Energy Commission in late April. A “will serve letter” issued to R&L Capital, Inc. by the Inyokern Community Services District commits to providing about that same amount. But desert residents aren’t buying it.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Vail Daily (Colo.)

May snowstorm lifts Colorado snowpack from zeroth percentile, but will it hold?

Colorado waved goodbye to winter with a late-season blast, as a May snowstorm brought more than 2 feet of snow to some areas of the state. But was the storm enough to keep the snowpack above the zeroth percentile? The statewide snowpack is at 25% of median as of May 8, meaning the mountains have one-quarter of the typical amount of snow-water equivalent compared to the median for that specific date. Despite still being on the lower end of snowpack for an average spring in Colorado, the state is officially out of historically low levels for the first week of May. … While this is good news, Colorado is still on track to lose its snowpack earlier than normal.

Other snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Conversation

Blog: New research highlights how wildfires are harming fish

… While the impacts on humans, forests and the animals that live in them are the most observable effects, wildfires also have devastating impacts on aquatic life, especially fish. Many of these occur during and shortly after the fire is out, but others can continue for years, and potentially, decades. … One of the immediate impacts on fish after a wildfire comes from the increase in water draining from the burned land and entering rivers. Without thick forest cover to store and use rainfall, more water runs off over the soil towards rivers. In some situations, soil can become water-repellent, as gases from the burning vegetation enter and condense below the topsoil, forming a barrier and limiting the amount of rainfall that can infiltrate.

Other water and wildfire news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Newsom to water officials on Delta Conveyance tunnel: ‘We’ve got to finish the job’

… The fact that more than 1 million people “in the wealthiest state and the wealthiest democracy God has ever conceived” lacked access to clean drinking water inspired him to overhaul the state’s water infrastructure, [Gov. Gavin] Newsom said Thursday at an Association of California Water Agencies conference. Over the next seven years, his administration fast-tracked projects like the Delta Conveyance tunnel and spent hundreds of millions to shore up the state’s climate defenses, like removing dams on the Klamath River to restore salmon populations, negotiating with Arizona and Nevada to preserve water from the rapidly shrinking Colorado River, and restoring the Salton Sea. … The governor’s overview of his water policy was likely one of his last chances to frame his state climate record before he leaves office at the end of the year.

Other Delta tunnel news:

Aquafornia news FOX40 (Sacramento, Calif.)

Return of the king: Anglers ‘gearing up’ for salmon fishing in Sac River

Anglers will once again be able to fish for Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River this summer, after a three-year closure. On Wednesday, the California Fish and Game Commission unanimously passed new fishing regulations. The updated regulations reverse fishing closures for Chinook salmon as populations continue to rebound in the central valley. “We’ve increased hatchery production. We’ve got more investments in salmon research and habitat restoration projects. We’ve had a series of good water years,” said Krysten Kellum, information officer with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. This year’s salmon season will begin July 16 for most stretches of the Sacramento River. Anglers will be allowed to keep two Chinook salmon per day, with a four-fish possession limit.

Other salmon news: