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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 CalMatters

Monday Top of the Scroll: California farmers depleted groundwater in this county. Now a state crackdown could rein them in

For the first time in California history, state officials are poised to crack down on overpumping of groundwater in the agricultural heartland.  The State Water Resources Control Board on Tuesday will weigh whether to put Kings County groundwater agencies on probation for failing to rein in growers’ overdrafting of the underground water supply. Probation — which would levy state fees that could total millions of dollars — is the first step that could allow California regulators to eventually take over management of the region’s groundwater. 

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Aquafornia news Bay City News

Another closure of salmon fisheries exposes state’s water politics

For the second year in a row, there will be no commercial or recreational salmon fishing in California. … The Golden State Salmon Association supports the recommendation of the [Pacific Fishery Management Council], which works closely with federally recognized West Coast tribes, many who define themselves as “salmon people” and hold annual ceremonies to honor their return each year. Bates said $20.6 million has been allocated from the U.S. Department of Commerce to compensate for some of the losses caused by last year’s closure to charter fleets and commercial fleets, buyers and processors. But the fisheries are calling on the state to allocate water, not cash. Scott Artis, executive director of the Golden State Salmon Association, said big agriculture is not limited in their water use, but fisheries get hit with constraints.

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Aquafornia news Colorado Sun

Why the tiny Shoshone Power Plant’s matters for Colorado River water rights

… This year Western Slope leaders, led by the Colorado River District, struck a $99 million deal to buy a tiny hydro plant’s water rights from Xcel Energy and lease the water back to Xcel to generate electricity. As part of the deal, Shoshone’s rights would become the largest, most influential environmental water right in state history.  The change would protect fish and habitat, but it would also beef up water security on the Western Slope by protecting reliable westward flows for farmers and tourist economies. … The Colorado River District’s plan has drawn hawk-eyed attention from water players around the state who are keen on protecting their supplies. 

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Aquafornia news KOBI - Medford

500,000 coho, chinook salmon to be released into Klamath River

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife will be joined by Tribal leaders and fisheries experts to release over 500,000 salmon into the Klamath River Tuesday. According to CDFW, this will be the first major release of Coho Salmon into the river since the drawdown of Klamath River reservoirs as part of the dam removal currently underway. 

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

L.A.’s water supplies are in good shape. But is the city ready for the next drought?

California’s second wet winter in a row has left L.A’s water supplies in good shape for at least another year, but the inevitable return to dry conditions could once again put the city’s residents in a precarious position. After the state’s final snow survey of the season, officials with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power announced that Eastern Sierra snowpack is measuring 103% of normal, “providing ample supplies through the city’s most cost-efficient water supply from the Los Angeles Aqueduct.” 

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Aquafornia news The Washington Post

Missouri could crack down on water exports to drought-weary West

Missouri lawmakers say water has almost always been plentiful in their state, giving no reason to think twice about a concept known as riparian rights — the idea that, if you own the land, you have broad freedoms to use its water. But that could change under a bill advancing quickly in a state legislature that is normally sharply divided. The measure would largely forbid the export of water across state lines without a permit, even though there is no evidence that is happening on any large scale. … lawmakers are wary of the West, and the chance that thirsty communities facing dwindling water supplies will look east for lakes and rivers to tap. 

Aquafornia news KPBS - Public Media

‘Forever chemicals’: Water supplies throughout California will exceed new national limits

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [last week] unveiled the first nationwide limits on dangerous “forever chemicals” in drinking water, setting standards that will have sweeping, costly effects throughout California. … In California alone, traces of the compounds have been detected in water systems serving more than 25 million people, nearly a third in disadvantaged communities, according to an analysis by the Natural Resources Defense Council. 

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Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Lawsuit: Feds continue violating Clean Water Act for failing to control border sewage crisis

The International Boundary and Water Commission is again being sued over water-quality permit violations that have led to rampant sewage polluting San Diego County’s southernmost shoreline. The San Diego Coastkeeper and Coastal Environmental Rights Foundation on Thursday filed a lawsuit in federal court against the U.S. arm of the IBWC and its contractor Veolia Water North America-West, alleging violations of the Clean Water Act. 

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California granted federal disaster declaration for February storms

President Biden has approved California’s request for a major disaster declaration to support recovery efforts from a string of February storms that drenched much of the state with historic rainfall and mountain snow and resulted in numerous deaths, officials announced Sunday. Nine California counties — Butte, Glenn, Los Angeles, Monterey, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Sutter and Ventura — will receive federal aid as a result of the declaration, which also includes funding for statewide hazard mitigation efforts, officials said. “

Aquafornia news California WaterBlog

Blog: Mornings at the Duck Pond

Each morning is similar, but different. As we approach the pond on the wooden catwalk, you can hear the birds calling, eventually you start to smell the freshness of the ecosystem, the glitters and splashing ahead gives some indication of bird activity on the water. Sometimes an alligator lizard scoots past along the floorwork – occasionally even two. Steam rises from my coffee cup, to varying degrees, depending on how quickly we got out the door. And then there are my three kids, also ever changing. Each day, one to three are in-tow, usually chatting it up about geology, Egypt, space, or the day’s most pressing sports news. And so it goes on most mornings, ideally when the mist is still fresh or the winter fog lingering, the Rypel family ventures to the “the duck pond” aka Julie Partansky Pond in north Davis.

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Star

Opinion: Delivering water to the West

… The federal government’s current approach to this imbalance is the equivalent of trying to cure cancer with a Band-Aid. Instead of pursuing a long-term solution, Washington is using federal funds to pay states and tribal nations to leave water in the river instead of taking their full allocation. Mostly, that means paying farmers to stop farming. That is not a viable long-term solution, and strategically, we need to be encouraging MORE local farming and food production, not less. It does make sense to assist local farmers in switching to crops that require less water, but it does not make sense to put American farmers out of business and make us more reliant on food trucked or shipped thousands of miles before it arrives on our tables.
-Written by Arizona Republican Kari Lake, who is running for the U.S. Senate.​

Aquafornia news NASA Earth Observatory

Blog: Antelope Valley abloom

Near the western tip of the Mojave Desert and a few miles west of NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center, fields of wildflowers painted the landscape yellow in spring 2024. On April 9, the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on the Landsat 8 satellite acquired this image of fields of yellow wildflowers blanketing Antelope Valley amid solar and wind farms. The day after the image was acquired, the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve reported that wildflowers were “popping,” but the region’s famous poppies were not. Rangers at the reserve said they also saw very few small poppy plants maturing, suggesting an impressive poppy bloom is unlikely in the coming weeks.

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

Opinion: California must create climate-resilient state parks

Four years ago, over 97% of Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Santa Cruz County burned during the state’s worst wildfire season in recorded history. Last year, unprecedented winter storms caused an estimated $190 million in damages to coastal parks. And at Seacliff State Beach, also in Santa Cruz County, storms flooded the campground and destroyed the beach’s historic pier. Climate change and the resulting severe wildfires, extreme storms and rising sea levels are increasingly threatening our beloved state parks. … To address this unprecedented threat, we need to create climate-resilient state parks that can prepare for, adapt to and recover from climate impacts.
-Written by Rachel Norton, the executive director of the California State Parks Foundation.

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Friday Top of the Scroll: The hunt for water is causing this region to sink. Now, California is weighing a historic crackdown

A stretch of California that’s considered one of the fastest-sinking areas in the nation, where farms have pumped so much water from the ground that the land has slowly collapsed, is on the verge of state intervention. In a first-ever move, California regulators are looking to step in and monitor groundwater pumping in the Tulare Lake subbasin, an 837-square-mile hydrological region flush with cotton, hay and almonds between Fresno and Bakersfield. Because of heavy pumping, some places here are sinking a foot a year, causing roads to buckle and canals to crack. … The looming confrontation between the state and water agencies marks the latest, and one of the most significant, developments with California’s decade-old groundwater legislation, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, or SGMA.

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Aquafornia news The Associated Press

Water pouring out of crack in rural Utah dam puts nearby town at risk

Workers hurriedly tried to shore up a rural Utah dam after a 60-foot crack sent water pouring into a creek and endangering the 1,800 residents of a downstream town. State and local leaders don’t think the Panguitch Lake Dam is in imminent danger of breaking open but have told residents to be prepared to evacuate if conditions worsen. 

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Aquafornia news AccuWeather

Mid-April storm to eye California with rain, mountain snow

Even though Pacific storms have become less frequent, as is often the case in April, a new storm is brewing and will slice across California just in time for the weekend, bringing areas of rain, mountain snow and much cooler air, AccuWeather meteorologists say. … A storm over the Gulf of Alaska will drop southward just off the coast into Friday and will swing toward California this weekend. … A few inches to perhaps a foot of snow may fall over the high country of the Sierra Nevada from the weekend storm.

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Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: International Groundwater Conference returns to San Francisco for first time since 2016

The Foundation’s Central Valley Tour at the end of April is nearing capacity and while there’s still some space on the tour, there’s another very exciting opportunity on the horizon this summer to engage directly with groundwater experts from California and across the world. Toward Sustainable Groundwater in Agriculture: June 18-20 The 3ʳᵈ International Groundwater Conference Linking Science & Policy returns to San Francisco for the first time since 2016 and you won’t want to miss this opportunity to hear about the latest scientific, management, legal and policy advances for sustaining our groundwater resources in agricultural regions around the world. Learn how you can attend, sponsor or exhibit at this amazing event!

Aquafornia news Agri-Pulse

Water right hearings underway for Sites Reservoir Project

The state water board has begun taking testimony in its long process to evaluate the potential environmental impacts of the proposed off-stream reservoir.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Blog: Water pollution is fueling ocean acidification. Environmentalists urge California to act

As the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities continue to increase the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the ocean is absorbing a large portion of the CO2, which is making seawater more acidic. … And here’s one important fact about ocean acidification: It’s not happening at the same rate everywhere. The California coast is one of the regions of the world where ocean acidification is occurring the fastest. … In particular, effluent discharged from coastal sewage treatment plants, which has high nitrogen levels from human waste, has been shown to significantly contribute to ocean acidification off the Southern California coast.

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Aquafornia news The Nevada Independent

How bulldozing a closed Motel 6 could help improve Lake Tahoe’s water clarity

The Upper Truckee River Watershed is the largest contributor of freshwater to Lake Tahoe. … With fewer floodplains, more fine sediment and nutrients began flowing in, and the lake’s clarity declined from more than 130 feet in the 1960s to a low point of 60 feet in 2017. … Once a healthy wetland, the property is paved with asphalt, housing a defunct Motel 6 and a long-shuttered restaurant. During the next several years, the buildings will be razed, the asphalt removed and the wetland restored, connecting 560 acres of the Upper Truckee Marsh on the shores of Lake Tahoe to 206-acre Johnson Meadow across Highway 50 to the south. It’s all part of a bigger effort to restore the lake’s clarity by reclaiming habitat around the 9 miles of the river closest to Lake Tahoe, an area that has seen heavy development.