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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 Big Pivots

Blog: These ‘Traveling Wilburys’ of the Colorado River are being heard

… An ad hoc group of six Colorado River experts began assembling reports in 2025. They have been dubbed the Traveling Wilburys of the Colorado River Basin. … Big Pivots convened a conversation with several of the report authors on Sept. 18, a week after their latest report had been issued. …That report delivered the numbers that collectively showed dramatically increased risk during the upcoming two years of the dams on the Colorado River becoming dysfunctional.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Half a billion dollars for a sinking California highway? Gavin Newsom may OK it

Gov. Gavin Newsom may greenlight a half-billion-dollar effort to widen a North Bay highway [Highway 37] that Caltrans has acknowledged is sinking under its own weight. … [T]he sinking expressway was surrounded by sinking levees, which could be overwhelmed by the more intense and more frequent storms already occurring due to climate change. … The highway blocks flows into and out of the wetland habitat, cutting off healthy functions of the ecosystem. … Caltrans has agreed to open up more channels under the roadway, raise the bridge over Tolay Creek in Sonoma County and open the channel underneath to allow more movement of water.

Other marsh sinking news:

Aquafornia news The New Lede

Industry, environmental groups spar over California bill to ban PFAS in cookware

As US states increasingly pass laws to limit PFAS chemicals in consumer products, a debate is heating up over a California bill that proposes banning the sale of cookware with intentionally added “forever chemicals” beginning in 2030. intentionally added PFAS beginning in January 2028. … The bill’s supporters argue that PTFE from cookware adds to the flow of forever chemicals in household waste, adding to the costly public burden of treating PFAS-tainted wastewater. … A coalition of cookware industry leaders, however, is pushing back against similar proposed bans across the country.

Other PFAS and microplastics news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

Illegal dredging operations discovered at several California waterways

Five individuals have been caught illegally mining along several California waterways, state officials announced. According to a Sept. 26 news release from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the citations began in August of last year, when authorities found someone operating a suction dredge — a powerful tool that sucks materials out of underwater cracks and crevices — on the Salmon River. … According to the CDFW, this motorized equipment can harm fish and their native habitat by releasing contaminants, causing erosion and potentially creating more favorable conditions for the invasive signal crayfish.

Aquafornia news Grist

California extends cap-and-trade, as Indigenous nations grapple with the trade-offs

… [L]ast week, California Governor Gavin Newsom extended the state’s cap-and-trade program until 2045. … [T]he [Yurok] tribe has now received tens of millions of dollars in carbon credit sales, boosting its economy and funding environmental projects like recovery work on the Klamath River in the wake of dam removal. But critics of carbon markets remain staunchly opposed to the programs, alleging that the scheme perpetuates colonialism, incentivizes the theft of Indigenous resources, and allows companies to essentially pay to keep polluting without having to change their activities.

Aquafornia news The New Lede

How Big Sugar pushed fluoride — new study alleges a century of spin

The sugar industry and companies that make sweet drinks and foods have spent nearly a century downplaying sugar’s role in health problems and distorting the science around fluoride — and the practice continues today, according to a new study.  The study, published in the journal Environmental Health, adds to evidence that the industry promoted fluoride as the solution to tooth decay to avoid scrutiny over sugar’s role. … The findings come as two states — Utah and Florida — and dozens of communities have banned fluoride in public water.

Related article:

Aquafornia news The Story Exchange

Blog: An innovator in pest control has her sights on invasive species

After 35 years of working in organic pest control, serial entrepreneur Pam Marrone is on a new mission to eradicate invasive species using alternatives to terrible chemicals. In particular, she’s on a quest for what she calls “the holy grail” – an eco-friendly herbicide that will zap out non-native weeds. “We have the team that can really execute it,” says Marrone, whose 2-year-old startup, Invasive Species Corp., known as ISC, is already helping the state of California find a sustainable way to deal with golden mussels, which clog waterways and damage water treatment facilities. “There’s nobody doing exactly what we’re doing with invasive species.”

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Monday Top of the Scroll: How the first major Pacific storm of the rainy season will impact California

The first major Pacific storm of the wet season is forecast to wallop the West Coast. … Some Bay Area cities could record their wettest September day in decades. Showers will remain in the forecast Monday through at least Wednesday. … Rain showers are expected to linger across Northern California on Tuesday, where snow may mix in at the summits of Tahoe ski resorts. … Although the rain probably won’t be enough to completely end fire season in most places, it should moisten vegetation considerably and lower fire risk significantly, especially in the Coastal Ranges and northern Sierra.

Other wet season forecast news:

Aquafornia news KGW8 (Portland, Ore.)

Chinook salmon seen passing upper Klamath River dam for the first time since lower dams removed

Video captured a Chinook salmon successfully summiting the fish ladder at an upper Klamath River dam this week, according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife — the first known instance since the removal of four lower dams last year. The video comes from Keno Dam, located just southwest of Klamath Falls. Salmon were previously spotted on the Keno Dam fish ladders last year, but this is the first time one’s been spotted passing the dam. The camera was installed just the day before. 

Other dam news:

Aquafornia news The Center Square

Data center energy and water needs raise concerns

Data center companies want to triple Nevada’s energy capacity to meet the power demands of a rapidly growing industry. … But the new demand comes at an awkward time for Nevada. Water access in the state is under severe threat by a dwindling Colorado River. Water by the hundreds of millions of gallons is commonly used by data centers to effectively cool the hard working computers. While a law to ban the most water wasteful centers — referred to as evaporative cooling —  was shot down in 2024, no such data centers have been approved since February of last year.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

As Trump eyes overhauling FEMA, Californians’ flood insurance at risk

More than half a million Californians live among waterways in low-lying towns of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. … [T]housands of homeowners in the region are insured against flooding thanks to the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), which backs policies sold by private insurers. … But the flood insurance program is administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the Trump administration says that agency is in need of a major overhaul. … The flood insurance program might even be eliminated, experts say. 

Other federal funding news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Capitol Times (Phoenix)

Opinion: Arizona’s water future – ‘Ag to Urban’ is a good start

… In July, the Legislature passed, and Governor Katie Hobbs signed, an unprecedented law to authorize the transfer of groundwater rights from agricultural to urban use within Maricopa, Pinal and Pima counties. This framework legislation – called “Ag to Urban” – enables farmers in these three counties to sell and transfer their groundwater rights to the home building industry. … To gain the necessary majority for passage, Ag to Urban contains a significant limitation: the credits made available to home builders can be used only within a one-mile radius of the farmland being retired from production, thereby ensuring that local communities will retain a continuing share in ongoing regional development.
–Written by Bruce Babbitt, a former governor of Arizona and former U.S. secretary of the interior under President Bill Clinton.

Other groundwater regulation news around the West:

Aquafornia news SFGate

This SoCal water was once bottled and sold. Now it’s returning to nature.

… Last summer, Citizens for Los Angeles Wildlife, or CLAW, and the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority purchased the approximately 2.5-acre parcel that’s home to Laurel Spring for $1 million after two months of intense and hurried fundraising. … The property near the corner of Laurel Canyon Boulevard and Lookout Mountain Avenue is home to a spring and stream that flow year-round, providing a valuable water source for species … which are dealing with increased habitat fragmentation from development and roadways that can make accessing the Santa Monica Mountains’ limited water sources even more difficult. 

Aquafornia news High Country News (Paonia, Colo.)

What do fens do? Make peat, store water and help combat climate change

… Peatlands — fens and bogs — are key climate regulators. (Bogs are maintained by precipitation, but fens, which, in North America, occur in the Northeast, Midwest and Mountain West, depend on groundwater.) … In relatively dry southern Colorado, they also provide a secondary round of water storage. The first round is Colorado’s snowpack, which, as it melts, feeds groundwater that fens’ spongy peat captures and later releases to dwindling waterways and drying landscapes after the snow is gone. But the steep and degraded bare patch at Ophir Pass no longer functions.

Other wetlands news:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

San Diego’s water department is not alright

Amid handwringing at San Diego City Hall over next week’s vote to hike water rates, city analysts dropped a harrowing report revealing how easily the department that handles water and wastewater could collapse without them. … The analysts’ report says that if councilmembers refuse to raise rates at all, the Public Utilities Department would still have to make an immediate almost 30 percent cut to its budget. That would likely come in the form of staff layoffs and disruptions in water or wastewater service, which could be anything from unanswered customer service calls to more frequent water pipe breaks.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Bay City News (Berkeley, Calif.)

San Mateo unveils $597M wastewater plant, largest infrastructure project in city history

After more than five years of construction, San Mateo’s upgraded Wastewater Treatment Plant was unveiled in a ribbon-cutting ceremony. It is the largest infrastructure project in San Mateo’s history, and developers say it’s one of the most sustainable wastewater treatment facilities in the country. … The plant is part of San Mateo’s $1 billion Clean Water Program, an initiative that was launched in 2015 in response to a cease and desist order the city received mandating sewer system improvements to prevent overflow into the San Francisco Bay. 

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

Gold miners busted for illegal suction dredging in NorCal waterways

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) has cited five individuals in Siskiyou County for illegally using suction dredge equipment in state waterways, a practice banned due to its harmful impacts on native fish and wildlife. On August 20, 2024, wardens discovered a man actively dredging the Salmon River near Cecilville in search of gold. … Although the case was initially dismissed due to a clerical error, prosecutors have since refiled charges, with arraignment set for October 7, 2025, in Siskiyou County. Since July, four others have been cited for unlawful dredging on the Klamath River and Elk Creek.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Modesto Irrigation director, accused of stealing water, blames political conspiracy

In his first public comments since facing allegations of water theft, Modesto Irrigation District Director Larry Byrd said during Tuesday’s board meeting that the claims are a conspiracy to hurt him politically. An independent investigation into Byrd’s water use at an almond orchard near La Grange, first reported Sept. 15 in The Modesto Focus, is moving forward, MID General Manager Jimi Netniss said Tuesday. Byrd said, “I completely support (it) and will fully cooperate.”

Aquafornia news KUNR (Reno, Nev.)

Can New Mexico’s centuries-old acequias survive the worst drought in 1,200 years?

Albuquerque’s South Valley is surrounded by brown desert and towering red mesas. But, inside the valley, the land is sprouting lush trees and green fields. Here, the Rio Grande spills into irrigation ditches called acequias. They wind through the landscape of this small Hispanic community, carrying rain and snowmelt straight to crops. … For hundreds of years, Hispanic communities across the Southwest have relied on these networks of hand-dug irrigation ditches to water their crops and feed their families. But now, these ancient traditions are under pressure from a changing climate and shrinking water supplies.

Other acequia news:

Aquafornia news California Department of Fish and Wildlife

News release: White sturgeon opener kicks off with a no-fee report card for this season

The white sturgeon sport fishing season opens Oct. 1, 2025, through June 30, 2026, for catch-and-release fishing in the ocean, San Francisco Bay, Delta and lower Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. … Though recent results from white sturgeon monitoring surveys by CDFW suggest the white sturgeon population has continued to decline, science indicates that non-lethal take via a catch-and-release fishery will not harm the long-term viability of the white sturgeon population. Factors such as harmful algal blooms, poaching, poor river and Delta conditions and historical overharvest have been shown to have significant negative impacts on the population.