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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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Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, 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 Whittier Daily News

Commentary: Metropolitan Water District soaks taxpayers with higher property taxes

In what may be an illegal tax increase, the board of the Metropolitan Water District just approved a two-year budget that doubles the property tax it collects in its six-county service area. MWD is a water wholesaler with 26 cities and water retailers as its customers. Through those entities, MWD supplies water to about 19 million people in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura counties. The new budget raises the wholesale rates by 8.5% in 2025 and then by 8.5% again in 2026. The rates for treated water will go up 11% and then 10%. Metropolitan said it has to raise rates and taxes to cover its operating costs because they’ve been selling less water, first because of drought, and then because of rain.

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Aquafornia news San Francisco Examiner

Opinion: Why San Francisco stands in way of California water reform

The recently announced closure of the salmon fishing season delivered yet another devastating blow to the thousands of families that depend on commercial and recreational fishing for their livelihoods. For the second year in a row, fishing boats at Fisherman’s Wharf will remain mothballed. The recent drought contributed to the salmon decline, but the larger problem is archaic water policies that allow too much water to be diverted from our rivers and the Delta. As a result, salmon experience manmade droughts almost every year, and the droughts we notice become mega-droughts for fish. … California desperately needs water reform, but strong opposition has come from what might seem like an unlikely suspect. The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, which manages our Hetch Hetchy Water System, is one of the worst culprits when it comes to poor stewardship of our aquatic ecosystems.
-Written by Peter Drekmeier, Policy Director for the Tuolumne River Trust; and Scott Artis; Executive Director of the Golden State Salmon Association.​

Aquafornia news The Guardian

Friday Top of the Scroll: US lawmakers Elizabeth Warren and Ro Khanna seek to ban trade in water rights

With private investors poised to profit from water scarcity in the west, US senator Elizabeth Warren and representative Ro Khanna are pursuing a bill to prohibit the trading of water as a commodity. The lawmakers will introduce the bill on Thursday afternoon, the Guardian has learned. “Water is not a commodity for the rich and powerful to profit off of,” said Warren, the progressive Democrat from Massachusetts. … Water-futures trading allows investors – including hedge funds, farmers and municipalities – to trade water and water rights as a commodity, similar to oil or gold. The practice is currently limited to California, where the world’s first water futures market was launched. So far, the market hasn’t taken off, dampened by the reality that the physical trade of water in the state has been limited. After a couple of wet years in California, the price of water futures has also plummeted.

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Aquafornia news Berkeley Lab

New study: Unraveling the mysteries of consecutive atmospheric river events

… Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) recently conducted a study … finding that more intense atmospheric rivers are more likely to occur in succession within a short period of time. … California’s winter climate is largely defined by these atmospheric rivers – long, narrow regions in the atmosphere that transfer water vapor from the tropics, most commonly associated with the West Coast coming from the Pacific Ocean. When they make landfall, they can release massive amounts of rain and snow.

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Aquafornia news Water World

California State Water Resources Control Board will hold a multiday workshop to discuss voluntary agreements

The California State Water Resources Control Board will hold a multiday public workshop to discuss voluntary agreements (VAs) proposed by water users and state and federal agencies. The VAs proposed are to update the Sacramento River and Delta components of the Water Quality Control Plan for the San Francisco Bay/Sacamento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary (Bay-Delta Plan). The purpose for the planned workshop is for the VA parties to provide a detailed overview of the VA proposal. It is also planned to receive input and answer questions from board members and receive input from the public. The workshop will take place from April 24 through April 26, 2024. The schedule for the workshop can be found here.

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Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: Early ‘Big Day of Giving’ begins today!

There is no need to wait to show your love for the Water Education Foundation! Starting today, you can donate to our Big Day of Giving campaign and help us reach our fundraising goal of $15,000 by May 2. Big Day of Giving is a 24-hour online fundraising marathon for nonprofits. Donations will benefit our programs and publications across California and the West. Here are just a few things your donation will help us accomplish in 2024: Expand Project WET teacher training workshops to benefit K-12 students throughout California. Update our Layperson’s Guide to Water Recycling at a time when the drought-weary West is looking to stretch its water supplies. Continue free access to our Western Water news coverage and daily water newsfeed known as Aquafornia. Provide scholarships for our tours, events and workshops so everyone can learn about the West’s most critical natural resource.

Aquafornia news The Washington Post

New Mexico town has endured toxic arsenic in drinking water for years

Rosana Monge clutched her husband’s death certificate and an envelope of his medical records as she approached the microphone and faced members of the water utility board on a recent Monday in this city in southeast New Mexico. “I have proof here of arsenic tests — positive on him, that were done by the Veterans Administration,” she testified about her husband, whose 2023 records show he had been diagnosed with “exposure to arsenic” before his death in February at age 79. “What I’m asking is for a health assessment of the community.” … Naturally occurring in the soil in New Mexico, arsenic seeps into the groundwater used for drinking. In water, arsenic has no taste, odor or color — but can be removed with treatment. Over time, it can cause a variety of health problems, including cancer, diabetes and heart disease, endangering the lives of people in this low-income and overwhelmingly Latino community.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Commentary: Is the death of salmon fishing drawing near?

… The main reason is the decline of the salmon population in the Sacramento River to such an unsustainable level that there’s reason to fear that it may not recover for years, if ever — unless government policies are radically reconsidered. … The crisis underscores the utter failure of the state’s political leaders to balance the needs of stakeholders in its water supply. In this case, the conflict is between large-scale farms on one side and environmental and fishery interests on the other. For decades, agribusiness has had the upper hand in this conflict. 
-Written by Michael Hiltzik, LA Times columnist.

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Aquafornia news Newsweek

California rain map shows cities to be hit hardest by ’significant’ storm

National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologists shared a map on social media that reveals which Southern California cities will be hit hardest by an approaching storm expected to arrive this weekend. California has faced an abnormally wet winter as moisture-laden storms and atmospheric rivers dumped a deluge of rain and snow on the state, beginning in January. The excessive rainfall has resulted from a slew of atmospheric rivers that have battered the state this month. Last year, more than a dozen of them helped alleviate the state’s severe drought situation and replenished many of the state’s reservoirs, but the storms also caused devastating floods and landslides.

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Aquafornia news Farm Progress

Opinion: Hand wringing aside, alfalfa is here to stay

The mainstream media continues its obsession with the amount of water that goes to producing alfalfa and other important forage crops in the West. The Colorado River right now is understandably a favorite topic of environmental journalists, as state, federal and tribal decision-makers are scrambling to negotiate a long-term river operating agreement to replace the current one that expires in 2026. Those arguments were teed up again last month when the Los Angeles Times broadcast a recent study showing that agriculture is the “dominant” user of Colorado River water, “about three times the combined usage of all the cities that depend on the river”. Unfortunately, not a single Colorado River farmer or water manager was mentioned in that story.
-Written by Dan Keppen, executive director of the Family Farm Alliance.

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

Commentary: American River levee work angers residents at loss of trees

Since the founding of Sacramento, residents have treasured the beauty of the American River while living in fear of its destructive power. Were the American to defy its man-made banks in a series of historic storms, hundreds of thousands of residents would face a flood disaster modern-day Sacramento has never seen. The more we try to tame the river — as when the Folsom Dam was constructed in 1955 to deny the river its floodplain — the more we disfigure it. This ugly trade-off has marked the passage of time in Sacramento and is as central to the essence of this community as the state Capitol or the Tower Bridge. A proposal to shore up some erosion spots along the lower American River is the most recent flashpoint in the trade-off between public safety and nature.
-Written by Tom Philip, Sacramento Bee columnist.

Aquafornia news CBS - San Francisco

Replacement Central Valley canal threatened by groundwater extraction

The land had been sinking so fast for so long that the canal was failing, so they built an entire new canal, but now that’s sinking as well. It’s a dramatic reminder that after two good years, California’s water challenges still run deep. The Friant-Kern Canal, which runs along the east side of the San Joaquin Valley, and it is the lifeline for many farmers and communities in that region. The system starts at Millerton Lake, and from there, it runs 152 miles to the south, powered entirely by gravity. But gravity means going downhill and that has gotten complicated. Decades of groundwater pumping have caused the valley floor to sink, and the canal with it. KPIX first toured the site back in August of 2022. The fix is a duplicate canal built right along side the old one, only higher, so the water can still flow downhill.

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Aquafornia news Knee Deep Times

Harmful blooms spur more wastewater upgrades

Palo Alto’s bioreactor towers are aging out, like a lot of the clean water infrastructure constructed around the Bay Area in the 1950s-1970s. Recent wind gusts, swirling around the edges of February’s atmospheric river storms, have not been friendly to the towers either. On a March visit to the Palo Alto Regional Water Quality Control Plant, which treats 18 million gallons of wastewater every day, I could see a big chunk missing from the wall of one rusty cauldron and tumbleweeds caught in the metalwork.  Elsewhere on the 25-acre site, the plant’s facilities are visibly undergoing a $193 million overhaul. The overhaul will help the plant meet increasing regulatory limits on the amount of nitrogen that dischargers can pipe into the shallows of San Francisco Bay.  

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Questions abound in case of contamination of Sacramento River tributary

A federal judge denied summary judgment to a California nonprofit that accuses a solid waste facility in Butte County of allowing contaminants to seep out of its facility and into a wetland preserve that leads to a Sacramento River tributary during a major rainstorm. Nonprofit California Open Lands maintains a wetland preserve in Butte County that sits near the Neal Road Recycling and Waste Facility, operated by the Butte County Department of Public Works. 

Aquafornia news Sierra Daily News

Plumas County review casts doubt on mining rights for Engels-Superior mines

Plumas County recently commissioned an independent review of vested mining rights for the Engels-Superior Mines, situated in the county. Best Best & Krieger LLP (BBK), a prominent law firm, undertook this investigation, posting its findings in a detailed memorandum on April 15, 2024. The memorandum addresses a request by California-Engels Mining Company (owner) and US Copper Corp (applicant). This request pertains to the Engels Mine and Superior Mine located in Indian Valley on the Feather River watershed. The memorandum, accessible on the Plumas County Zoning Administrator website, illuminates the historical context and legal intricacies surrounding the mining operations. It discusses five determinations sought by the applicant, including the mining history, vesting date, extent of mining, continuity of mining rights, and intent to continue mining.

Aquafornia news CleanTechnica

Blog: U.S. hydropower generation expected to increase by 6% in 2024 following last year’s lows

Last year, U.S. hydropower electricity generation fell to its lowest since 2001. This year, we expect hydropower to increase 6% and account for 250 billion kilowatthours of electricity generation in the power sector, based on forecasts in our Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO). We expect hydropower to increase in nearly every part of the country, with notable increases in the Southeast and in the Northwest and Rockies. We expect other regions with significant hydropower generation to either increase slightly, such as in New York, or remain about the same, such as in California.

Aquafornia news CA Department of Water Resources

Blog: First-of-its-kind watershed study highlights how innovative tools help build climate resilience in the San Joaquin Valley

California’s changing climate brings new challenges each year for water managers as they navigate extreme shifts from drought to flood while working to ensure safe, reliable water supplies for California’s 39 million residents. Water managers address these challenges in their local watersheds, which are often at the forefront of the impacts of climate change.

Aquafornia news California WaterBlog

Blog: Support our students and engagement at the Center for Watershed Sciences

California WaterBlog is a long-running outreach project from the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences, a research center dedicated to interdisciplinary study of water challenges, particularly in California. We focus on environmentally and economically sustainable solutions for managing rivers, lakes, groundwater, and estuaries. This week, for UC Davis Give Day (April 19-20) we’re sharing a little about the Center and the work we do. I’m Karrigan Bork, the Center’s Interim Director, helping out while Director Andrew Rypel is on sabbatical, and I’ll be your guide for this brief tour through the “Shed”. If you would like to donate to help the Center continue important work, I’ve shared our giving link below.  

Aquafornia news KJZZ - Tempe

Ancient farmers dug canals that shaped Phoenix’s modern water system

Just south of the intersection of North Horne and East McKellips Road in Mesa sits the Park of the Canals. It’s one of just a few places where you can still see remnants of canals dug by the ancestral Sonoran Desert people who occupied the Salt River Valley before the time of Christ. Those ancient farmers have been referred to as the “Hohokam” but it’s not the name of a tribe or a people, and their O’Odham, Hopi, and Zuni descendants do not call them that. Early archaeologists believe the culture developed in Mexico and moved into what is now Arizona. In order to flourish, they built an extensive canal system to bring water to villages and irrigate thousands of acres of agricultural fields.

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Thursday Top of the Scroll: California sets nation’s first standard for cancer-causing chemical

In an effort to protect more than 5 million Californians from a cancer-causing contaminant, state regulators today set a new standard that is expected to increase the cost of water for many people throughout the state. The State Water Resources Control Board unanimously approved the nation’s first drinking water standard for hexavalent chromium, which is found naturally in some California groundwater as well as water contaminated by industries. Now water suppliers will be forced to install costly treatment to limit the chemical in water to no more than 10 parts per billion — equivalent to about 10 drops in an Olympic-sized swimming pool.

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