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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 San Francisco Chronicle

Monday Top of the Scroll: Drought conditions have mostly disappeared in California. It’s a first in more than a decade

For the first time in more than four years, all of Northern California is free of drought or abnormally dry conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor data released on Thursday. California now has its lowest amount of drought conditions since 2011. “Considering how long they were in some form of abnormal dryness or drought, it’s pretty significant,” said Lindsay Johnson, a climatologist with the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. It’s the first time all of Northern California is free of abnormally dry or drought conditions since October 2019. Parts of Siskiyou and Modoc counties that were previously a stronghold of dry conditions are now classified as normal for the first time since Nov. 19, 2019.

Related Western drought articles: 

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Kings County Farm Bureau sues state for placing the region on probation because of groundwater woes

The Kings County Farm Bureau and two of its farmer members have filed suit against the state Water Resources Control Board, claiming the board exceeded its jurisdiction when it placed the Tulare Lake groundwater subbasin on probation April 16. A writ of mandate was filed May 15 in Kings County Superior Court. A writ is an order asking a governmental body, in this case the Water Board, to cease an action. The farm bureau is asking the board to vacate the resolution, which was passed unanimously. “The board’s decision to place the (Tulare Lake Subbasin) on probation violated the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act and expanded the board’s authority beyond its jurisdiction,” a Kings County Farm Bureau press release states.  The filing asks for declaratory and injunctive relief, and cites eight causes of action under the writ that the “probationary designation is arbitrary, capricious, and lacking in evidentiary support.” 

Related groundwater articles: 

Aquafornia news St. George News

Cox entertains idea of collaborating with California to bring more Colorado River water to Southern Utah

Gov. Spencer Cox said Thursday he is open to alternatives to bring more Colorado River water to Southern Utah, including a suggestion from the Utah Senate president to help California fund desalination facilities in exchange for part of its water share. … Earlier in the week, a report by Fox 13 News and the Colorado River Collaborative journalism initiative said that Utah Senate President J. Stuart Adams, R-Layton, has put forward the idea of providing part of the funds for California to construct desalination facilities to remove salt and brine from Pacific Ocean water to convert it to safe drinking water. In exchange, Utah would get a portion of California’s share of the river’s water.

Related Utah water article: 

Aquafornia news Chico Enterprise-Record

Oroville considers lifting fluoride requirement

Time has passed, but tension once ran deep between Oroville and Cal Water, when the utility company refused the city’s request to add fluoride to its water supply in 1954. In fact, Oroville complained to the California Public Utilities Commission in 1955, asking it to order Cal Water to obtain its fluoridation permit. Its case with the CPUC met a petition with the California Supreme Court in 1957, but Cal Water ultimately applied for and received its permit from the state Department of Health by the end of that year. It was said to be the first request of its kind in the United States to a state regulatory body like the CPUC, according to the March 1, 1955 Oroville Mercury-Register. But that’s all history, now that the Oroville City Council will consider Tuesday whether to require Cal Water add fluoride to the domestic water supply in city limits.

Aquafornia news Mono Lake Committee

Blog: Will LA take more Mono Lake water?

Last year was notably wet, raising Mono Lake five feet—and creating a conundrum. Under rules written three decades ago, the lake’s rise over the 6,380-foot elevation threshold means that on April 1, 2024, the maximum limit on water diversions from Mono Lake increased nearly fourfold. Yet decades of evidence show that increasing water diversions will erode the wet year gains, stopping the lake from reaching the mandated healthy 6,392-foot elevation. This flaw in the water diversion rules, now obvious after 30 years of implementation, has real-world results: Mono Lake is a decade late and eight feet short of achieving the healthy lake requirement. The California State Water Resources Control Board plans to examine this problem in a future hearing. 

Aquafornia news Grand Junction Sentinel

Glenwood $2 million pledge pushes Shoshone campaign over halfway mark

A Western Slope fundraising effort to buy the historic Shoshone hydroelectric plant water rights is now more than half of the way toward succeeding thanks to a $2 million contribution by the City of Glenwood Springs, just downstream of the Glenwood Canyon facility. Glenwood’s City Council unanimously approved the funding Thursday. The city’s recreation-based economy relies in part on reliable Colorado River flows through the canyon, which the plant’s water rights help assure by virtue of their seniority. 

Related article: 

Aquafornia news Representative Josh Harder

News release: Harder slams new Delta Tunnel report after Sacramento admits the project would irreparably harm Delta communities

Today, Rep. Harder called out Sacramento politicians and the California Department of Water Resources for trying to ship the Central Valley’s water south while causing “significant and unavoidable” impacts on Delta communities. In a benefit-cost analysis released yesterday, the state admits the cost of the project has grown to over $20 billion and would devastate Delta communities with $167 million in damages. The project would be a disaster for Delta communities by destroying farmland and worsening air quality. “This new analysis acknowledges what we’ve known all along: the Delta Tunnel is meant to benefit Beverly Hills and leave Delta communities out to dry,” said Rep. Harder. “This $20 billion boondoggle project wouldn’t create a single new gallon of water for anyone. I’m sick and tired of politicians in Sacramento ignoring our Valley voices and I will do everything in my power to stop them from stealing our water.” 

Related article: 

Aquafornia news Lodi News-Sentinel

Commentary: How tiny tags help Mokelumne fishes: Scientists use acoustic tech to track salmon and steelhead

Without their knowledge, they are tracked. There are little transmitters in their bodies, slipped inside when they were groggy, unknowing. The tracking goes on 24 hours a day, every day. Sometimes for weeks, sometimes for months. It is, though, all for the good. This surveillance is done so fish in the Mokelumne River – and fishes all over Northern California and beyond – might survive and thrive. Acoustic tracking, it is called. At any given time, there are hundreds of fishes swimming about with tiny implanted transmitters. As they swim, they ping out signals to an array of 400 receivers throughout the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and San Francisco Bay.
-Written by Rich Hanner, special to the News-Sentinel.

Aquafornia news Grist

Bottled water is full of microplastics. Is it still ‘natural’?

Is bottled water really “natural” if it’s contaminated with microplastics? A series of lawsuits recently filed against six bottled water brands claim that it’s deceptive to use labels like “100 percent mountain spring water” and “natural spring water” — not because of the water’s provenance, but because it is likely tainted with tiny plastic fragments. Reasonable consumers, the suits allege, would read those labels and assume bottled water to be totally free of contaminants; if they knew the truth, they might not have bought it. … Experts aren’t sure it’s a winning legal strategy, but it’s a creative new approach for consumers hoping to protect themselves against the ubiquity of microplastics. Research over the past several years has identified these particles — fragments of plastic less than 5 millimeters in diameter — just about everywhere, in nature and in people’s bodies. 

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Nearly all staff at Bay Area environmental group suddenly resign

Almost the entire staff of a 43-year-old Bay Area environmental group has resigned over a dispute about the publication of a book and management of the nonprofit that runs it. Six out of seven members of the staff of the Bay Institute, which does research and advocacy work to protect the San Francisco Bay and delta, announced their resignation last week to the board of Bay.org, the umbrella organization that runs the Bay Institute and also runs the Aquarium of the Bay in San Francisco and several other entities.  According to a May 16, statement by the group that resigned, which included four senior staff and two junior staff members, the action was prompted in part by the decision by Bay.org CEO and President George Jacob to publish a book authored by the staff before they had a chance to finalize their own revisions and before it received a peer review.

Aquafornia news California WaterBlog

Blog: Bill Bennett - Friend of fish and fisheries in the San Francisco Estuary

William A. Bennett (1955-2024)  was a top-notch scientist/biologist who spent much of his career improving our understanding of the ecology and management of native and non-native fishes in the SF Estuary (SFE) especially delta smelt and striped bass.  Those of us who had the good fortune to work with him knew Bill as an insightful biologist who worked hard to retain his objectivity on controversial fish management issues in the SFE.  

Aquafornia news Grand Junction Sentinel

Government coalition opposes Dolores monument

A coalition of Northwest Colorado governments has come out in opposition to designating the Dolores Canyon region as a national monument. The board of the Associated Governments of Northwest Colorado this week approved a resolution urging “President Biden, federal agencies and legislative bodies to consider the adverse impacts such designation would have on local governance, economy, access, and national security.” The board’s action came the same week Mesa County commissioners passed a resolution opposing the monument designation. … [The AGNC] worries about potential impacts to things such as farming/ranching and recreational access, and to potential mining of uranium and lithium in the region that “represents a critical matter of national security, particularly considering the current state of global affairs.”

Related land use and conservation article: 

Aquafornia news Santa Cruz Sentinel

Despite short-term gains, ‘future is still uncertain’ for Big Basin Water

The court-appointed manager of an embattled utility provider in the Santa Cruz Mountains reported that circumstances aren’t as dire as they were six months ago, but the system and its hundreds of customers aren’t out of the woods. “We’re still standing,” is the simplest way Nicolas Jaber, an attorney with Serviam by Wright LLP, could put it during a Wednesday town hall meeting in Boulder Creek for customers of Big Basin Water Co. Jaber is also a project manager with the Irvine-based law firm assigned by a Santa Cruz County Superior Court judge last fall to assume operational control of the water system after it spent years on the brink of collapse. Only a couple of months later, a judge assigned even more responsibility to Serviam by Wright by having it take over Big Basin’s wastewater treatment plant — serving a subset of customers in the Fallen Leaf neighborhood — after raw waste was spotted spilling onto open earth at the facility. 

Aquafornia news Orange County Register

Coastkeeper says no more extensions for addressing water quality issues at South Orange County riding park

All equestrian operations have been suspended at the Rancho Mission Viejo Riding Park after its operators did not complete a project to address water quality issues by a settlement’s deadline. In 2017, the nonprofit Orange County Coastkeeper sued San Juan Capistrano and the Ridland Group, which operates the riding park, alleging Clean Water Act violations from horse-washing water discharge that contained feces, soap and urine. As part of a settlement agreement, the city took on nearly $8 million in necessary improvements to prevent contaminated water from running off into nearby San Juan Creek. But the Ridland Group, which runs equestrian events and operations at the riding park, did not put in a storm drain before the settlement’s April 15 deadline, according to San Juan Capistrano officials.

Related article: 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California’s first Black land trust fights climate change, makes the outdoors more inclusive

Jade Stevens stands at the edge of a snowy cliff and takes in the jaw-dropping panorama of the Sierra. Peaks reaching more than a mile high form the backdrop to Bear Valley, a kaleidoscope of green pastures mixed with ponderosa pines, firs, cedars and oak trees. Stevens, 34, is well aware that some of her fellow Black Americans can’t picture themselves in places like this. Camping, hiking, mountain biking, snow sports, venturing to locales with wild animals in their names — those are things white people do. As co-founder of the 40 Acre Conservation League, California’s first Black-led land conservancy, she’s determined to change that perception. Darryl Lucien snowshoes near Lake Putt. The nonprofit recently secured $3 million in funding from the state Wildlife Conservation Board and the nonprofit Sierra Nevada Conservancy to purchase 650 acres of a former logging forest north of Lake Tahoe. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Couple sues Newport Beach after same water main breaks twice

The trial dates for two related lawsuits filed against the city of Newport Beach accusing it of negligence in the maintenance of a water main that burst and flooded a local home twice has been set for this fall, according to attorney Jesse Creed. Amy and Marshall Senk have owned their home on Evening Canyon Road in Corona del Mar since 2002 and, after remodeling it, began living there in August 2006. In October 2020, a water main owned and operated by the city failed and burst, which led to “catastrophic” flooding of the property with 500,000 gallons of water, according to a complaint filed in Orange County Superior Court in April 2023 by the Senks’ attorneys from Panish|Shea|Ravipudi LLP. The damage left in the wake of the failure made the house uninhabitable.

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Friday Top of the Scroll: $20 billion: The Delta tunnel’s new price tag

California’s contentious and long-debated plan to replumb the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and pump more water south finally has a price tag: about $20 billion.  The new estimate for the Delta tunnel project — which would transform the massive water system that sends Northern California water south to farms and cities — is $4 billion higher than a 2020 estimate, largely because of inflation. Included is almost $1.2 billion to offset local harms and environmental damage, such as impacts on salmon and rare fish that state officials have called “potentially significant.” The goal of the project is to collect and deliver more water to two-thirds of California’s population and 750,000 acres of farmland during wet periods … But environmental groups and many Delta residents have long warned that the tunnel could put the imperiled Delta ecosystem at even greater risk, sapping freshwater flows needed for fish, farms and communities in the region.

Related articles: 

Aquafornia news KUNC - Greeley, Colo.

Negotiator says 7 Western states are close to a Colorado River water sharing deal

Policymakers say they’re getting closer to an agreement between seven Western states on how to manage the Colorado River in the future. But details from those closed-door negotiations have been limited. Utah’s top water negotiator said states have met “three or four times” since they split into two factions and put out competing proposals back in March. Gene Shawcroft didn’t give specifics but said they’re making progress on a strategy to share water after 2026, when the current river management plan expires. “I think the commitment level to stay together on a seven state proposal is significantly higher now than it was a few weeks ago,” he said. It does not appear likely that Shawcroft and his allies are willing to back off from a proposal to send less water downstream to California, Arizona and Nevada each year. 

Related Colorado basin water article: 

Aquafornia news Hanford Sentinel

Corcoran has sunk nearly 5 feet

Land subsidence remains the biggest issue in the new state regulation of groundwater. The state Water Board reports that subsidence measured as much as 7 feet just east of Corcoran between June 2015 and January 2024. Groundwater pumping west of Highway 99 has caused the land to sink at least 4 to 5 feet according to a DWR database. The worry here is the collapse of water delivering infrastructure. Tulare Lake farmers have been asked to install metering on their pumps 90 days after the decision to put the GSA on probation which was made April 16. That means by mid-July pumpers must install metering as well as begin reporting how much water they are extracting.

Aquafornia news Washington Post

Commentary: Why a water war is brewing between the U.S. and Mexico

A water dispute between the United States and Mexico that goes back decades is turning increasingly urgent in Texas communities that rely on the Rio Grande. Their leaders are now demanding the Mexican government either share water or face cuts in U.S. aid. Sign up for the Climate Coach newsletter and get advice for life on our changing planet, in your inbox every Tuesday. In a deepening diplomatic conflict, Mexico is behind in obligations under an 80-year-old treaty that governs cross-border flows of the drought-stricken Colorado River. It has for decades resisted water deliveries to the United States from its reservoirs in the Rio Grande basin as it faces its own drought pressures on thirsty and valuable crops bound for sale across the border.
-Written by Scott Dance, reporter for The Washington Post covering extreme weather news.