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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 Courthouse News Service

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Proposed decision favors California in delta tunnel project dispute

A draft decision issued Monday on appeals to California’s Delta Conveyance Project appears to hand the state a major win in its battle to make the massive project a reality. However, while discarding most of the appeals against the project, the recommendation to the Delta Stewardship Council calls for sending two issues about the project back to the state Department of Water Resources for reconsideration. It also wants yearly reports from the department about its outreach efforts to tribes and various agencies. … A formal vote on the decision by the council is expected [Thursday]. …The project calls for two intake facilities by the Sacramento River, near the town of Hood, that could handle 6,000 cubic feet of water per second. A tunnel some 45 miles in length would carry water south to the Bethany Reservoir and ultimately to Southern California.

Other Bay-Delta news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Lake Powell will get a short-term boost amid Colorado River drought

The nation’s second-largest reservoir will get a boost to keep water levels from dropping too low, but the fix won’t last long. Water levels in Lake Powell, which sits in southern Utah and northern Arizona, are on course for historic lows after a record-setting dry winter and a 26-year drought fueled by climate change. The federal government announced a strategy to prop up the reservoir and avoid infrastructure problems at Glen Canyon Dam, which holds it back in Page, Arizona. The Bureau of Reclamation will take water from Flaming Gorge Reservoir in Utah and Wyoming and send it downstream to Lake Powell. The agency, which manages major dams and reservoirs across the Western U.S., will also ratchet back the amount of water released from Lake Powell.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Winter storm warning for Sierra as another multi-foot dump expected

A looming storm is forecast to drop more than 2 feet of snow in parts of the Sierra Nevada, prompting the National Weather Service to issue winter storm warnings. It’s the second round of winter storm warnings this month in the Sierra, a rarity for April. … The heaviest snow is expected Tuesday afternoon and evening above 5,000 feet in the northern Sierra and above 7,000 feet in the southern Sierra. … April storms are propping up a scarce Sierra snowpack. California’s snowpack was just 18% of normal as of Monday morning following the state’s warmest and driest March on record.

Other California storm news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Record-low snowpack and historic heat threaten New Mexico’s time-honored irrigation canals

… This year, New Mexicans are confronting record-low snowpack, which is essential for supplying an even flow of water into acequia systems. Record heat isn’t helping, as it accelerates evaporation throughout New Mexico waterways and has contributed to an early melt off of the already thin snowpack. … New Mexico’s acequias date back to the late 16th century, when the Spanish colonized the region. By 1700, what would become New Mexico had around 60 of these community-managed irrigation ditches. Today, there are more than 700 active acequias in the state, many of them concentrated in Northern New Mexico.

Other snow drought impact news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

California’s largest power user strains to meet 2035 climate goal

At the Edmonston Pumping Plant in Kern County, giant pumps lift water from an aqueduct near the Central Valley’s floor high up over the Tehachapi Mountains — roughly 2,000 feet — through a series of tunnels and tanks to the Southern California cities below. It’s part of the State Water Project, a sprawling state-run system of pumps, canals and reservoirs that delivers water to 27 million Californians. It’s also the single biggest electricity user in the state. The project’s massive energy demand makes it an early testing ground for one of California’s most aggressive climate targets: that state agencies must run on 100 percent renewable and zero-carbon electricity by 2035, a full decade ahead of the state’s broader 2045 goal.

Other water and energy news:

Aquafornia news KTAR (Phoenix)

Colorado River funds being held as leverage, say lawmakers

Two Arizona congressmen, one Democrat and one Republican, are calling on the Trump administration to stop holding back billions of dollars meant to fight the historic drought choking the Colorado River. They warn the money could disappear if it isn’t spent soon. Reps. Greg Stanton and Andy Biggs, a Democrat and Republican respectively, co-signed the letter to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and budget chief Russell Vought on April 9, demanding the government release unspent drought relief funds that Congress set aside nearly four years ago. … The problem, the lawmakers say, is that federal officials are using the cash as leverage.

Related article:

Aquafornia news KSL (Salt Lake City)

More migratory birds flock to Great Salt Lake as other saline lakes decline

… As a biologist with Utah’s Division of Wildlife Resources [Kyle] Stone serves as the Project Leader for the Great Salt Lake Ecosystem Program, which has been counting migratory birds around the lake and its wetlands since 1997. “With these low lake conditions, we’re seeing a lot of the birds that are here are being artificially concentrated in the areas that are left,” Stone said about the current spring migration. … As other saline lakes decline, particularly in California, more of the birds are being drawn to Great Salt Lake. “Used to be a lot of those birds were going to the Salton Sea,” Stone explained. “Now that the Salton Sea is mostly dry, that’s no longer available to them.” Stone noted similar behaviors happening with the decline of Mono Lake, just east of Yosemite National Park. 

Aquafornia news Water Blueprint for the San Joaquin Valley

Blog: The mussel threat is already here

You may recall a line of bravado from any number of action movies, “That ain’t a threat, it’s a promise.” Sorry to say this part out loud but, the invasive Limnoperna fortunei, also known as the golden mussel, is no longer a hypothetical threat – it’s here in the San Joaquin Valley. More importantly, these mussels can clog pipes, damage pumps, and threaten the reliability of California’s water delivery systems. First detected in North America in 2024, golden mussels have rapidly spread throughout California’s interconnected water system. … According to the California Department of Fish & Wildlife (CDF&W), golden mussels have been found from Martinez in the East Bay to San Diego.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

These salmon got high on cocaine. That wasn’t the craziest part.

… In recent years, there has been an alarming rise in the number of waterways polluted with cocaine, prompting scientists to wonder how fish might be handling their highs. As it turns out, fish indeed get wired when on cocaine. In a study published Monday in the journal Current Biology, Dr. [Jack] Brand and his colleagues show that coked-up salmon swim faster and travel farther than their sober counterparts. This study prompts additional questions about the effects that human drug habits may be having on salmon and other freshwater fish. … A 2016 study of the salmon in the Puget Sound in Washington found Prozac, Advil, Benadryl and Lipitor, as well as cocaine, in the tissues of juvenile chinook salmon.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Army Corps narrows its scope of regulated wetlands

The Trump administration is still regulating federally protected wetlands, despite recent remarks from a senior official about the Army Corps of Engineers moving away from the practice. Lee Forsgren, principal deputy assistant secretary of the Army for Civil Works, said during a conference last month that the administration was “getting out of the business of regulating wetlands.” Reported by Bloomberg Law and other outlets, the comment was later confirmed by the agency. Yet Army Corps officials now say that the statement was not meant as a total abdication of oversight over wetlands. Rather, it reflects the agency’s limited authority under the Clean Water Act, the top political appointee for the Army Corps said in a brief interview last week.

Related article:

Aquafornia news KALW (San Francisco)

Your Call Podcast: Amy Cordalis on her family’s fight to save the Klamath River

On this edition of Your Call’s One Planet Series, Indigenous rights and environmental advocate Amy Bowers Cordalis discusses her new book, The Water Remembers: My Indigenous Family’s Fight to Save a River and a Way of Life. Cordalis chronicles a multigenerational struggle to protect Indigenous cultural heritage and the Klamath River from environmental damage, which led to the largest river restoration project in history. She writes: “The lessons from Klamath dam removal are critical now because the relationship between humans and nature is out of balance across the planet. Klamath dam removal proves that humans can work with nature to create a thriving future on planet earth.”

Other Indigenous water activism news:

Aquafornia news KSBY (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)

San Luis Obispo County holds community meeting to discuss desalination project

The County of San Luis Obispo held a community engagement meeting Monday to share their plans for a desalination project. The “Desalination Executable Solution and Logistics Plan” is a five-phase flood control and water conservation project. The county is currently conducting a feasibility study to determine whether to move forward with the project and where it would be located. … According to the County of San Luis Obispo, the feasibility study is funded by a United States Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) WaterSMART grant.

Aquafornia news Groundwater Demand Management Network

Survey confirms need for groundwater demand management network and resources

In August 2025, the Groundwater Demand Management Network launched a “California Groundwater Community Needs Assessment Survey” (Survey) to identify priority needs for the diverse community that manages and researches groundwater.  As the Network grows into this new year, our next step is to use the survey results to inform programming to meet these needs, establish partnerships across the state, and create a comprehensive community of practice to manage California’s critical groundwater resources. Almost 100 colleagues responded to the Survey and provided exceptionally helpful and robust input.  A comprehensive Survey Report will be available later in 2026; in the meantime, here’s an initial summary.

Related article:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Monday Top of the Scroll: Feds plan deep cuts to water releases from Lake Powell due to drought

Federal and state officials have proposed severe drought response actions, like drastically cutting water releases from Lake Powell, in face of a historically dry year and worsening conditions in the Colorado River Basin. The Bureau of Reclamation announced Friday it will likely reduce Lake Powell water releases to 6 million acre-feet, the lowest amount in decades. It also intends to release additional water from Flaming Gorge, an upstream reservoir, to help elevate the water level in Lake Powell.  The decisions could raise the specter of forced water cuts in states including Colorado, impact endangered fish populations and affect communities and economies.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Western states need water. San Diego has extra. Will they make a deal?

As most Western communities expect to grapple with water shortages this summer and fall, one is looking to share its unlikely surplus. San Diego County in California spent nearly $1 billion on a desalination plant after a 1990s drought left it with scarce supply. Now, with the seawater-to-tap water plant running at just one-third of capacity, its water utility is shopping around deals to sell its water across the West. … It’s not yet clear how interstate transfers of water could occur — likely by Arizona or other states paying San Diego for its Colorado River water rights. Such transfers have never occurred and could require new federal laws or regulations.

Other California water supply news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

This California delicacy has been unavailable for 3 years. Soon restaurants can serve it again

Local king salmon will be on menus in California for the first time in four years after federal fishery managers voted [last] week to reopen the state’s coastal waters to salmon fishing. Since 2022, commercial fishing fleets have been barred from catching the celebrated fish in the state because of a frightening plunge in their numbers. A forecasted bump in the population prompted federal regulators to change course this year, albeit cautiously: They approved a limited commercial season, which begins in May. … Scientists pin the plight on a combination of dammed rivers, too much water drawn off for cities and farms, climate shifts such as intensifying droughts and warming temperatures, and increasingly unfavorable ocean conditions.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news Post Independent (Glenwood Springs, Colo.)

Cloud seeding couldn’t save Colorado from a historically bad snowpack, but the dry winter sparked more interest in the technology

Colorado’s weather modification program is seeing an increased interest in cloud seeding technology after the record-low snowpack this past winter. … The ability of cloud seeding to add to Colorado’s snowpack was limited this year compared to past years due in large part to the lack of suitable storms that rolled through the state, [Weather Modification Program Manager Andrew] Rickert said. He noted, however, that the technology still likely added small amounts of extra precipitation to the storms it did seed. In Colorado, Rickert said all seven wintertime cloud seeding programs use ground-based generator systems and operate from Nov. 1 to April 15, with contractors able to get an extension to the end of April if conditions allow.

Other snow drought news:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Court rules in favor of top water regulator in Nevada lithium mining dispute

The Nevada Supreme Court reversed a previous decision that could have taken water rights away from the nation’s only operational lithium mine. In doing so, the court affirmed the broad power granted to the state’s top water regulator to make technical decisions about water rights. In Nevada, water rights must be put to “beneficial use” or be surrendered to the state. … The dispute between two mining companies stems from a rush to extract lithium in Esmeralda County, the state’s least populated county with about 1,000 residents roughly halfway between Reno and Las Vegas. It is home to Albemarle Corp.’s Silver Peak mine, which remains the only producing lithium mine in the country.

Other water and mining news:

Aquafornia news Indian Gaming

Reclamation announces $6.3m in technical assistance to tribes

The Bureau of Reclamation is investing $6.3 million in 10 tribal water projects, including several projects to ensure clean, reliable drinking water. … The funding comes through Reclamation’s Native American Affairs Technical Assistance Program, which is aimed at increasing opportunities for federal recognized tribes to manage, develop and protect their water and related resources. Since 2016, Reclamation has invited tribes in the 17 western states to submit project proposals as part of Reclamation’s Indian Trust responsibilities. Projects funded range from drinking water system installation and rehabilitation, well installation, wastewater and lagoon construction to water quality testing and workforce development. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news KUNC (Greeley, Colo.)

Robots are joining a fight to protect fish and crops from elusive invaders in the Colorado River

… [S]cientists are deploying a new tool on the frontlines to find and contain the invaders. Enter the environmental DNA autosampler. At first glance, it looks like an unglamorous silver storage trunk with a hose coming out of it. It’s hard to tell it’s actually a $29,595 sophisticated robot. The machine autonomously takes water samples to find microscopic traces of organic matter, like scales and skin cells, to determine if invasive species have been present in the water. U.S. Geological Survey fish biologist Kimberley Dibble has recently been using the tech to search for invasive smallmouth bass in the Colorado River near the Glen Canyon Dam. The predators are devouring native species like razorback suckers and humpback chub.

Other invasive species news: