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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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Aquafornia news CalMatters

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: ‘Emerging threat’: An invasive species is upending life in the Delta, with no help on the way

… [S]tate and local water managers are battling to keep golden mussels from reaching uninfested lakes and reservoirs. They’re racing to keep them from damaging the pumping facilities that send Delta water to farms and cities in Central and Southern California. … In the urgency to  stop the spread, state agencies have prioritized protecting the rest of the state from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, over protecting the Delta itself. Residents and local leaders feel overlooked. And they fear that the stigma of a golden mussel infestation will drive visitors and boaters away from one of the country’s largest estuaries. 

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news The Times-Independent (Moab, Utah)

State weighs water-right change as developer eyes rebirth of Cisco ghost town

The Utah Division of Water Rights is reviewing an application to repurpose a Green River–basin water right for municipal use that could draw from the Colorado River near Cisco, where a new residential community is proposed off Interstate 70 about an hour from Moab. The San Juan Water Conservancy District filed the change application July 1, requesting permission to convert Water Right 91-5233 from power generation — originally allocated for a nuclear power plant that was never built — to municipal use.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news KQED (San Francisco)

Rain on me: Bay Area braces for a wet and windy atmospheric river storm

The Bay Area is in for another atmospheric river storm this week, and forecasters expect the North Bay to receive the bulk of the wet weather. … While the rain will mostly be beneficial, localized nuisance flooding is possible. Minor coastal flooding could also occur Tuesday through Saturday due to spring tides. … The warm storm will push snow levels in the Sierra Nevada to above 7,500 feet, resulting in the bulk of the snowfall at higher elevations. Lassen National Park and the highest peaks of the Sierra could see some snowfall, and snow levels could dip below 7,000 feet on Wednesday night if temperatures fall.

Other rain and snow news around the West:

Aquafornia news UC San Diego

New study reveals source of rain is major factor behind drought risks for farmers

A new University of California San Diego study uncovers a hidden driver of global crop vulnerability: the origin of rainfall itself. Published in Nature Sustainability, the research traces atmospheric moisture back to its source. … They discovered that when more than about one-third of rainfall originates from land, croplands are significantly more vulnerable to drought, soil moisture loss and yield declines – likely because ocean-sourced systems tend to deliver heavier rainfall, while land-sourced systems tend to deliver less reliable showers, increasing the chance of water deficits during critical crop growth stages.

Other drought and agriculture news:

Aquafornia news GovTech

Two new data centers may come to Tucson, Ariz., area

More data centers may be built in the Tucson area as well as the controversial Project Blue. … But just like Project Blue, these projects are also raising still-unanswered questions about their projected energy and water use — and facing opposition from many of the same activists who have fought Project Blue. … If the Davis-Monthan data center requires the drilling of new wells for its water supply, the Arizona Department of Water Resources will require that the center operator demonstrate its water use won’t cause significant declines in any neighboring wells.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news UC Riverside

UV light holds promise for energy-efficient desalination

A team of UC Riverside researchers has uncovered a potential breakthrough in solar desalination that could reduce the need for energy-intensive saltwater treatment. Led by Luat Vuong, an associate professor of mechanical engineering in UCR’s Marlan and Rosemary Bourns College of Engineering, the team has demonstrated for the first time how the highest frequencies of sunlight—specifically invisible ultraviolet (UV) light—can break the stubborn bonds between salt and water.

Other water innovation news:

Aquafornia news Calexico Chronicle (Calif.)

Volunteers help Calexico New River wetlands with native plants

In the continuing effort of the New River Improvement Project to improve the local ecosystem, volunteers from far and near joined the Imperial Irrigation District’s Community Action Day to plant more than 1,000 native plants in local wetlands on Saturday, Nov 1. … These native plants will help the wetland grow stronger to serve its natural function of filtering the water of the New River, aiding in erosion and waste control. … [T]hose same contaminants would end up polluting the Salton Sea as well. Now, with the New River Improvement Project completed, any polluted water has its physical debris separated and is treated before entering the New River. 

Aquafornia news Nevada Current

A tribe in Nevada finally had funding for climate resilience. Then a grant was ripped away

… [T]he Walker River Paiute Tribe was awarded $20 million in funding from the EPA’s Community Change Grant. … The grant would also fund the last leg of a water infrastructure project that would support dozens of new fire hydrants on the reservation and secure reliable clean water for 425 existing homes and over 100 future homes. … [O]n May 1, the $20 million Community Change Grant was officially terminated by EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, along with more than 780 other environmental justice grants as part of Trump’s executive order to eliminate DEI across the government.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Volunteers needed for annual check-in on Kings River Fish

The Kings River Fisheries Management Program is gearing up for its annual fish “check in.” The program is seeking volunteers over 18 to assist biologists Nov. 18, Dec. 2 and Dec. 3 to conduct its annual fish population survey. … The survey provides critical insight into the balance, biodiversity and health of the fish in the lower Kings River and ensures the ecosystem is thriving. Biologists and volunteers will use electrofishing equipment, which shocks but does not harm the fish, to collect and examine fish, collecting data such as size, density, the fish’s condition and the variety of fish in the river.

Other fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news Kronick

Blog: Court of appeal clears way for state intervention in local groundwater management under SGMA

On October 29, 2025, the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Kings County Farm Bureau v. State Water Resources Control Board reversed a broad preliminary injunction that had barred the State Water Resources Control Board from imposing regulatory fees and mandating groundwater extraction monitoring and reporting in the San Joaquin Valley’s critically overdrafted Tulare Lake Subbasin. … The Kings County Farm Bureau opinion provides guidance to help GSAs and stakeholders use Periodic Evaluations to make the case for protecting sustainable subbasins, or portions of subbasins, against the potential for probation when other subbasins or portions of subbasins are failing to show progress toward achieving sustainability.

Other water policy news:

Aquafornia news Nevada Appeal (Carson City)

Carson City supervisors to consider Marlette water contract

… Both the city and state are upgrading their respective [water] systems. The state is undertaking a high-mountain project to reconstruct the Comstock-era dam at Marlette Lake, which FEMA found could fail in a 6.5 earthquake or larger. Estimated to cost more than $23 million, with $10 million in FEMA grant funding, that project is expected to be completed by autumn 2026. Meanwhile, the city is upgrading the Quill plant off Kings Canyon Road to increase treatment of surface water from the Marlette system and nearby creeks to 4 million gallons a day. 

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Biden border water official jumps to engineering firm

A former Biden administration official who led water protection efforts along the U.S.-Mexico border is now working at a major engineering firm. Maria-Elena Giner, the former U.S. commissioner of the International Boundary and Water Commission, joined Black & Veatch last week as a portfolio leader. She is on the firm’s water resources and community planning team, working with federal agencies, state and local governments, utilities and private companies, including tech firms. Giner said her new role will focus on environmental and infrastructure challenges affecting the water sector.

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Monday Top of the Scroll: ‘Very undesirable’: Interior could decide Colorado River’s future

With state negotiators in the Colorado River Basin still at odds ahead of a key deadline, the Trump administration could soon be tasked with deciding where to cut water use across the West and appears to be weighing options like draining reservoirs or curbing senior water rights. … Without a deal, the Interior Department and its Bureau of Reclamation have threatened to step in to wield federal authority — a largely untested power — and potentially tap reservoirs in the Upper Basin and reduce flows to the Lower Basin. 

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

California storm to bring strong winds, widespread rain to parts of state

After a warm, dry weekend across Northern California, wet weather is forecast to return this week. Widespread rain and the strongest winds so far this season are predicted in the Bay Area, North Coast, Sacramento Valley and Sierra Nevada as an atmospheric river-fueled storm sweeps through the region. … Because of the warm wind direction, this week’s storm isn’t anticipated to be a big snowmaker in the Sierra Nevada. … Several inches of rain is forecast around the headwaters of the Sacramento and Feather rivers, which is important for water supply early in the wet season.

Other atmospheric river news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Groundwater agencies squabble as state announces restart of sanctions against Tulare Lake subbasin

Two neighboring groundwater agencies in Kings County are preparing for a showdown over how much farmers can pump even as the state Water Resources Control Board restarted probationary sanctions for farmers in the Tulare Lake subbasin. Farmers will be required to report how much they pumped from July 14, 2024 through Sept. 25, 2025 by May 1, 2026, according to a Water Board press release issued Friday evening. Fees of $20-per-acre-foot pumped won’t be far behind.

Other groundwater management news:

Aquafornia news Rocky Mountain Community Radio

Zebra mussels threaten infrastructure and native ecosystems. Colorado is ramping up efforts to detect and contain them.

… Zebra mussels are bad news for western waterways. Spread mainly by hitching rides on watercraft, the fast-reproducing mollusks clog water infrastructure, cling to marinas and docks, and outcompete native species. Colorado has taken costly measures to keep its lakes and rivers free of the mussels, but recorded the first official infestation in the state’s portion of the Colorado River this year. Quagga mussels, zebra mussels’ close relatives, and other aquatic nuisance species, have made their presence known at reservoirs in the Colorado River Basin, like Lake Powell and Lake Mead.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news SeafoodSource

California reintroducing salmon by planting 350,000 spring-run Chinook eggs above dam

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) plans to inject 350,000 Chinook salmon eggs into the North Yuba River this fall as the state government looks for new ways to help struggling salmon populations recover. This is the second year CDFW has taken this approach, collecting eggs fertilized at the Feather River Fish Hatchery in Oroville and then hydraulically injecting them into the river’s gravel substrate in November. … Salmon populations have struggled in California rivers as they face rising temperatures and fish passage blockages like dams.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Western states brace for a uranium boom as the nation looks to recharge its nuclear power industry

The U.S. says it wants to revive its atomic power industry, but it barely produces any nuclear fuel. Thanks in part to new technology, mothballed mines have restarted, potentially carrying fewer environmental and human health risks than older mines. But this uranium boom could unfold near some of the U.S.’s most cherished landscapes, where communities fear groundwater pollution and other threats. … [Pinyon Plain Mine, Ariz.] and others like it pose threats to the region’s network of interconnected aquifers that stretches across the Grand Canyon region, according to research published last year. 

Other water and mining news:

Aquafornia news Bay City News (Berkeley, Calif.)

State of the estuary: Environmentalists turn to creative thinking to save San Francisco Bay

Is the water in San Francisco Bay safe for swimming? Are the fish safe to eat? … These are some of the questions addressed at the State of the San Francisco Estuary Conference, which was held this week at Oakland’s Scottish Rite Center. … Changes in the amount of cool fresh water that flows into the Bay from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta are one of the strongest indicators of overall health. “Based on the amount of fresh water that actually flows into the bay each year, the estuary has been for decades experiencing chronic man-made drought conditions,” said independent consultant Christina Swanson. 

Other Bay-Delta news:

Aquafornia news North Bay Business News

Local contractors confront tougher stormwater rules

The complex web of federal, state and local water-quality rules has recently become even more stringent, as was on display at a roundtable Wednesday in Santa Rosa that brought together more than two dozen local regulators, municipal officials and construction industry professionals to tackle what’s changed and what’s posing problems. The event, hosted by the Northern California Engineering Contractors Association and the North Coast Builders Exchange, revealed an evolving regulatory landscape for protecting streams, creeks and rivers from runoff of sediment, oils and other pollutants from construction sites.

Other water policy news: