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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 Vik Jolly

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Aquafornia news Bloomberg Law

States take up ‘forever chemicals’ restrictions as EPA shifts

… While stakeholders wait to see how the EPA’s announcements will develop into specific actions, one particular area of continued uncertainty relates to PFAS in drinking water. … Following its request to stay legal challenges to these two Biden-era actions to allow the new EPA leadership to review these rules, the EPA on May 14 announced that it would maintain the current national primary drinking water regulation for PFOA and PFOS and introduce a proposal to extend the compliance date to 2031. At the same time, the EPA said it would rescind regulations and reconsider regulatory determinations for PFHxS, PFNA, HFPO-DA (commonly known as GenX), and the hazard index mixture of these three, plus PFBS, citing compliance with the Safe Drinking Water Act as its rationale.

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news Forbes

Why the climate sandwich generation is saddled with national debt

Fire and water are seemingly opposing forces. But in the context of global climate, they go together like peanut butter and jelly. And looking at the fire and flood tally so far, 2025 has been extra. … Aridification is causing the arid west to move eastward, encroaching on the mid longitude regions of the U.S. and Canada. Aridity, drought and heat combine to make ideal conditions for fire. Increased average air temperature leads to more water in the atmosphere as water vapor. More energy in the form of heat moves storms. The combination of the two–more water and more energy–means more disasters with higher consequences measured in deaths and dollars. The end result is that communities are sandwiched between dry and wet extremes and the economic consequences of fire and flood disasters. The U.S. sustained 403 weather and climate disasters from 1980–2024 where overall damages and costs reached or exceeded $1 billion each (including the Consumer Price Index adjustment to 2024). When you add them together, the total cost of these 403 events exceeds $2.915 trillion.

Other climate research news:

Aquafornia news Oregon Capital Chronicle (Salem)

Opinion: A half bet at the Keno Dam

Last August, Northwest salmon caught a break when four dams on the Klamath River, which flows from mountain country in southwest Oregon through northern California to the Pacific Ocean, were demolished. But it was a limited break. The goal of that $500 million project, possibly the largest of its kind in American history, remains unreached, and serious effort still is needed to fulfill it. A fully free-flowing Klamath River may be beyond us for a while, but certain half-measures could help.  Hanging over it is the shadow of the decision this month by the Trump administration to abandon a regional agreement involving breach of the four lower Snake River dams in Washington state, also partly for fish run purposes. … Some news stories at the time proclaiming the return of a free run of the Klamath River spoke too optimistically. In Oregon, much of the upper river is blocked by the last two dams, the Keno, west of Klamath Falls and near the same-named unincorporated community, and the Link River, which impounds and partly creates Upper Klamath Lake.

Other salmon restoration and dam removal news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Why harmful algae blooms will only get worse in Arizona waterways

Harmful blooms of algae like the one floating near the dam on Apache Lake are on the rise worldwide and are likely to proliferate more in Arizona as warming temperatures create encouraging habitats for the blue-green toxic scum. The Apache Lake bloom, reported May 29, is the second this year in Arizona following one spotted on Lake Havasu a month prior. About 30 harmful blooms plagued Arizona waters last year, affecting parts of Lake Havasu, Saguaro and Canyon lakes and Tempe Town Lake. That’s likely an undercount as the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality voluntarily collects reports and doesn’t have the authority to force water managers to post warnings or test the water. … Harmful blooms also are likely to become more common and more severe in Arizona as conditions get dryer and hotter, said Taylor L. Weiss, with the Arizona Center for Algae Technology and Innovation and assistant professor at Arizona State University.

Other blue-green algae news:

Aquafornia news WyoFile (Lander, Wyo.)

New federal estimates could open more of southwest Wyoming to oil and gas

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s effort to remove barriers to energy development within the 3.6 million-acre Rock Springs Resource Management Plan area (which replaced Green River RMP in 2024) will include revised estimates of oil and natural gas reserves, according to the agency. … Initial “low” estimates, which may change dramatically based on new calculations, will potentially be used to reduce restrictions on oil and natural gas development imposed under “area of critical environmental concern” designations in the Rock Springs RMP updated in December. That plan will likely change after a review spurred by President Donald Trump’s Unleashing American Energy executive order, and Interior orders under his administration. The U.S. Geological Survey — the BLM’s sister agency under the Interior Department — released a report Wednesday revising estimates of “undiscovered, technically recoverable” oil and natural gas reserves underlying onshore federal lands, boasting “significant increases.”

Related articles: 

Aquafornia news The Signal (Santa Clarita, Calif.)

Saugus water reports show need for continued cleanup 

A June quarterly monitoring report from a Department of Toxic Substance Control order for the Saugus Industrial Center, former home of the Keysor-Century Corp., revealed groundwater contamination levels many times above the state’s limits as cleanup continues and plans for nearby properties are filed at City Hall. A Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency spokesman said Thursday the reports are from monitoring wells and not from any sources in circulation for customers. Water-contamination concerns in that area are expected to cost tens of millions of dollars for the agency for years to come, according to officials in court records and past statements. … The process, which began a decade ago, involves the injection of emulsified vegetable oil into the wells as part of a complicated process to “promote anaerobic biodegradation of volatile organic compounds in saturated soils and groundwater,” according to (the) report.

Other water contamination news:

Aquafornia news Action News Now (Chico, Calif.)

Shasta Dam’s 80th anniversary brings citywide celebration Friday

The community is set to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the completion of Shasta Dam, a key structure in California’s Central Valley Project. The celebration on Friday, June 20 promises a full day of events in The City of Shasta Lake. Construction of Shasta Dam began in 1938 and was completed in 1945. President Truman once referred to the dam as “symbolic of the hopes and aspirations of generations who would make the broadest, wisest uses of their natural resources.” The festivities will kick off Friday morning with a Shasta Lake business mixer at the Shasta Dam Visitors Center at 10 a.m. A celebration program will follow at 11 a.m., and an open house will start at noon. … The Bureau of Reclamation, along with the Shasta County Board of Supervisors and the Shasta BoomTown Museum, organized the event to commemorate this milestone. The Shasta Dam plays a crucial role in regulating the Sacramento River’s flow and creates the largest water storage facility in California, holding more than 4.5 million acre-feet of water.

Other dam anniversary news:

Aquafornia news Valley Voice (Hanford, Calif.)

West Goshen community celebrates groundbreaking to connect with Cal Water

Yesterday, the unincorporated community of West Goshen in Tulare County hit a key milestone to achieve their Human Right to Water by breaking ground on their safe drinking water project. Many families in this area currently rely on drinking water contaminated with concerning levels of contaminants including nitrate, 1,2,3-trichloropropane, and uranium. … In 2021, residents formed the community based organization West Goshen Water for Life. … Through an alternatives analysis funded by State Water Board technical assistance funding, the community decided that connecting to a safe piped water supply from the California Water Service (Cal Water) Visalia system was the most sustainable long-term drinking water solution. Their efforts to implement that solution were met with collaboration from Tulare County, California Water Service, and funding from the Department of Water Resources through a $3.4 million grant aimed at emergency drought relief.

Other California water infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Long Beach Post News (Calif.)

Gas, water and sewer rates set to increase to help cover $397 million Utilities Department budget

Citing a rise in costs to deliver gas and water to the public, the Long Beach Board of Utilities Commissioners on Tuesday approved higher rates, as part of their $397.4 million budget for the fiscal year that begins in October. Under the plan, water and sewer rates will go up starting Oct. 1. Under the proposal, the monthly charge for the typical single-family home will increase by 12% for water and sewer rates. This translates to an average increase of $8.26 per month for a single-family water bill and $1.47 for a monthly sewer charge. For gas services, the board approved a 15% increase starting in August, followed by a 12% hike next April. For a typical single-family home, this translates to an estimated monthly increase of $4.67. … The increase in rates, officials say, are meant to offset the rising costs of construction, imported water and other “inflationary pressures.”

Other water rate news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Lawmakers decline to audit $20 billion Delta water tunnel

California’s state auditor will not investigate the state’s controversial Delta Conveyance Project, which would divert water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta down to farms and consumers in Southern California. Despite the proposal receiving some bipartisan support Wednesday afternoon, lawmakers on the Joint Legislative Audit Committee stopped short of recommending the project be audited. … Despite six lawmakers voting to approve the audit, no one made a vocal endorsement. The proposal failed because it didn’t receive the votes necessary from the state Senate side. At least four votes are necessary from both houses on the joint committee. At her request, (Assemblymember Rhodesia) Ransom (D-Stockton) was granted reconsideration of the audit proposal, meaning the issue will be on a future audit committee agenda. 

Other Delta tunnel news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

As the Colorado River shrinks, water negotiators debate new compromise

Negotiators for the seven states arguing over diminished Colorado River water are discussing an option they hope will end their deadlock, one that Arizona officials say would focus less on who gets what and more on what the river can realistically provide. They’re calling it the “supply-driven” solution, Arizona Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke said, and it links the required water deliveries out of Glen Canyon Dam to what might naturally be flowing downstream at Lees Ferry if the dam weren’t there. The Rocky Mountain states upstream from there would have to let that amount pass, and the Southwestern states would have to live within its limits. It’s intended as a fair way of adapting — and shrinking — the region’s use of a river whose flow was once thought to exceed 15 million acre-feet of water a year but, in the last 25 years, has averaged 12.4 million.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news Politico

Trump admin eyes Mojave Desert groundwater as potential source for arid Arizona

… After trying and failing for more than two decades to pump ancient groundwater from beneath the Mojave Desert and sell it to Southern California water districts, the controversial company (Cadiz) has set its sights on new customers over the border in the Grand Canyon State. … On Monday, the Interior Department announced plans to sign a memorandum of understanding with the latest incarnation of the project, called the Mojave Groundwater Bank, touting it as “an important tool to improve drought resiliency in the Colorado River Basin” though recognizing that it is only in “early development.” And on Tuesday, the Trump administration official leading Colorado River negotiations for the federal government suggested to water power players in Arizona that they consider the project. … Opponents of the project, including conservation groups who say it could harm sensitive desert ecosystems, still see it as the same old concept.

Other desert water news:

Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: Registration now open for Oct. 1 Water Summit

Registration is now open for the Water Education Foundation’s 41ˢᵗ annual Water Summit featuring leading policymakers and experts in conversation about the latest information and insights on water in California and the West. The daylong summit on Wednesday, Oct. 1, in Sacramento is our premier event and an ideal way to get up to speed on current topics for water district managers and board members, state and federal agency officials, city and county government leaders, farmers, environmentalists, attorneys, consultants, engineers, business executives and public interest groups. Plus, don’t forget to enter the ticket lottery for our first-ever Klamath River Tour Sept. 8-12 and snatch a ticket for our Northern California Tour Oct. 22-24. 

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

EPA must revisit decision to not revise industrial pollution standards

The Environmental Protection Agency isn’t required to revise every outdated wastewater pollution standard for various industries, but its decision in 2023 to not revise standards using new pollution control technologies is both arbitrary and capricious, a Ninth Circuit panel ruled Wednesday. In 2023 several environmental groups, including Waterkeeper Alliance and the Center for Biological Diversity, filed a complaint directly to the Ninth Circuit, challenging the EPA’s decision to not revise “effluent limitations, effluent limitation guidelines, standards of performance for new sources, and pretreatment standards” that haven’t been updated in decades. Passed in 1972, the Clean Water Act requires the agency to regulate industrial pollutants that make their way into the water, based on the best available wastewater treatment technology. But according to the plaintiffs, the EPA has never set limits on plants that mold and form plastic, and has gone nearly 40 years without updating wastewater limits on inorganic chemical plants and petroleum refineries. 

Other EPA news:

Aquafornia news Western Water Notes

Blog: Water and a plan to sell-off public land

Last week, lawmakers introduced a new proposal to sell off roughly 3 million acres of public land in the Western U.S. as part of President Trump’s omnibus spending and tax bill, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” According to the Wilderness Society, more than 250 million acres of land managed by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management could be up for grabs under a leaked June 14 version of the proposal. Though the plan focuses on land, its effects on water could be profound. The eligible land excludes national parks and a few other protected areas, but it leaves open massive amounts of acreage in each Western state. These eligible areas include land with wilderness characteristics, grazing lands, wildlife corridors for threatened and endangered species, recreation areas and popular camping sites. Its also land that buffers the headwaters of some of our most important rivers in the West.

Other public land sale news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Sun (Flagstaff)

The home of Grand Canyon science in Flagstaff possibly at risk as results of cuts

A Flagstaff-based hub for regional science — and for the protection of the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River — could be under threat from President Donald Trump’s proposed cuts to the federal budget. In a letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee last month, Trump’s budget director, Russell T. Vought, laid out the president’s fiscal priorities — mostly, a long list of cuts to virtually all federal agencies. Among those was a recommendation to slash $564 million from the budget of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). And in a more detailed appendix, the Office of Management and Budget proposed reducing the budget of the agency’s Ecosystems Mission Area by approximately 90%. … Among the programs funded by the Ecosystems Mission Area are the Southwest Biological Science Center and its subsidiary, the Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center (GCMRC) — both housed here in Flagstaff. 

Other water and climate research news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Endangered fish saved from the Palisades fire were just returned to their Malibu home

Hundreds of tiny endangered fish slipped from orange plastic buckets into a glittering lagoon in Malibu on Tuesday, returning home five months after being whisked away from threats wrought by the Palisades fire. The repatriation of more than 300 northern tidewater gobies — led by the Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains — marked a peaceful moment in a region still reeling from the aftermath of wildfires. … In January, (conservation biologist Rosi) Dagit orchestrated a successful rescue of 760 of the semi-translucent, swamp-colored fish from Topanga Lagoon, an unassuming biodiversity hotspot located off the Pacific Coast Highway that drains into the Santa Monica Bay. The Palisades fire that sparked Jan. 7 tore through the area, scorching all of the critical habitat for the gobies and an endangered population of steelhead trout that occupied the same watershed. … Scientists and citizen volunteers arrived on Jan. 17 and used giant nets that served as sieves to retrieve the fish that rarely exceed a length of two inches.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Engineering News-Record

PCL, Stantec outline $250M expansion of San Diego wastewater treatment plant

The design-build team of Stantec and PCL Construction detailed the planned $250-million expansion of the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant in San Diego, Calif., a project that has recently been fast-tracked due to the ongoing transboundary raw sewage flows from Tijuana, Mexico. Michael Watson, senior vice president and major projects lead for water at Stantec and Jeff Newman, operations manager at PCL, said at a public meeting held by the U.S. section of the International Boundary and Water Commission June 12 that they had validated that 50 million gallons per day can be treated by the plant after the expansion and will soon put out early work packages. … New IBWC U.S. Commissioner Chad McIntosh told local officials and attendees at the forum that even after the expansion they would continue to press Mexico to halt the cross-boundary sewage and chemical flows into the Tijuana River which eventually flow into the Pacific Ocean near the South Bay community of Imperial Beach.

Other U.S.-Mexico water news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Spring runoff in Colorado valley is worse than the Dust Bowl era

Water engineer Bob Hurford has a chart he often shares with communities in the Gunnison River Basin to drive home the seriousness of the region’s water conditions. It shows that the basin’s runoff in the 2020s, so far, is worse than the Dust Bowl era of the ’30s. … The western Colorado river basin spans mountainous, agricultural regions and communities like Crested Butte, Gunnison, Paonia, Montrose, Olathe and Delta. Snowpack in the basin this year was near normal — when based on 30 years of data. The 100-year look was much more bleak, Hurford found. … Mountain snowpack in the Gunnison River Basin — one of several major river basins in Colorado — peaked at 93% in late March, melted a bit, then rose again to 84% of the median, based on federal data from 1991 to 2020. The basin is broken into smaller watersheds, including the Upper Gunnison, Uncompahgre and North Fork basins. In the Uncompahgre Valley, where Harold farms, the snowpack also peaked at slightly less than normal. Spring runoff projections for the valley were about 70% of the norm, Hurford said.

Other water supply and drought news around the West:

Aquafornia news Lookout Santa Cruz (Calif.)

Flood victims’ lawyers in Pajaro levee lawsuit to seek tens of millions from state, local governments

The long, litigious tail behind Santa Cruz County’s 2023 winter storms still has no end in sight.  But this week, a partner at one of the firms leading the mass tort against local and state government agencies for their alleged failure to protect Pajaro Valley residents and businesses against the destructive floods told Lookout that they are seeking damages in the range of tens of millions of dollars. … The nine lawsuits filed between 2023 and 2024 fault a half-dozen government agencies for the damage caused by a string of atmospheric rivers in the winter of 2023, beginning with the New Year’s Eve floods in Watsonville and ending with the catastrophic breach of the Pajaro River levee on March 11. … The lawsuits allege that the governments not only knew, or should have known, that the levee’s instability posed grave risks to the region’s people and businesses, but that they also failed in their responsibility to address the issue.