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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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  • 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 KSL (Salt Lake City)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Utah lawmakers pass water reporting requirement for large data centers

Both the Utah House and Senate signed off on a proposal to require large data centers moving to Utah to report their annual water use to state officials. … “The market itself has reacted to the concern nationwide about water use,” said State Representative Jill Koford, R-Ogden, who sponsored the bill. “In the second-driest state in the nation, I think it’s good for us to set the tone nationally.” … Koford’s bill would require data centers that are at least 10,000 square feet and use at least 75 acre-feet of water a year to report their water usage to the state. That water usage data would also be accessible to the public.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Washington Post

Will there be a super El Niño later this year? Here’s what that would mean

The planet may experience a strong or even a super El Niño later this year, one that could rival the strongest ones in history. … [I]mpacts can include the frequency and location of heat waves, the locations of flooding downpours and drought could focus, where hurricanes may hit, and declining sea ice concentrations. For example, the Western United States could face a hotter than average summer. … Late in the year, a stronger southern branch of the jet stream could influence heavy downpours and the potential for flooding. … That stronger southern jet stream can also increase the chance for flooding wintertime downpours in California.

Other El Niño news:

Aquafornia news KSL (Salt Lake City)

Utah shattered its winter temperature records. Why was it so warm?

This past winter was officially Utah’s warmest in over a century, contributing to many of the snowpack challenges facing the state. Utah posted a statewide average temperature of 36.4 degrees between Dec. 1 and Feb. 28, shattering the previous meteorological record — set during the 2014-2015 winter — by 2.2 degrees, according to National Centers for Environmental Information data released on Monday. … It could have repercussions for later this year. The National Weather Service’s Colorado Basin River Forecast Center updated its spring runoff outlook on Friday, projecting that snowmelt could be approximately 60% of normal or less at many of the major creeks and rivers in the state.

Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Star (Tucson)

Report: Big CAP cuts would trigger major Arizona job losses

Arizona will take nearly a $3 trillion total economic hit and lose millions of jobs that would have come to the state by 2060 if Central Arizona Project deliveries are halted by the federal government, a new report from the project’s governing agency says. A CAP consultant’s report said the state’s total economic output would by 2060 be 11% to 14% lower than it otherwise would have been, under two proposed federal alternatives for managing the Colorado River. At worst, the state’s total jobs would shrink by 7.9% if the project’s supplies were eliminated, the report said. 

Other Colorado River planning news:

Aquafornia news Marin Independent Journal (San Rafael, Calif.)

Lagunitas Creek salmon habitat project gets $1.1M grant

The Marin Municipal Water District has secured a $1.1 million state grant to support its ongoing effort to restore habitat for endangered coho salmon and other aquatic species in Lagunitas Creek. The district plans to use the grant to initiate the project “phase 2,” which is set for construction in 2027. … Marin County has the largest population of wild endangered coho salmon from Monterey Bay to the Mendocino County-Sonoma County line. Once believed to have numbered in the thousands, coho populations dwindled to the hundreds during the 20th century because dam construction blocked miles of former spawning grounds and tributaries.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news KJCT (Grand Junction, Colo.)

CPW launches ‘Oh Shell No’ campaign as zebra mussel threat continues in Colorado

Colorado Parks and Wildlife is launching an awareness campaign called “Oh Shell No” to address the spread of zebra mussels in the state, with a focus on impacts to agriculture and water infrastructure. In 2025, CPW detected adult zebra mussels in the Colorado River for the first time, as well as in smaller lakes and ponds in the Grand Junction area. … As temperatures rise, CPW plans to put more technicians in the field for sampling. The agency said it will focus monitoring efforts upstream of areas where zebra mussels have already been found. 

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news KCRA (Sacramento, Calif.)

Three new groundwater wells increase reliability, flexibility of water supply in Antelope

Three new groundwater wells are giving the city of Antelope more reliable access to drinking water and the flexibility to meet water needs in wet and dry years. The Sacramento Suburban Water District formally commissioned the three wells, known as “the triplets” on Monday. The three wells plus a fourth recently brought online can serve up to 33,500 homes in the Antelope area daily. This project is part of a decades-long larger effort to balance the Sacramento region’s use of groundwater and surface water. During dry years, the use of groundwater wells reduces the demand on surface water sources like Folsom Lake and the Lower American River.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news KOAA (Colorado Springs, Colo.)

Colorado experts weigh in on summer wildfire concerns after record warm winter

… Colorado has already seen multiple wildfires break out in the past couple weeks alone; and though most experts recognize the state’s fire season is year round at this point, they still have great concern for the upcoming core summer fire season. … “We’ve seen an unprecedented drying trend this winter and no one really knows when that’s going to end,” said Jeff Rasmussen, branch chief of fire planning for the Division of Fire Prevention and Control. … “Those fuels will be available as long as there’s no snow on the ground.”

Other wildfire and water news:

Aquafornia news UC ANR

Blog: Heavy rains threaten homeless people living in Bay Area stream corridors

Rapidly falling rain can overwhelm storm drains and cause flooding. Windy rainstorms drenching the San Francisco Bay Area occur on average once a year, but over the past 30 years these storms have become wetter and more frequent.  Rainstorms are increasingly dangerous for homeless people living near rivers and streams, according to University of California scientists. … Nikhil Kumar, a hydroclimatologist, worked with Lacan and UC Davis professor Gregory Pasternack to study the impact of the wetter storms on some of the Bay Area’s most vulnerable communities. 

Other flood planning news:

Aquafornia news Sierra Nevada Ally (Carson City, Nev.)

The “Land Back” movement has led to a series of land transfers and growing calls for Indigenous governance over ancestral territories

… [T]he Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California … recently purchased significant portions of ancestral land in the Sierra region. … The purchase was made possible through a conservation partnership model, increasingly common for tribal land returns in California. Over several years, the Feather River Land Trust (FRLT) worked with the Washoe Tribe to incorporate their perspectives into land management and interpretive programming. … Alongside reclaiming the ability to carry out traditional practices, the tribe plans to manage the land with conservation as its guiding principle, protecting habitats for pronghorn, mule deer, gray wolves, natural springs, and vital water sources. 

Other tribal water news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

‘Smells like swamp’: This Wine Country town is fed up with brown tap water

In the heart of Napa Valley, St. Helena is home to world-class Cabernet Sauvignon, a historic stone-and-brick downtown and, to locals at least, brown tap water. … The problem is that naturally occurring minerals, mostly iron and manganese, have built up in the city’s aging pipes. … City officials have insisted the water may seem unappealing at times, but it is not harmful and is safe to drink. The city’s reassurances have not satisfied some residents who argue they can’t be expected to consume or bathe in brown water — while still paying some of the Bay Area’s highest water bills.

Aquafornia news The Raincross Gazette (Riverside, Calif.)

Putting the ‘lake’ back in Riverside: Hole Lake revitalization project to begin this year

Amid Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson’s mission to put the “river” back in Riverside, Councilmember Steve Hemenway is starting with a lake – the former reservoir in the southwestern part of the city known as Hole Lake. … Hemenway said Hole Lake’s revitalization project is in partnership with the mayor’s vision to reconnect Riverside with the Santa Ana River, as the lake serves as a “bookend” to the stretch of river in the city. Lock Dawson said the lake effort is a “meaningful step toward putting the river back in Riverside” by investing in restoration and addressing issues like illegal dumping.

Aquafornia news The Salt Lake Tribune

Monday Top of the Scroll: A record warm winter could send Lake Powell to a historic low. Flaming Gorge may be its lifeline.

… The Bureau of Reclamation’s latest most probable forecast for Lake Powell shows it sinking below “power pool” — 3,490 feet — by December. At that level, water can’t make it through the turbines at Glen Canyon Dam that generate hydropower and keep the lights on across Utah and six other states. … To prop up Powell, the bureau will likely rely on another popular Utah reservoir: Flaming Gorge. The reservoir that straddles the border of Utah and Wyoming has the best water outlook in the basin, at 64% of normal, according to the forecast center. 

Other Colorado River news:

Aquafornia news The Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Snow drought complicates water outlook in the West

There was no reason for the hydrologists who help predict the annual water supply for metro Phoenix to visit the snow survey site here until the last week of February. Until a storm passed through heading into that week, there had been no snow to speak of. … The federal government’s Colorado Basin River Forecast Center’s March report noted much of the drainage, especially in the mountains of Colorado and Utah, had experienced their worst snowpack since at least 1981. … The warmth that pervaded the West had melted much of the existing snowpack or caused it to fall as rain instead, encouraging evaporation and plant uptake and reducing the amount that will reach reservoirs this spring and summer. 

Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news ABC10 (Sacramento, Calif.)

Tuolumne County seeks $6.3M state funding for emergency water reservoir after canal damage

The Tuolumne County Board of Supervisors will meet on Tuesday, March 10, to consider sending a formal request to Governor Gavin Newsom for $6.3 million in state funding for a critical water infrastructure project. The funding would support construction of the Sierra Pines Raw Water Reservoir, a shovel-ready project designed to protect public health, fire safety, and disaster response. The request follows severe damage to the Pacific Gas and Electric Main Tuolumne Canal during a multi-day winter storm on Feb. 17. More than 200 trees fell onto the canal, damaging wooden flumes and forcing PG&E to halt water flows. The interruption cut off 95% of Tuolumne Utilities District’s drinking water supply.

Other drinking water and infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

New on-farm recharge project with a soil health twist targets pistachio orchards in the San Joaquin Valley

A large-scale pilot project studying the effects of recharging water onto pistachio orchards, some with cover crops and some without,  is in full swing across the San Joaquin Valley.  The project, a collaboration between private nonprofit Sustainable Conservation, American Pistachio Growers and Fresno State University kicked off in January and will study recharge on six orchards in Tulare, Merced and Madera counties. Each pilot partner recharges onto 20 acres of orchard with cover crops and 20 acres with no cover crops. … Specifically, the project will look at whether recharge cover crops can reduce nitrates in groundwater

Other agricultural water news:

Aquafornia news Grist

The US barely bothers to track geoengineering. What could go wrong?

… [W]hat’s now known as geoengineering remains a strange, somewhat ad hoc field even today. A recent report by the Government Accountability Office, or GAO, found that the federal government still does not have sufficient oversight over weather modification activities and is also “not fully meeting its responsibilities to maintain and share weather modification reports.” … As drought intensifies and water demand increases across the West, states have been ramping up cloud-seeding efforts, as one way to work around the lack of water. …  Cloud seeding alone can’t fix that. Another report from the GAO last year found that the process still needs more research to determine how well it works and why. 

Other cloud seeding news:

Aquafornia news Aspen Journalism (Colo.)

Aspen activist wants ‘rights of nature’ for the Roaring Fork River

An Aspen activist is hoping to gain support for a paradigm shift in the way people view their local waterway by granting rights to the Roaring Fork River. Environmental psychologist, author and Aspen Times columnist Lindsay Branham is asking local elected officials to consider a resolution protecting the Roaring Fork and its tributaries by recognizing that nature has rights and that it’s the government’s responsibility to care for them. … The Rights of Nature is a small but growing movement that seeks to evolve the legal system’s relationship with nature from one that views rivers as a resource and property for human use, to recognizing that natural entities have intrinsic value and an inherent right to exist. 

Other river news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Stockton Record (Calif.)

California to treat Delta waterways near Stockton for invasive plants

California parks officials will begin another season of herbicide treatments in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta later this month, targeting invasive aquatic plants that clog waterways, threaten boaters and disrupt marinas and irrigation systems. Starting March 19, California State Parks’ Division of Boating and Waterways (DBW) plans to treat thousands of acres across the Delta and its southern tributaries as part of its 2026 control program. The invasive plants include water hyacinth, South American spongeplant, Uruguay water primrose, Alligator weed, Brazilian waterweed, curlyleaf pondweed, Eurasian watermilfoil, coontail, fanwort and ribbon weed. 

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Center for Biological Diversity

News release: Colorado bill would protect beavers, reduce wildfire, drought risks

Conservation groups joined state Rep. Mandy Lindsay, Rep. Elizabeth Velasco, Sen. Cathy Kipp and Sen. Lisa Cutter Thursday to introduce a first-of-its-kind bill to protect beavers on public lands and support their proven role in building drought and wildfire resilience. The bill is especially important as historically low snowpack heightens drought and wildfire danger across Colorado. … House Bill 26-1323 would prohibit killing beavers on public lands while preserving flexibility to remove beavers when necessary to address conflicts involving infrastructure, agriculture or other management needs.

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