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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 Lake County Record-Bee (Lakeport, Calif.)

Scotts Dam removal debated at Chamber sponsored forum

A Town Hall convened Thursday aimed at protecting a vital water resource that has, and could again, prove critical to fighting wildfires, but also to sustain the economy and enhance recreational opportunities for an isolated, yet popular destination point for longtime residents. The Lake County Chamber of Commerce hosted the event at the Soper Reese Theater, Thursday. Master of Ceremonies was Amanda Martin, Chief Economic Officer of the Chamber. Martin said the presentation was to promote awareness and to educate the community on the critical issue of a potential removal of Scotts Dam from the Potter Valley Project. … Should the dam be torn down, Lake County Treasurer estimated there could be a loss of $850,000 in tax revenue. Additionally, property values of $40 million could depreciate. … Meanwhile the decommissioning of Scotts Dam is estimated at $500 million and probably more, by the time the work is completed, based on a study by The Eel River Power Authority.

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news San José Spotlight (Calif.)

Santa Clara data centers hit max energy capacity

Santa Clara leaders are raising concerns about how the city’s dozens of data centers affect residents and the environment. Santa Clara has more standalone data centers than any other California city — 55 in operation and three in the pipeline, according to the city. Demand is growing as more people use the internet and digitally demanding technology advances, such as artificial intelligence. With data centers providing the city with millions in revenue, officials are questioning impacts to water and the electrical grid. … (Planning Commissioner Priya) Cherukuru, who is the executive director of space planning for Stanford Health Care, said Santa Clara needs to conduct a deeper study on the strain data centers put on city resources, such as electricity and water. Data centers use water to cool their densely packed servers. Ahmed Aly, the city’s principal engineer for water and sewer utilities, said more data centers are starting to use water efficient cooling systems, and 31 data centers in the city use recycled water.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Vacaville Reporter

Local reps push back on Newsom’s Delta Tunnel fast-track plan

Solano County’s congressional representatives teamed up with collegues representing Sacramento, San Joaquin and Contra Costa counties to fire off a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom protesting his latest proposal to use the budget process to fast-track the Delta Conveyance Project, also known as the Delta Tunnel. The controversial project is a $20 billion plan to funnel more water south. U.S. Reps. Mike Thompson and John Garamendi teamed with representatives Doris Matsui, Mark DeSaulnier and Josh Harder to issue the letter to the governor and state legislative leadership reaffirming their strong opposition to the proposed tunnel. …  Noting that the Bay-Delta is one of the most ecologically significant estuaries on the West Coast, and that it supports thousands of fishing jobs, vital agricultural lands, tribal and environmental justice communities as well as some of the most vulnerable ecosystems in the state, the legislators said the tunnel plan would be devastating for the region. 

Aquafornia news ABC7 (San Francisco)

New high-tech maps developed by Stanford’s Doerr School of Sustainability could fast track groundwater recharge

Researchers at Stanford are hoping to jump start a water revolution in California. The goal is to rapidly expand the areas where we store water – not by building reservoirs, but by returning millions of gallons back into the ground in a new and efficient way. … A recent study found the elevation of San Jose has risen slightly over the decades, while dozens of other cities around the country are steadily sinking. One common factor is groundwater. … Valley Water manages a sophisticated system of ponds and groundwater injection wells to help replenish the area’s aquifers. While sites, like the Laguna Seca basin at Coyote Valley are being conserved as open space, allowing additional stormwater to sink into the water table. These are long term strategies that are paying off. … And now, researchers at Stanford’s Doerr School of Sustainability are hoping to use ground-breaking technology to expand groundwater recharge across California’s Central Valley. 

Other groundwater and subsidence news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Dems seek probe of Bureau of Reclamation staff losses

Democratic senators are pressing the Interior Department to determine whether significant staff losses at the Bureau of Reclamation could put water infrastructure at risk as well as derail the agency’s ability to fulfill congressional mandates. In a Friday letter to Interior acting Inspector General Caryl Brzymialkiewicz, eight senators asked for a review of staff reductions at Reclamation, pointing to an estimated loss of up to 25 percent of the agency’s staff under the Trump administration. “We are concerned that the administration’s actions to gut the agency of qualified public servants could leave critical water infrastructure and communities vulnerable to operational disruptions,” states the letter, led by Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), ranking member on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

Aquafornia news Coronado Times (Calif.)

With International Collector complete, Coronado’s beaches reopen — aside from Silver Strand

Coronado’s northern beaches are open again after the city’s entire shoreline closed over Memorial Day weekend as wastewater from the ongoing Tijuana sewage crisis pushed bacteria into coastal waters. The reopenings came as Mexico completed work on its two-phase International Collector project. … Mexico completed the second and final phase of its International Collector project on May 21. During the two phases of the construction, excess sewage was pushed into the Tijuana River, causing beach closures in Coronado in April and in May. However, Mexico used temporary bypasses to prevent about 75 million gallons of untreated sewage from entering the river during phase two, the US International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC) said. The International Collector is a pipeline that carries raw sewage from Tijuana to treatment plants, and it was aging and prone to leaks. Mexico has now relined the pipeline.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Vail Daily (Colo.)

Native trout species return to the new Colorado River Connectivity Channel near Granby

Native fish populations are returning more quickly than anticipated in the Colorado River Connectivity Channel near Granby. This news is according to the latest Colorado Parks and Wildlife electrofishing survey of the trout population along the newly constructed 1-mile river channel. In May, Parks and Wildlife biologists estimated that approximately 848 brown trout and 221 rainbow trout over 6 inches in length live within the channel.  The $33 million connectivity channel project sought to establish connectivity along the Colorado River after the construction of the 445-acre-foot Windy Gap Reservoir in 1985 disrupted flows in the region. The reservoir and dam — which were constructed to help divert water to two northern Front Range cities — impacted stream flows, caused sediment buildup and decimated fish populations. 

Other anadromous fish news:

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

Nicasio Reservoir project prompts flooding concerns

Nicasio residents are urging the Marin Municipal Water District to reconsider a proposal to add storage to the nearby reservoir. Over the past two weeks, residents have told district officials that they fear the project could exacerbate flooding along Nicasio and Halleck creeks, and that the community would see no benefit from the added storage at Nicasio Reservoir. The community uses well water and is not served by the reservoir or the district’s supply. Residents said increased flooding would threaten their properties, the roads, the school and their well water and septic systems. … The proposal calls for modifying the spillway gates at Seeger Dam, which was constructed on Nicasio Creek in 1960 to create the reservoir. … The project would install a 280-foot-long, 4.4-foot-high inflatable rubber gate spanning the spillway crest to increase capacity by about 3,700 acre-feet. The project was selected from several proposals as a short-term and efficient way to increase supply.

Other inflatable dam news:

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.)

Lake Tahoe inspectors intercept vessel with golden mussels

Lake Tahoe watercraft inspectors on Friday identified highly invasive golden mussels on a vessel at the Alpine Meadows, Calif. inspection station. This is the first interception of the new invasive species by Lake Tahoe watercraft inspectors since their first detection in North America in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta in October, 2024. … Inspectors at the Alpine Meadows station conducted an initial decontamination of the 65-foot vessel. It will be held under quarantine under California Department of Fish and Wildlife regulations until the vessel is deemed risk-free. Watercraft Inspection Program managers are also coordinating with Nevada Division of Wildlife and other state agencies and continue to share information on all detections with agencies in both states and the western U.S. As new threats to Lake Tahoe emerge, the emphasis on following Clean, Drain, Dry protocols remains for all boaters, paddlers, anglers, and beachgoers. 

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news The Fence Post (Greeley, Colo.)

USDA to distribute livestock payments due to wildfires

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins today (May 30) announced the release of congressionally mandated Emergency Livestock Relief Program payments to cover grazing losses due to eligible drought or wildfire events in 2023 and/or 2024.  USDA explained that USDA’s Farm Service Agency is leveraging existing Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP) data to streamline payment calculations and expedite relief. Emergency relief payments are automatically issued for producers who have an approved LFP application on file for 2023 and/or 2024, and do not have to contact USDA to receive payments. USDA added, “The American Relief Act, 2025, provided funds for emergency relief payments. This program is the first of two programs authorized to assist with eligible losses suffered by livestock producers. FSA will announce additional ELRP assistance for other losses authorized by the act, including flooding, later this summer.”

Related articles:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

These native California creatures are unusually well adapted for climate change

The tiny native oysters of San Francisco Bay managed to outlive the Gold Rush, bay-shore development and decades of punishing pollution. New research shows they have a fighting chance to survive global warming as well. … In recent years, extreme heat waves killed thousands of shellfish that inhabit the same type of intertidal zone, including mussels that were baked in their shells in both the Pacific Northwest and Northern California during low tide. Scientists involved with oyster restoration were really concerned when that happened, said Chela Zabin, ecologist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center and one of two dozen co-authors on the study. … The study, which was published last month and involved significant team effort in 26 locations up and down the West Coast, with funding from the nonprofit organization the Nature Conservancy, showed that native oysters thrive in a wide range of habitats. 

Aquafornia news San Luis Obispo Tribune (Calif.)

Calif. farmers, wineries face water use fees in Paso Basin

From farmers to winemakers, commercial irrigators pumping from the Paso Robles Area Groundwater Basin may soon need to pay for their water use. On Tuesday, the Paso Robles Area Groundwater Authority voted unanimously to send notices of the proposed rates to impacted property owners, giving them the opportunity to protest the fees. If a majority of recipients submit a written protest, the agency can’t implement the rates. The California Department of Water Resources considers the basin “critically overdrafted.” Users pumped about 25,500 acre-feet of water more than was returned to the underground reservoir in 2024, according to the most recent annual report on the basin. … The fees would fund administrative tasks like monitoring wells and writing annual reports along with programs designed to balance the basin. If passed, the rate structure will last for five years.

Aquafornia news Yale Climate Connections

Blog: How farmers can help rescue water-loving birds

In some places, farmer cooperation is critical to the continued existence of whooping cranes and other wetland-dependent waterbird species, close to one-third of which are experiencing declines. Numbers of waterfowl (think ducks and geese) have crashed by 20 percent since 2014, and long-legged wading shorebirds like sandpipers have suffered steep population losses. Conservation-minded biologists, nonprofits, government agencies and farmers themselves are amping up efforts to ensure that each species survives and thrives. With federal support in the crosshairs of the Trump administration, their work is more important (and threatened) than ever. Their collaborations, be they domestic or international, are highly specific, because different regions support different kinds of agriculture — grasslands, or deep or shallow wetlands, for example, favored by different kinds of birds. Key to the efforts is making it financially worthwhile for farmers to keep — or tweak — practices to meet bird forage and habitat needs.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Friday Top of the Scroll: Supreme Court sharply limits environmental impact statements

The Supreme Court on Thursday sharply limited the reach of environmental impact statements in a victory for developers. In an 8-0 decision, the justices said these claims of the potential impact on the environment have been used too often to delay or block new projects. … In Thursday’s unanimous decision, the high court ruled for the developers of a proposed 88-mile railroad in northeastern Utah, a spur line that could carry crude oil that would be refined along the Gulf Coast. … Sections of the rail line would run along the Colorado River. … Agency officials said they haven’t yet had a chance to study the Supreme Court’s decision, and so it is unclear what the ruling’s effect will be (on California high-speed rail), if any. The same is true for the Delta Conveyance Project — a proposed $20-billion tunnel that would move water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta to cities and farmlands to the south that is undergoing NEPA review. 

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Meager snowpack and runoff compound Colorado River’s water crisis

Many of California’s reservoirs have filled nearly to capacity this year with runoff from the ample snowpack in the Sierra Nevada. But the situation is very different along the Colorado River, another vital water source for Southern California, where a very dry spring has shrunk the amount of runoff streaming into reservoirs. The latest forecast from the federal Colorado Basin River Forecast Center shows that the river’s flows into Lake Powell will probably be about 46% of average over the next three months. … The snowpack in the upper Colorado River Basin reached 89% of the median level on April 1, but the outlook worsened over the last two months because of persistent dryness, warm temperatures and dry soils in the mountains that have absorbed a portion of the runoff. … The water level of Lake Powell, on the Utah-Arizona border, sits at 33% of capacity. Downstream near Las Vegas, Lake Mead is 32% full.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

A warming planet is poised to get even hotter, forecasters warn

As hot, dry and disastrous as the last few years have been, it appears that the chaos caused by a warming planet is just getting started. Though the hottest year in nearly two centuries was recorded only last year, the world will probably shatter that record yet again by 2029, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization, the climate and weather arm of the United Nations. There is a very good chance that average warming over the next five years will be more than 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, or 1.5 degrees Celsius, above preindustrial levels, the cap established by the Paris Agreement to ward off the worst consequences of climate change. … In the western U.S. states, including California, those effects most probably include drought, heat waves and longer fire seasons with more intense wildfires, climate scientists said.

Other climate change and regulation news:

Aquafornia news KSL (Salt Lake City, Utah)

Why water conservation remains a ‘top priority’ in Utah after Cox’s drought order expires

Gov. Spencer Cox’s emergency drought declaration has now expired, but state water managers say conservation should “remain a top priority” as the state’s typically driest season approaches. … Cox declared a state of emergency for 17 of Utah’s 29 counties late last month, citing extreme and severe drought conditions already in place across large swaths of central and southern Utah. Below-average snowpack levels in those regions were also a factor in the emergency. … Although Utah’s reservoir system remains at 87% of capacity, drought continues to be a challenge heading into summer. About 70% of Utah remains in drought, including 46% of the state that is either in severe or extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor’s final report before meteorological summer begins.

Other Utah water news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Researchers assess how fires damaged L.A. County water systems

The January firestorms that swept through Altadena and Pacific Palisades destroyed not only thousands of homes but also portions of the water and sewer systems that served them. Smaller water systems were hit the hardest, according to a study by UCLA researchers released Thursday. In Altadena, for example, the burned areas covered 79% of Rubio Cañon Land & Water Assn.’s service area and 88% of Las Flores Water Co.’s territory. By comparison, less than 5% of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s service area suffered damage. The DWP serves about 4 million people; Las Flores supplies fewer than 5,000. … The report notes that smaller water suppliers such as Las Flores and Lincoln Avenue have limited access to funds to help rebuild their systems.

Related article:

Aquafornia news California Trout

Blog: Six things to know about the Potter Valley Project and Eel River restoration

Since CalTrout’s inception 50 years ago, we have worked tirelessly to protect and restore the Eel River. This remarkable river, the third largest in California, holds immense potential to recover a harvestable population of wild salmon. These salmon have long served as an economic driver on the North Coast and have been vital to the communities that have lived near the river for thousands of years. As PG&E moves forward with its plans to remove Scott and Cape Horn dams as part of its decommissioning of the Potter Valley Hydroelectric Project, here are six things to know about how and why this is happening. 

Other dam removal news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Friant Water Authority agrees to replacement pump stations for district that’s suing it, but adds strings

Fallout from the ongoing who-owes-what dispute over the still sinking Friant-Kern Canal led to some awkward and very carefully worded moments during a meeting to discuss replacement pump stations. At its May 22 meeting, the Friant Water Authority ultimately voted to restart the bidding process to build four replacement pump stations to deliver water from the canal to the Saucelito Irrigation District. But the board added some strings. It will only start construction if: Litigation filed by Saucelito and its sister districts, Porterville and Terra Bella, regarding the “Cost Recovery Methodology” was resolved through a settlement or verdict; Friant had sufficient cash on hand and certainty of funding sources necessary to cover future payments for the parallel canal and pump stations. The vote elicited a mixed reaction.