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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 WyoFile (Cheyenne)

Claims ‘chemtrails’ poison citizens spur Wyoming lawmakers to advance ‘geoengineering’ ban

After fretting for a day over claims the government is poisoning citizens by spraying chemicals in the sky, a Wyoming legislative committee endorsed a bill banning the release of “atmospheric contaminants” above the state. … Vapor-like trails that appear behind jets — also known as contrails and widely understood to be water vapor from engines — are actually poisonous sprays intentionally released by the Department of War to change the climate, witnesses said. … Water users from Wyoming’s portion of the Colorado River Basin and others representing ag interests successfully asked that cloud seeding be exempt from the proposed geoengineering ban. 

Other geoengineering news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

California researcher finds Earth’s vital signs flashing red

A new climate report emphasizes that not only was 2024 the hottest year on record, but it may have also been the warmest in at least 125,000 years. … The report comes just a week before the 30th U.N. Climate Change Conference in Brazil, where world leaders, scientists and organizations will gather to focus on the implementation of the 2015 Paris climate agreement and how to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Exceeding that 1.5-degree increase … is expected to lead to increasingly frequent and dangerous weather events like heat waves, droughts, wildfires and flooding.

Other climate impact news:

Aquafornia news Public Policy Institute of California

Blog: Poor water quality and noxious smells are a cross-border headache on the Tijuana River

The Tijuana River has been in the news lately as pollution pours into the US from Mexico. To help us understand what’s happening, we spoke with former PPIC Water Policy Center advisory council chair Celeste Cantú, who currently sits on the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board. … [Celeste Cantú:] Tijuana is at the end of the drought-prone and dwindling Colorado River system. All of us will need to thrive with less water from the Colorado River. I would love for Tijuana to augment its water supply with indirect or direct potable reuse, with US support to build a plant for that.

Other water pollution news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

EPA flush with cash for ‘priority’ staff​

EPA has billions of dollars on hand to stay open through the government shutdown and is using it to fund a new approach to this funding lapse: sending some staffers home while many others stay on to support the president’s priority projects. … EPA staff and outside observers who engage with them say that virtually everyone who is working to undo marquee Biden-era regulations for air pollution, climate change and water quality is still on the job … while teams at EPA’s water and air offices continued to work on priority policies that the agency has promised to deliver at a breakneck pace.

Other government shutdown news:

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Opinion: Erie Canal contrasts with public works pace in California

… As California entered the 20th century, massive public works projects surfaced to encourage economic expansion and transformation, notably in Southern California. Mid-century also saw arguably the state’s last truly transformative public works project, the California Water Plan. … The last decades of the 20th Century and the first decades of the 21st have been a period of stasis in public works. Projects such as the tunnel to carry water under the Delta and the Sites Reservoir to divert and store high flows on the Sacramento River have kicked around for decades. … Looking back, it’s amazing that the 363-mile Erie Canal could have been dug by hand in just eight years, or that the two San Francisco bridges were erected in just a few years.
–Written by CalMatters columnist Dan Walters.

Aquafornia news Bay City News (Berkeley, Calif.)

Mendocino supes debate resolution favoring Potter Valley Project dam decommissioning

The Mendocino County Board of Supervisors recently discussed dueling resolutions on PG&E’s position in the decommissioning of the Potter Valley Project’s dams. … Two different non-binding resolutions were discussed during the board’s Oct. 21 meeting regarding the decommissioning of the Potter Valley Project. After hours of tense discussion and public comment, the board decided to move forward with a resolution sponsored by Supervisor Ted Williams, placing it on the consent calendar for the board’s next meeting on Nov. 4. 

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news The San Luis Obispo Tribune (Calif.)

Planners advance Cambria water reuse facility permit

Cambria’s embattled, delayed water reclamation facility took a major step forward this month after years spent in permit limbo. … The CSD’s [Community Services District's] water-reclamation concept and plant, which treat effluent and brackish water and reinject it into the aquifer, have been a lightning rod since they were first proposed. Some said from the outset that it wouldn’t work. Others alleged it would cost way too much for such a small community of about 6,000 people. And some environmentalists decried its potential impact on the sensitive habitat near San Simeon Creek, where the plant is located.

Other water treatment news:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

Elo-Rivera wants city to build solar to combat high water rates

What if San Diego blanketed land, reservoirs and buildings its Public Utilities Department owned with solar and used the money it made off that power to subsidize skyrocketing water rates for poorer people?  That’s the idea San Diego City Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera pitched during an uncomfortable series of debates over raising water rates on San Diegans by 63 percent over the next four years. The Public Utilities department owns 42,550 acres of land – about the size of Washington D.C. It could, in theory, lease that land out to solar developers and help bring down water rates, fix dams or otherwise prop-up a city department key to ensuring water is treated and distributed to 1.4 million people.  

Other water and solar news:

Aquafornia news Sierra Daily News (Susanville, Calif.)

Oroville leaders propose wildlife refuge to protect Feather River and combat illegal dumping

Oroville city leaders are actively working to combat illegal dumping along the Feather River by considering a new designation for the area. Councilmember Shawn Webber has proposed transforming the river stretch between Table Mountain Bridge and the Highway 70 Bridge into a city park. However, the proposal has evolved with growing support for establishing the area as a wildlife refuge, primarily to protect the sensitive salmon population that uses this section of the river for spawning after their journey from the Pacific Ocean.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news City News Service

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: San Diego City Council approves reduced water rate hikes over next two years

Water rates for San Diegans will rise 14.7% next year and 14.5% the following year after the San Diego City Council today passed an amended water and wastewater rate hike. A staff proposal before the council was to increase water rates by 63% through 2029 and wastewater rates by 31% in the same period. The much- reduced, two-year plan passed by a 5-4 majority Tuesday was proposed by Councilman Stephen Whitburn. … The justification for the increase was largely based on increasing water costs. San Diego’s rates remain below the county average.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Grist

The West’s new gold rush is the data center boom

A new kind of gold rush is sweeping the West, and this time the prize isn’t minerals but megawatts. From Phoenix to Colorado’s Front Range, data centers are arriving with outsize demands for power and water. In a new report, the regional environmental advocacy group Western Resource Advocates (WRA) warns that without stronger guardrails, the financial and environmental costs could fall on everyday households. … Where the potential water needed for new data centers can be estimated, the scale is sobering. In Nevada, for example, currently proposed new data centers will consume an estimated 4.5 billion gallons of water in 2030, if built with conventional cooling. 

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

How scientists brought the legendary Lahontan cutthroat trout back to Lake Tahoe

After nearly 90 years, Lahontan cutthroat trout have made a historic return to Lake Tahoe. This milestone is part of a long-term effort led by the Nevada Department of Wildlife to restore this native species, which disappeared from the lake in 1938 due to overfishing, habitat destruction, and the introduction of non-native species. In 2014, NDOW began studying non-native rainbow trout in Lake Tahoe to identify suitable spawning areas for the Lahontan cutthroat trout. … Over the past several years, Lahontan cutthroat trout have been gradually reintroduced, with 100,000 fish stocked in Lake Tahoe this year alone.

Other fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news BenitoLink (San Benito, Calif.)

County Water District weighs cost of failed Pacheco Reservoir expansion

It now appears San Benito County Water District customers could be on the hook for more than $730,000—or its roughly equivalent in stored water under a proposed deal—in sunk costs for the ill-fated, multibillion-dollar Pacheco Reservoir Expansion Project. … On Oct. 29, the county water district board of directors is set to consider a proposal to cover the district’s share of environmental review costs through December 2021, set at 2.5%, for the $3.2 billion Pacheco expansion, which was dropped by the Santa Clara Valley Water District last month.

Aquafornia news Aspen Times (Colo.)

A billionaire, a land swap, gold medal fishing, ‘dinosaur’ trout and a permit proposal anglers are calling a ‘bait and switch’ in Colorado

Just months after the federal government closed on a land exchange with a billionaire, a proposal to institute a permit system on the Blue River has ignited a conversation about river access and fishery health in Colorado. … Blue Valley Ranch, a more than 2,000-acre property owned by billionaire Paul Tudor Jones II, and the nonprofit Friends of the Lower Blue River say a permit system is necessary to manage the negative impacts of increasing fishing pressure. … As part of the exchange, the ranch has agreed to cover the costs of river restoration work for a three-quarter-mile stretch of the Blue River near its confluence with the Colorado River. … Anglers who opposed the land swap because they felt it was tilted toward private interests, said they see the proposed permit system as the continuation of an effort by a landowner to restrict public access to the river.

Aquafornia news Tribal Business News

Lytton Rancheria invests $51M in California groundwater project

A publicly traded company announced Tuesday that it has secured $51 million in financing from Lytton Rancheria of California, marking the first tribal investment in the Mojave Groundwater Bank, a water supply and groundwater storage project planned as the largest groundwater bank in the Southwest. Cadiz Inc., a Los Angeles-based water solutions company, reported it is raising the capital through Mojave Water Infrastructure Company LLC, a special-purpose entity formed to construct, own and operate the project. The federally recognized tribe’s investment represents the first tranche of approximately $450 million in total equity capital the company is raising for the project.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news LAist

LA to double recycled water capacity at Van Nuys wastewater plant

The board of the L.A. Department of Water and Power voted Tuesday to nearly double the amount of water it recycles for drinking at the Donald C. Tillman Wastewater Treatment Plant in Van Nuys.  The city has been retrofitting one of its wastewater treatment plants in Van Nuys to recycle water for drinking in order to boost water supplies in the face of long-term water shortages driven by climate change and overuse. Now, if approved by City Council, the plant will be able to recycle water to its full capacity, producing enough water for a half-million Angelenos as soon as 2028.

Other water treatment news:

Aquafornia news The Fence Post (Greeley, Colo.)

La Nina expected to bring increased precipitation patterns to the Rockies

There’s good news for farmers and ranchers in the northern Rockies, with optimistic weather predictions for expected precipitation this winter. And, the Climate Prediction Center continued issuing forecasts during the government shutdown with the official release of their early winter weather outlook on Oct. 16, 2025. … Heavy precipitation is expected across coastal portions of southern Oregon and Washington into northern California. … As for precipitation [in Colorado], there is an equal chance of below, near or above normal precipitation through the winter months, except for a very small sliver in southwest Colorado of below normal.

Aquafornia news KCRA (Sacramento, Calif.)

San Joaquin County works to tackle invasive golden mussels

San Joaquin County is launching a task force to combat the spread of golden mussels, an invasive species threatening the local ecosystem and infrastructure, with the help of $20 million in state funding. Deep beneath the Delta hides a threat to the ecosystem, as golden mussels, discovered in the area for the first time last year, are known for clogging pipes and harming native species. … The new funding aims to establish infrastructure for education, tagging, and inspections.

Aquafornia news The National Law Review

Long-term water strategic plan expanded and strengthened in Calif.

California law requires the Department of Water Resources (DWR) to create, promulgate, and update every five years the California Water Plan (Plan). The Plan is intended to provide a comprehensive strategy for the sustainable management and stewardship of California’s water resources. However, the Plan has not had significant revisions responsive to increasing climate unpredictability. On October 1, 2025, Governor Newsom signed Senate Bill (SB) 72 into law, significantly expanding the requirements of the Plan to provide a more forward-looking, actionable roadmap to secure water resources across the state.

Other water policy news:

Aquafornia news The Raincross Gazette (Riverside, Calif.)

Riverside’s plan to reconnect residents with their river

The City Council received an update Tuesday on a two-year feasibility study proposing to transform 250 acres of underutilized parkland along the Santa Ana River into a “vibrant public realm”—building on a vision first conceived more than 20 years ago to “put the river back in Riverside.” … The California State Coastal Conservancy supported the feasibility study, conducted by Economic Consultants Oregon, Ltd. under a $199,335 contract Council approved in October 2023. The draft study is now available online for public comment before finalization.

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