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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 & the West

Thirsty for power and water, AI-crunching data centers sprout across the West

Driving around the cities and small towns of the West, one of the most consequential changes to the landscape are hard to see. Data centers, the buildings of the future, are usually low-slung, their large bulk is best seen from above. A drone’s-eye view shows a spreading, warehouse-flat landscape born of the economic and electrical revolution that is reshaping places like Phoenix, the city of Santa Clara in Silicon Valley, or rural Oregon towns close to the Columbia River. … Heat is the enemy of data operations, reducing their efficiency or even making them inoperable. What creates the heat? The armies of servers gobbling up vast amounts of electricity. What cools it? A variety of technologies, with one, evaporative cooling, requiring significant amounts of water.  

Other data center water use news: 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Public Press

When will LA have its own water supply? It will take 30 more years.

The mythology of rugged individualism often touted in the West comes to a screeching halt where water is concerned, especially here in Los Angeles. That’s because the city has long been propped up by water shipped from hundreds of miles away to the extent that today, about 85% of its drinking water is imported. … Imported water is an addiction the city will have to kick if it’s to weather the worsening impacts from climate change. That’s why, since at least 2008, LA leaders have pushed the city — but have so far failed — to massively increase the amount of recycled wastewater it uses for drinking. Currently, that number is around 2%. These plans took a major step forward with the completion last December of Pure Water LA, a city plan to massively scale-up the amount of wastewater it recycles at the Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant in Playa Del Rey. The aim is to eventually make the city 70% reliant on local supplies. Today, about 15% of water is derived from local supplies. 

Other Southern California water management news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Trump moves to undercut state climate laws, including California’s

The Trump administration this week ramped up its efforts to erode nationwide climate progress with a sweeping executive order aimed at undermining states’ ability to set their own environmental policies, including key components of California’s fight against climate change. In an order dated April 8, the president directed Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi to identify and “stop the enforcement of” state laws that address climate change and other environmental initiatives. … The order also takes aim at California’s cap-and-trade program — a first-of-its-kind initiative that sets limits on companies’ greenhouse gas emissions and allows them to sell “credits” for unused emissions to other companies.

Other water and energy executive order news:

Aquafornia news Grist

Logging doesn’t prevent wildfires, but Trump is trying anyway

In an emergency directive issued late last week, U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced her department’s plan to expand logging and timber production by 25 percent and, in the process, dismantle the half-a-century-old environmental review system that has blocked the federal government from finalizing major decisions concerning national forest lands without public insight. … While it may seem intuitive that cutting down high-risk trees will lead to less organic material that could incinerate, environmentalists say the administration’s plans to increase timber outputs, simplify permitting, and do away with certain environmental review processes are likely to only escalate wildfire risk and contribute more to climate change. 

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Opinion: DOGE and Trump quash a Klamath River basin comeback

The Trump administration ruined what should have been a good spring in the Klamath River basin. By abruptly laying off federal personnel and freezing payments for already authorized programs and projects, the administration replaced a budding sense of hopefulness in the basin with fear and uncertainty, and tore at fragile bonds years in the making among upper basin ranchers and farmers, federal, state and local governments, nonprofits and Native tribes. In a region where conflict over water has simmered for the last quarter-century, trust was already fragile. Now it is smashed to smithereens. Through the 21st century the Klamath has lurched from crisis to crisis, usually related to the extended drought that has hovered over the basin most of that time. What distinguishes the current debacle is that it has no relation to natural phenomena. It’s entirely man-made — and entirely unnecessary.
–Written by Jacques Leslie, author of “Deep Water: The Epic Struggle Over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment.”

Other dam removal news:

Aquafornia news The New Lede

Thousands of US water systems show dangerous levels of cancer-causing chemicals

Millions of people across the United States could be drinking water contaminated with dangerous levels of substances created when utilities disinfect water tainted with animal manure and other pollutants, according to a report released Thursday. An analysis of testing results from community water systems in 49 states found that nearly 6,000 such systems serving 122 million people recorded an unsafe level of chemicals known as trihalomethanes at least once during testing from 2019 to 2023. … New York, Oklahoma, California and Illinois followed Texas with hundreds of water systems in each of those states showing higher-than-allowed levels of TTHMs during the testing period, the EWG report found. More than 64.5 million people are served by 3,170 systems in the ten states that had the most violations.

Aquafornia news CBS Sacramento

East Bay water district closes boat access at 3 California reservoirs amid golden mussels concerns

East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) is keeping boat launches closed for the 2025 season at three of its reservoirs in an effort to prevent the spread of golden mussels.  Earlier this year, EBMUD closed boat access to the Pardee and Camanche reservoirs, both located in the Sierra foothills, until further notice.  In an update on Wednesday, EBMUD announced the boat launches at the two reservoirs, along with the San Pablo Reservoir in the East Bay, will remain closed throughout the 2025 season. … Others, like Folsom Lake above Sacramento, are requiring that all boats be cleaned, inspected and quarantined for 30 days on the premises before they can be launched. … EBMUD isn’t taking any chances. The primary purpose of their reservoirs is as a water supply, and they aren’t going to jeopardize their infrastructure in the name of recreation.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

L.A. fire-affected beaches are safe for swimming, health officials say

… On Wednesday, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced the ocean water advisory placed on Las Flores State Beach to Santa Monica State Beach had been lifted. The decision was made based on water testing and analysis conducted by the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board on the ocean water and sand between the end of January and mid-March. Both areas were tested for metals, nutrients, polychlorinated biphenyls and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which are all chemicals that may be found in water runoff based on previous California wildfires, officials said. Results showed “no chemicals related to wildfires at levels that are dangerous to human health,” according to a news release.

Other coastal water quality news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Opinion: Turf battle over grass is heating up in Phoenix and the West

… The push against so-called non-functional turf has spread across Western cities that rely on Colorado River water. … Arizona Department of Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke wants to nix non-functional turf in areas where housing growth on groundwater has been paused as a sign to other Colorado River basin states that we are using every drop wisely. … Republican Tim Dunn is pushing Senate Bill 1523 to, among other things, prohibit cities from requiring builders to install a minimum amount of non-functional turf in their projects. … Don’t overlook why we are weeding through these details at this moment: Because even though Republican lawmakers are bitterly fighting Buschatzke over how to handle groundwater in metro Phoenix, they agree that some limits on grass could help bolster our negotiating position on the Colorado River.
–Written by opinion columnist Joanna Allhands.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

New board member with old ties appointed to powerful Kern water agency

The Division 1 board seat on the powerful Kern County Water Agency came full circle Tuesday after Jay Kroeker was appointed to fill the vacancy left by Ted Page who resigned early last month. Kroeker is a son-in-law of the late Fred Starrh who held that same seat for 28 years before being beaten by Page in an upset election in 2010. Starrh died in 2019. Kroeker is a partner in Starrh Farms, which operates mostly in northwestern Kern County. Their lands are in the Lost Hills Water District and Belridge and Semitropic water storage districts, which get water from the State Water project, and the Shafter-Wasco Irrigation District, which holds a federal contract for water from the Central Valley Project.

Aquafornia news The Porterville Recorder (Calif.)

Beaver reintroduction to Tule River has been a challenge

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife has provided an update on the results so far of returning beavers to watersheds, which included working with the Tule Rive Tribe to return beavers to the Tule River. So far the effort to return beavers to the Tule River has been challenging when it comes to all three releases that were done. All of the seven beavers in the first release may have been killed by predators and there has also been human tampering of monitoring equipment. CDFW stated after a year-and-a-half the beavers have begun their work as “ecosystem engineers” initiating the restoration of wetlands and building resilience to the effects of climate change such as drought and wildfire.

Aquafornia news Cal Coast News (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)

Opinion: Lake Nacimiento at risk: Group takes legal action

The Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee is in a critical legal battle against Monterey County’s mismanagement of Lake Nacimiento’s water levels. Excessive water releases and the controversial Interlake Tunnel Project threaten to devastate recreation, tourism, and the local economy. A San Luis Obispo County judge has ordered Monterey County to engage in a final settlement process with our committee to address these ongoing issues. … For years, Monterey County’s water releases from Lake Nacimiento have been mismanaged and at times appear to have exceeded legal limits, with documented cases such as the 12,000 acre-feet over-release in 2018—valued at over $30 million—was released in violation of the state-issued operating permit.
–Written by the Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee

Aquafornia news Newsweek

Americans being warned of water contamination scam

Officials in multiple cities across the United States in recent months have warned citizens about scams targeting water systems that involve payments to improve so-called quality issues and provide adequate testing. … A similar situation happened in February in Fairfield, California, where a female homeowner said that a strange man and woman showed up on her porch requesting to come into her home. “He says, ‘What we’re doing in the neighborhood is we’re checking the 94533 ZIP codes, which your water is contaminated.’ I said, ‘What do you mean, contaminated?’” Fairfield resident Martha Andrade told local NBC affiliate KCRA. … In December, residents of Santa Maria, California, reported to local officials that scam artists were in their neighborhoods selling water treatment units—telling homeowners that the costs associated with the units would be reimbursed by the city, according to local NBC affiliate KSBY.

Aquafornia news The Salt Lake Tribune (Utah)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Here’s why 3 decent winters in a row still isn’t enough to fill Lake Powell

Over the last three years, the Colorado River Basin has experienced three relatively healthy winters. But that decent snowpack, after melting, hasn’t filled reservoirs like Lake Mead and Lake Powell as much as water users across the West might like, due to years of drought and overuse. Recent forecasts show Lake Mead and Lake Powell will remain roughly one-third full after snow melts down from the mountains across the West into the Colorado River and its tributaries this year. … This year’s lackluster forecasted runoff into Lake Powell coincides with tense political negotiations between the seven states that use Colorado River water: Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. 

Other water supply and snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news National Public Radio

NOAA faces disruptions as federal contracts lapse

The secretary of commerce is personally reviewing all contracts with commitments above $100,000 at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, causing backups and uncertainty in the agency that is responsible for the country’s weather forecasts, marine fisheries management and coastal management. NOAA is housed within the Department of Commerce. Howard Lutnick is reviewing all NOAA contracts above $100,000, according to three agency employees who spoke anonymously out of fear of retribution at work. There are hundreds of such contracts across the agency that need to be reviewed each year and several that have been paused or otherwise impacted by the secretary’s review, according to an agency employee familiar with the contracting process.

Other NOAA news:

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

New rules at Folsom, Clementine target golden mussel threat

Faced with the rapid spread of golden mussels across California waterways, state and federal officials are imposing strict new measures at Folsom Lake and Lake Clementine to prevent the invasive species from taking hold. Beginning Monday, all trailered or motorized boats at the two popular Sacramento-area lakes will be required to undergo inspection and a mandatory 30-day quarantine before launching. Golden mussels, native to Asia, were first detected in California waters last fall in the Port of Stockton. Since then, they have spread rapidly through connected waterways, reaching as far south as Bakersfield. Officials warn that the freshwater mollusks threaten California’s water infrastructure, power systems and aquatic ecosystems by clogging pipes, outcompeting native species and damaging boats by attaching to hulls and clogging engines.

Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: Last call to register for tour of key water region; come to our open house!

NEARLY SOLD OUT! Our Central Valley Tour travels the length of the San Joaquin Valley where water supply and use have been in the national headlines, including our first stop at San Luis Reservoir near Los Banos. Register here before tickets are gone! Can’t join our Central Valley Tour? You can still learn about the Central Valley’s water resourcehs with our array of educational guides and maps. And join us May 1 for our annual open house and reception at our office near the Sacramento River! 

Aquafornia news AP News

Why water fluoridation, long considered a public health success story, is under scrutiny

U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he wants communities to stop fluoridating water, and he is setting the gears of government in motion to help make that happen. Kennedy this week said he plans to tell the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to stop recommending fluoridation in communities nationwide. And he said he’s assembling a task force of health experts to study the issue and make new recommendations. At the same time, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced it would review new scientific information on potential health risks of fluoride in drinking water. … Here’s a look at how reversing fluoride policy has become an action item under President Donald Trump’s administration.

Other fluoride and PFAS news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Another water district annexes so-called “white lands,” the scourge of complying with California’s groundwater law

A tiny water district in western Tulare County is poised to nearly triple in size by annexing 13,000 acres of land that has become “the stepchild nobody wants” for its lack of surface water. The Atwell Island Water District, at 7,300 acres, sought the annexation in order to help farmers in the area get access to surface water, said board member Deanna Jackson. Atwell has a small federal contract for water from the Central Valley Project and is a subcontractor for water from the Cross Valley Canal in Kern County as well. Jackson also runs the overarching Tri-County Water Authority Groundwater Sustainability Agency, tasked with bringing the region’s aquifers into balance per the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA). Atwell is a member agency of Tri-County, which also brought this acreage into its boundaries.

Other California groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Sentient Media

Phrases newly banned at USDA include ‘safe drinking water’ and ‘climate change,’ leaked memo reveals

“Safe drinking water,” “greenhouse gas emissions,” and “climate change” are just a few of the 100+ words and phrases now banned at the Department of Agriculture’s research division, according to a recently-leaked memo. More Perfect Union reports that in March, staff at the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) were sent a long list of words and phrases by a section head and told that they may no longer use any of them in certain official contexts. The memo was sent by Sharon Strickland, the Northeast Area Financial Management, Travel and Agreements Section Head at the ARS, to staff. The ARS is the research wing of the USDA, overseeing over 600 research projects and 2,000 scientists.

Other USDA water and natural resource news: