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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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  • 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 LAist

Will LA’s Ballona Wetlands ever be restored?

The Ballona Wetlands — an ecological reserve on L.A.’s Westside, bordered by Marina del Rey, Playa Vista and Playa del Rey — are the second-largest chunk of open space in L.A., second only to Griffith Park. … Healthy wetlands can absorb carbon in the atmosphere and buffer coastal communities from flooding. … Across the world, calls to protect them are growing as human-caused climate change accelerates. Despite the potential, the Ballona Wetlands have been the subject of one of Southern California’s longest running environmental battles. Nearly 20 years after the wetlands were designated by the state as an ecological reserve, there’s still no timeline for completing the plans to restore them, and public access to the green space remains significantly limited.

Other wetland restoration news:

Aquafornia news UC Agriculture and Natural Resources

Blog: Tangled ecosystems — protecting California from invasive water species

A few strands of thin, feathery, green plants growing under the dock didn’t catch anyone’s attention last spring. But those strands spread quickly and within months the lake’s calm waters were tangled in mats of the feathery Eurasian watermilfoil, an aggressive aquatic plant that grows quickly and clogs everything in its path. … This isn’t just an isolated incident; it’s happening across California. Aquatic invasive species are spreading faster than ever, infesting our ponds, creeks, reservoirs, lakes, and rivers. Now is the time to learn about aquatic invasive species; what they are, how they spread, and what we can do to stop them. When we understand the issue, we can make smart choices and protect California’s waters.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news KTVU/FOX2 (Oakland, Calif.)

Algae toxins suspected in California dog deaths: What to know

Toxins produced by algae have been found in the water of the Venice Canals in Southern California, where 26 dogs have been reported sick and five have died. County health officials have not yet confirmed a direct link between the toxins and the dog illnesses but are recommending that people and pets avoid contact with the water as a precautionary measure. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health has reported 26 suspected cases of canine illness in the area as of Friday, which includes five deaths. The most recent illness was reported on July 30. 

Aquafornia news The Hill

Opinion: Cloud-seeding is not a threat — it’s a time-tested tool to deal with water scarcity

… While relatively unknown to the general public, cloud seeding is nothing new. It was invented in the U.S. and has been used with little fanfare for over 80 years. Today, there are 10 states that actively invest in cloud seeding programs at either a local or state level across the American West: Utah, Idaho, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, Texas, California, North Dakota, Nevada and soon Montana. … In times of drought and increasing water insecurity, to take such a solution off the table would be tremendously damaging to our national interest. Unfortunately, some are trying to do just that.
–Written by Augustus Doricko, founder and chief executive officer of Rainmaker Technology Corporation.

Aquafornia news Government Executive

EPA becomes the second federal agency to cancel its union contracts

The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday informed union officials that it would terminate the contracts it signed with various labor partners effective immediately, making it the second agency to fully implement President Trump’s March executive order stripping most federal workers of their collective bargaining rights. … As part of the decision, the agency will no longer allow union officials to employ official time. … EPA also said it will “reclaim” office space previously occupied by unions and cease participating in arbitration proceedings—arbitrators will be paid only for “work performed to date” and their decisions are now deemed “nonbinding.”

Other EPA news:

Aquafornia news The Guardian (London, U.K.)

Biochar from human waste could solve global fertiliser shortages, study finds

Charcoal made from human waste could help solve fertiliser shortages as well as reduce pollution and energy use, a study has found. … Treated sewage sludge is already spread on farmland, but its use is controversial as it often contains microplastics, heavy metals, Pfas forever chemicals, pathogens, and pharmaceuticals.The researchers say biochar can avoid this problem by separating the waste at source. … The biochar production process also allows nutrient proportions to be adjusted according to the needs of individual crops. This can address problems associated with fertiliser use such as weed growth and eutrophication – when excess nutrients leach into groundwater, causing rapid growth of algae which depletes oxygen availability.

Other biochar news:

Aquafornia news inewsource (San Diego, Calif.)

Otay Water notifies customers of rate increases

Nearly 240,000 residents in parts of southeastern San Diego County will soon see higher water bills.  The Otay Water District notified customers that it will implement an 8.3% rate increase effective Jan. 1, saying the “unavoidable” hike is mostly due to charges passed down from its wholesale water suppliers: The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and the county Water Authority. … Otay Water officials said the vast majority of the increase is tied to costs from suppliers, which have seen higher labor and energy costs and inflation, while also bringing in lower water sales due to drought conditions.

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Judge hands hefty bill to feds after Army Corps loses FOIA case

A federal judge awarded Friends of the River nearly half-a-million dollars in attorneys’ fees Friday after the conservation group prevailed in a Freedom of Information Act dispute that had dragged on for nine years. The award — $491,676 in attorneys’ fees and $2,548 in costs — was less than what the organization asked for but nearly twice what the Army Corps of Engineers had proposed paying. The Corps was on the hook for at least some of the litigation costs after losing a FOIA lawsuit related to endangered species and dams on California’s Yuba River.

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Opinion: California’s dysfunction could squander Lithium Valley’s half-trillion-dollar potential

… Lithium is a vital component in renewable energy technology, and we have long known that there is a rich deposit underground near the Salton Sea. … Sadly though, Lithium Valley has thus far generated more unfulfilled plans and lawsuits than EV batteries. … California’s latest economic blueprint calls out critical minerals as an economic sector the state will “bet” on, and it has already invested well over $100 million. Yet businesses that committed to the effort are reconsidering their plans as progress stagnates. … Each new lawsuit, policy and delay pushes the realization of Lithium Valley’s promise further over the horizon.
–Written by Adela de la Torre, president of San Diego State University.

Aquafornia news Miller Starr Regalia /JDSupra

Blog: Fifth District holds State Water Board’s adoption of regulations requiring new test for whole effluent toxicity violated federal Clean Water Act regulations governing NPDES permitting, but not CEQA, APA or Porter Cologne

In a lengthy and highly technical published opinion filed August 5, 2025, the Fifth District Court of Appeal partly reversed and partly affirmed a judgment that had upheld the State Water Resources Control Board’s (“State Water Board” or “SWRCB”) adoption of the “State Policy for Water Quality Control: Toxicity Provisions” (the “Toxicity Provisions”), which policy in relevant part required use of a new “Test of Significant Toxicity” (“TST”) in analyzing a type of pollution known as “whole effluent toxicity.” … As to the CEQA aspects of the Court’s opinion, it provides valuable CEQA-compliance guidance to agencies with certified regulatory programs adopting new regulations that will trigger generally foreseeable future compliance actions the parameters of which are speculative. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Monday Top of the Scroll: Is Southern California prepared to avoid a ‘Day Zero’ water crisis?

… [T]raditional sources of water are projected to become less reliable as global warming shrinks the West’s mountain snowpack and unleashes more intense droughts. … With supplies at risk, Southern California’s cities and suburbs face major challenges in planning for the future. Decades from now, how might we get our water supply? And what ideas are leaders and managers of water agencies considering to ease risks of shortages — or even a scenario of a “Day Zero” crisis, in which we approach a point of running out? … Those who lead the region’s large water agencies say they are seeking to line up a diversified mix of sources by recycling wastewater, capturing stormwater, restoring watersheds, possibly building new water-transport infrastructure, and even tapping the Pacific Ocean. 

Other water supply technology news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

State’s proposed fee change for pumpers falls flat

The state Water Resources Control Board reversed course on a proposed fee change for groundwater extraction in the San Joaquin Valley after receiving a volley of negative letters, saying changes are “premature.”  The update came during an online Water Rights Fees meeting July 31. Fees target pumpers in overdrafted subbasins placed on probation by the Water Board for lacking adequate groundwater plans. State fees … are intended to repay the state an estimated $5.5 million a year that it says it costs to oversee six groundwater basins in the San Joaquin Valley where plans have been deemed inadequate. Water Board staff had suggested creating a graduated fee structure based on farm size, giving small growers a break at $5-per-acre-foot pumped and charging large growers $40 per acre foot pumped.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

New California dam removal could restore a river — and destroy a community

… Removing the Scott Dam, alongside the removal of the smaller Cape Horn Dam downstream, both on the picturesque Eel River, is part of PG&E’s plan to retire a century-old hydroelectric operation known as the Potter Valley Project, which the company says has gotten too expensive to run. … Downstream communities along the Eel River as well as environmental groups and tribes have cheered dam removal as a way to restore the river’s natural flows. Long-declining salmon and steelhead runs stand to benefit from the restoration. At the same time, the plan has raised concerns about power and water supplies in Northern California. … Much less talked about is the fate of Lake Pillsbury.

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Atmospheric rivers may be diminishing on the West Coast and surging in the East, study finds

… In a study published earlier this year in Nature that looked at 40 years of water vapor, precipitation and wind speed observations, [former NOAA research scientist Wenhao] Dong and his co-authors found that wintertime atmospheric rivers are growing significantly more frequent and intense over the Eastern U.S. while diminishing over the West. … [S]tates such as Washington, Oregon and California have seen atmospheric river frequency decrease by nearly 4 percent per decade since 1980, the researchers found. This has led to long-term wintertime drying of the West Coast. … While the West is drying out overall, there is an increase in extreme precipitation events that are associated with catastrophic atmospheric rivers, Dong added.

Aquafornia news Telluride Daily Planet (Colo.)

Local streamflows are ’significantly below normal’

Although the San Juans have seen a smattering of monsoon storms this season, the rains have not been as consistent as needed to help pull the western part of Colorado out of drought. … The drought conditions are exacerbated by a dry winter and lower-than-average snowpack. Warmer temperatures in April and May also caused snow to melt earlier than usual. … Similar trends across the West also put water supplies at risk. Combined with April’s lower precipitation levels, less water is likely to flow into the major Colorado River Basin this summer, according to NOAA. … Monsoon season in Colorado goes from June until September, so there is still time for rain to bring some much-needed relief, but late summer storms are unlikely to eradicate the Western Slope’s drought.

Other drought and monsoon news around the West: 

Aquafornia news SFGate

‘Major milestone’: Rare animal reintroduced to California national park

… Yellow-legged frogs were once one of the most abundant animals in the alpine habitats of the Sierra Nevada. But for the past decade, the Oakland Zoo has been raising individuals from the now-endangered species and releasing them to the wild as a way to boost their numbers in the aftermath of a deadly disease that has decimated 90% of their population. Known as chytridiomycosis, or the chytrid fungus, the disease leads to “devastating effects” and has contributed to the greatest loss of biodiversity ever caused by a pathogen. … After getting swabbed for the disease one last time, they were transported to their final destination: Laurel Lake at Sequoia and Kings National Park.  

Other conservation news:

Aquafornia news KTNV/ABC13 (Las Vegas, Nev.)

Water negotiations still at impasse as levels decline at Lake Mead

The Colorado River system, a lifeline for 40 million people across seven states, is in decline — as negotiations for water-sharing agreements approach a critical deadline. The current guidelines governing use of the river expire in October of 2026, so decision-making should be ramping up for how Nevada and six other western states will share the essential water resource in the future. … To better understand how the pending agreements impact our region, Channel 13 teamed up with our Scripps News Group member station in Phoenix, Arizona, to hear from the people who depend on this river and those sounding the alarm about its future.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix, Ariz.)

Top Interior officials reassure tribes Trump administration supports their water rights

This week, the nonprofit Native American Rights Fund hosted its biennial tribal water symposium in partnership with the Western States Water Council. It’s been a tradition since 1991, but this year’s daylong gathering was virtual. The online forum brought together tribal, state and federal stakeholders to focus on Indian water settlements – past and present – and the negotiations needed for them to be ratified by lawmakers on Capitol Hill. Top-ranking Interior Department officials took time to reassure tribes that the Trump administration is behind them – despite recent staffing cuts and Congress clawing back federal dollars.

Other tribal water news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Oxbow Bridge collapse called serious public safety threat

The collapse of the Oxbow Bridge, which linked Cibola in La Paz County to California, poses a serious threat to public health and safety and has cut off a critical access route between the two states, the La Paz County Board of Supervisors said. The bridge connected Levee Road to the west side of the Colorado River. The Oxbow 2 Fire burned about 5 acres near the Oxbow Recreation and Wildlife Area, according to the Bureau of Land Management. The collapse of the bridge also caused hazardous debris to enter the Colorado River waterway. This poses risks to environmental resources, recreational users and emergency responders, La Paz County Board of Supervisors said.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Vail Daily (Colo.)

Colorado Democrats ask Trump administration to act on invasive zebra mussels

Several Colorado Democrats are using the recent detections of zebra mussels in the Colorado River to push for implementation of key provisions in the Expanding Public Lands Outdoor Recreation Experiences Act. The EXPLORE Act, as it’s more commonly known, passed in December 2024 and contained multiple bills around improving public land access and conservation, including the aptly named “Stop the Spread of Invasive Mussels Act.” The law gave new authorities to the U.S. Department of the Interior and U.S. Department of Agriculture to respond to and monitor aquatic invasive species. 

Other invasive species news: