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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 Elk Grove Citizen (Calif.)

Army Corps concludes physical levee inspections in Wilton, Sloughhouse, Sheldon

When Reclamation District 800 (RD 800) was selected as one of only four private levee districts nationwide to take part in a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers pilot study in late 2022, it was already a major win. The program promised expert inspection, risk analysis, and long-term data — all at no cost to the district. But what may be even more rewarding, district leaders say, is that it also brought long-sought recognition and support from the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) – the most likely source for future funding. … The pilot project began in earnest on Feb. 13, 2024, when Army Corps engineers conducted their first levee tour on the north side of the Cosumnes River. Top DWR officials from the Division of Flood Management joined that tour — an unusual show of support for a rural district long accustomed to going it alone.

Aquafornia news EurekAlert! (American Association for the Advancement of Science)

Toxic well water will affect household pets first, new study finds

Dogs drink water wherever they happen to find it — a puddle, a pond, a toilet. But the stuff in their actual water bowls almost always comes from the same tap their owners use. When that water is contaminated, both dogs and humans may suffer. The risk is especially high for the 15 million American households that rely on private wells, according to a new Virginia Tech study in the journal PLOS Water. In dog drinking water sampled from wells across the country, 64 percent contained excessive levels of at least one potentially toxic heavy metal, such as lead, iron, sulfur, or arsenic. … Because heavy metal contaminants are often tasteless, odorless, and invisible, homeowners may not know there’s something in the water — until their dog gets sick. 

Aquafornia news Eastern Municipal Water District

News release: EMWD recognized for innovative career education program

Throughout the school year, Eastern Municipal Water District staff are helping to educate the students who one day may be taking their jobs. A year ago, EMWD launched a modernization of its longstanding education program. The focus is on developing its future workforce through a yearslong Environmental Water Resource Career Technical Education (CTE) program. The result is that EMWD staff can promote water industry careers to the industry’s future workforce. That program – the first of its kind in the region – was recently honored by the California Association of Sanitation Agencies (CASA) with its Excellence in Public Outreach and Education Award. CASA is an industry organization committed to the collection, treatment, and recycling of wastewater. 

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: New ways of saving California salmon emphasize collaboration

… The Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta is an epicenter of California’s bitter water wars, supplying water to fish, farmers and semi-arid Southern California. Stakeholders — fishermen, farmers, water managers, researchers, agencies — often find themselves at odds with one another, in need of a living and quick to fight. But recent fish and water crises have challenged these groups to set aside their competing interests. California’s commercial salmon fishing ban and drought-induced water curtailment to agriculture have rallied an unlikely coalition of fishermen, farmers and water managers hoping to find solutions. 

Other anadromous fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news KGUN (Tucson, Ariz.)

Anti-Project Blue rally attendees worry about water, resource usage

Tucson’s City Council is expected to vote Wednesday on whether to annex land for the construction of Project Blue, a proposed data center that has sparked concern among residents and public health advocates over its potential environmental and health impacts. On Tuesday morning, roughly 20 demonstrators gathered downtown to protest the project, voicing fears about the center’s water usage in an already drought-prone region. … “Our water supplies are dwindling,” said Mike Humphrey, vice chair of the Pima County Board of Health and an outspoken critic of the project. “We only have one source of water, which is our aquifer. We don’t have lakes, we don’t have rivers. And we need to protect that aquifer because it’s the only water source we have.”

Other Project Blue news:

Aquafornia news Summit Daily (Colo.)

Colorado’s congressional delegation asks for Colorado River funding to flow back to Western Slope projects

Colorado’s congressional delegation has united to ask the Trump administration to release $140 million in funding previously granted to water projects in the state, including $40 million to aid in the Colorado River District’s purchase of the Shoshone water rights. … Of the Colorado awardees, the largest allocation was $40 million to the Colorado River District to purchase the Shoshone water rights from Xcel Energy. … The Shoshone water rights — which include a 1905 senior right tied to the Shoshone Power Plant in Glenwood Canyon and a secondary, junior right established in 1929 for other water users, including Front Range providers — are among the oldest and largest non-consumptive rights on the Colorado River. 

Other Colorado River Basin news: 

Aquafornia news KSL (Salt Lake City, Utah)

Utah drought, fire danger worsens with dry spell

It’s been an entire month since a measurable amount of rain has fallen in Salt Lake City. And according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, more than 60% of the state has fallen into severe drought. National Weather Service Lead Meteorologist Christine Kruse says little relief is expected in the coming weeks. If current conditions persist, drought and fire risks will likely worsen, and much of the next snowpack could be absorbed by parched soil before reaching reservoirs. … The months of June and July are typically dry. The average is just under an inch-and-a-half of rain for both months in Salt Lake City. But this year, the state didn’t receive even a quarter of that average, and the whole state is seeing the impact of abnormally dry weather.

Other drought and precipitation news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Calif. farming costs, land loss drive innovation in agrobotics

… Urban development and water shortages are major drivers of farmland loss. Between 2016 and 2040, California is projected to lose more cropland to urbanization than any other state — over 300,000 acres. … There are few truly small farms left that are aiming to turn significant profits, according to Daniel Sumners, a professor of agricultural economics at UC Davis. The operations that can afford and benefit from agrobotics are mid-to-large farms that can secure loans for equipment purchases. … Across California’s Central Valley, a new generation of agrobotics founders is reshaping how innovation happens on the farm.

Other agricultural water use news:

Aquafornia news Grist

Groundwater is drying out, heating up, and causing sea level rise

… According to a study released last week in the peer-reviewed academic journal Science Advances, fresh water has been declining at an alarming rate since researchers began observing global groundwater in 2002, creating areas of “mega-drying” that cover much of the Northern Hemisphere.  … The United States, which sources half of its drinking water from groundwater, has no unifying water management plan, instead relying on a piecemeal local network of regulations. California passed the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, which aims to regulate water withdrawals and prevent aquifer exhaustion, in 2014, but the state isn’t expected to reach sustainable water use patterns until the early 2040s. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news AP News

Trump EPA says it will defend tough lead pipe replacement rule from Biden

The Environmental Protection Agency said Tuesday it will defend the Biden administration’s aggressive rule for reducing lead in drinking water against a court challenge, though public health advocates worry officials could still weaken it. The rule gave cities and towns a 10-year deadline to replace all of their lead pipes and was the strongest overhaul of lead-in-water standards in roughly three decades. Litigation against the rule was on pause so the Trump administration could decide whether it supported the policy. On Tuesday, the agency said it would defend the tough standards.

Other EPA news:

Aquafornia news Capital Public Radio (Sacramento, Calif.)

‘A dumping ground’: How, and why, did the Delta become a home for abandoned ships?

The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta’s waterways span over a thousand miles. The region serves as a critical source of water for California, a transportation corridor linking ports in Sacramento and Stockton with the Bay Area, and a habitat for hundreds of wildlife species. But these rivers, streams and sloughs also conceal a man-made danger which poses significant environmental and navigational threats. Dozens of abandoned vessels — ranging from small speedboats and pleasure craft, to barges and cruise ships — litter the Delta, some of which have sat derelict for decades.

Other Delta news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Copper mines close in on Western Apache sacred site, and the forest protected to mitigate the damage

On the banks of the San Pedro River lies one of the American Southwest’s few remaining old-growth mesquite bosques—a streamside forest in more than 3,000 acres of riparian ecosystem that is one of Arizona’s last intact landscapes. Known as the 7B Ranch, the mesquite forest is vital to the area’s biodiversity. … [J]ust eight miles up the road is another proposed mine, this one pursued by Faraday Copper, for which the Bureau of Land Management has approved exploratory drilling. Now, the San Carlos Apache Tribe and a coalition of environmental groups appealed to the BLM’s Arizona state director to review the agency’s approval of Faraday’s Copper Creek project, citing its impacts to 7B Ranch as a property mitigating the impacts of a mine elsewhere, and for the “serious risks to wildlife, water resources, landscape connectivity, human health, and cultural resources” it poses to the tribe, land and other local communities. 

Other tribal water news:

Aquafornia news Border Report

More trash booms might pop up following success in Tijuana River

This past rainy season, a trash boom in the Tijuana River kept 500 tons of plastics, trash and other debris away from the Tijuana River Valley and the Pacific Ocean, far exceeding expectations. On Tuesday morning, Oscar Romo, director of Alter Terra, the non-profit in charge of the boom, gave a tour of the area to members of the Rural Community Assistance Partnership, one of the agencies that helped secure funding for the trash boom. … For the time being, the boom has been dismantled but will be reassembled and operational in a few months. “RCAP was funded through the California State Water Board to have the booms, deploy them for two storm seasons,” [Rural Community Assistance Partnership Community Programs Director Jennifer] Hazard said. “We were able to extend that to a third storm season.”

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Bills would halt Interior, Forest Service firings

Top Democrats on the House and Senate energy, natural resources and agriculture committees introduced bills to halt planned firings at the Interior Department, the Forest Service and the Department of Energy. The bills, introduced Monday, aim to place a moratorium on any reduction in force (RIF) at the agencies while Congress reviews their staffing needs. The bills come after months of turmoil stemming from the Trump administration’s efforts to cull the federal workforce. … “The Trump administration is firing the public servants who protect lives and communities by helping to battle deadly wildfires, tracking extreme weather events, and keeping water clean and public lands accessible,” [Natural Resources ranking member Jared] Huffman [D-Calif.] said in a statement. 

Aquafornia news ABC30 (Fresno, Calif.)

53 West Goshen homes connected to clean water thanks to $3.4M state grant

A project nearly five years in the making by community partners, and now 53 homes, which includes over a hundred people, in West Goshen have access to clean, safe and reliable drinking water through their faucets. … Thanks to a $3.4 Million state grant, through The Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience Program, SAFER, Goshen homes have now been connected to Cal Water’s public water system. … The Community Water Center has been providing water bottles and jugs to locals for years. … The nonprofit says the project should be complete within the next week and hopes to continue reaching other communities in Tulare County, including areas near Porterville and Cutler-Orosi.

Other local water management news:

Aquafornia news Daily Republic (Fairfield, Calif.)

Teachers dive into local water issues at annual Solano Institute

Twenty-six Solano County educators recently immersed themselves in the lessons of the Solano Water Institute for Teachers. The three-day professional development program, hosted by Solano Resource Conservation District, instructs the K-12 educators in the natural and managed water systems that define the Solano County region. … The teachers explore the Suisun Marsh at Rush Ranch Open Space. They learn wetland ecology and management from experts like Steve Chappell from the Suisun Resource Conservation District and Matt Ferner from the San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. … The teachers take the deep dive into [Water Education Foundation's California] Project Wet program on the final day of the institute at the Dunnell Nature Park & Education Center in Fairfield.

Aquafornia news TechXplore

Floating sponges can recover ammonia from wastewater using the sun

Sunlight shining on specialized floaties can now produce fuel for plants by recovering ammonia from wastewater. Researchers designed a floatable amino-grafted (-NH2) MXene (Ti3C2)-based (AMS) sponge that, when scaled efficiently, can provide two sustainable solutions simultaneously: cleaning up wastewater and providing ammonia (NH3), an essential nitrogen source for plants, to farmers at a lower cost. … According to the findings published in Nature Sustainability, the researchers were able to recover ammonia at the rate of 0.6 mol/m2/h with 99.8% purity using ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) wastewater under 5-sun light intensity, without any added chemicals or energy.

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Bipartisan congressional letter calls on Trump to release water funds

Colorado’s entire congressional delegation, Republicans and Democrats alike, is calling for the release of $140 million in frozen funds for Colorado River water projects. In January, the last days of the Biden administration, the Bureau of Reclamation awarded funding for 17 projects as part of the federal drought-response effort in the overstressed Colorado River Basin. Three days later, President Donald Trump issued sweeping executive orders that aimed to reshape federal spending priorities to match his administration’s policies. … It stalled hoped-for progress on everything from irrigation ditch repairs to fish passage projects. … [The lawmakers] sent the letter Monday to the Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Reclamation, the agencies in charge of awarding the funds. 

Other water project funding news:

Aquafornia news Action News Now (Chico, Calif.)

Bureau of Reclamation to hold public negotiation sessions with Sites Project Authority

The Bureau of Reclamation announced the start of public negotiation sessions with the Sites Project Authority for a Partnership Agreement for the proposed Sites Reservoir Project. Reclamation and the Sites Project Authority are collaborating on a plan for a new 1.5-million-acre-foot [Sacramento River] offstream reservoir, located about 10 miles west of Maxwell, California. The agreement will outline the terms and conditions for both parties involved. … The public is invited to attend these sessions [Aug. 18 and 19] and will have the opportunity to offer comments on the contracting action. Further details and the proposed contract will be available at the sessions.

Other Sites Reservoir news:

Aquafornia news AZ Luminaria

Tucson City Council to discuss Project Blue for first time Wednesday

The Tucson City Council is slated to discuss the massive and secretive Project Blue data center proposal for the first time at a study session Wednesday afternoon. … Mayor Regina Romero asked the city manager to initiate a review of data center ordinances and regulations by other Arizona cities. … In a summary of the draft’s key elements, the document includes Project Blue’s water-related promises. … [e.g.]The developers of Project Blue will fund or directly invest in Tucson Water efforts to secure new water resources to offset their water use. Project Blue will use minor amounts of potable water that will be offset annually. … More information on water-related promises of the project are included in the updated Project Blue fact sheet shared ahead of Wednesday’s meeting.

Other data center water use news: