Aquafornia

Overview

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 Chris Bowman.

Subscribe to our weekday emails to have news delivered to your inbox at about 9 a.m. Monday through Friday except for holidays.

For breaking news, follow us on Twitter.

Check out our special news feeds devoted to:

Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, 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 Lost Coast Outpost/Humboldt County News

Klamath Dam removal project on track to open 420 miles of salmon habitat this Fall

For the first time since 1918, an astonishing 420 miles of salmon habitat in the Klamath River watershed in California and Oregon will be fully connected by September. This results from the world’s largest dam removal effort, the Klamath River Renewal Project. The amount of habitat opened up on the Klamath is equivalent to the distance between Portland, Maine, and Philadelphia–a journey through seven states. PacifiCorp, the previous owner, agreed to remove the aging dams after they determined removal would be less expensive than upgrading to current environmental standards. The dams had been used for power generation, not water storage. The Copco No. 2 Dam on the Klamath was removed last year. The deconstruction of the Iron Gate, Copco No. 1, and JC Boyle dams is underway and running ahead of schedule.

Related podcast:

Aquafornia news East Bay Times

Monterey County lake to reopen, massive fish die off likely due to algae bloom

Test results at Lake San Antonio in southern Monterey County suggest the culprit in a recent massive fish die-off that closed the lake may have been an algae bloom spurred by high heat that depleted the oxygen in the water and suffocated the fish. According to officials, there is no threat to public health and the lake will reopen Wednesday. After reports surfaced of a massive die-off of small fish around July 5 when temperatures climbed to 114 degrees at the lake, and then spread to larger fish in the following days, the recreation area was closed to the public July 10.

Related article:

Aquafornia news California Trout

News release: CalTrout launches new source water science study

The spring waters that emerge from the volcanic rocks of northern California’s Cascade Range are of critical importance for water security for both fish and people, yet relatively little is known about them and how they have been affected by recent drought and other climate change impacts. In 2023, CalTrout and our partners embarked on a three-year study to provide a scientifically based toolset to better understand, manage, and advance the protection of the cold, clean spring waters in the Upper Sacramento Basin.   Building on our past efforts to assess baseline conditions of springs in the Mount Shasta region, this study will define and quantify source areas and flows, assess ecosystem sensitivity to climate change, and determine how these systems support the diverse life history of wild cold-water fish. Study locations include the spring-fed streams above Shasta Reservoir: the McCloud, Upper Sacramento, Rising, and Fall rivers, Hat Creek, and Burney Creek, which feeds the iconic Burney Falls.   

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Geyser explosion sends park visitors fleeing at Yellowstone

A violent hydrothermal explosion at Yellowstone National Park sent visitors fleeing Tuesday as mud and debris erupted from a geyser just north of Old Faithful, according to park rangers. Video of the explosion showed a column of steam and dark earth launching high into the sky. “Run, run, run, run …” a woman shouted as parkgoers began running along a wooden boardwalk. The explosion occurred around 10:19 a.m. near Sapphire Pool in Biscuit Basin, just north of the Old Faithful geyser, the park service said in a news release. No injuries have been reported, but the event is still under investigation. Hydrothermal explosions occur when “water suddenly flashes to steam underground,” according to a statement from the U.S. Geological Survey. The agency said such explosions are “relatively common” at the park.

Related:

Aquafornia news The Mercury News

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Desalination plant proposed for San Francisco Bay

Saying it needs to evaluate all options for new sources of drinking water, Silicon Valley’s largest water district is studying a plan to build the first seawater desalination plant along the shores of San Francisco Bay. The Santa Clara Valley Water District, a government agency based in San Jose, has approved spending $1.7 million for Black & Veatch, a Walnut Creek firm, to conduct an engineering feasibility study over the next 12 months for a project near the bay’s shoreline in Palo Alto, Mountain View or San Jose. Under the proposal, which is still in the early stages, the plant would take between 20 million to 80 million gallons of water a day from the bay, run it through filters to strip the salt out and serve from 10 million to 40 million gallons a day of freshwater to South Bay homes and businesses. That would provide about 11,000 to 44,000 acre-feet of water per year, enough for between 100,000 and 500,000 households.

Aquafornia news Associated Press

Silicon Valley-backed voter plan for a new California city won’t be on the November ballot after all

A Silicon Valley-backed initiative to build a green city for up to 400,000 people in the San Francisco Bay Area on land now zoned for agriculture won’t be on the Nov. 5 ballot after all, officials said Monday. The California Forever campaign qualified for the ballot in June, but a Solano County report released last week raised questions about the project and concluded it “may not be financially feasible.” With Solano County supervisors set to consider the report on Tuesday, organizers suddenly withdrew the measure and said they would try again in two years. The report found the new city — described on the California Forever website as an “opportunity for a new community, good paying local jobs, solar farms, and open space” — was likely to cost the county billions of dollars and create substantial financial deficits, while slashing agricultural production and potentially threatening local water supplies, the Bay Area News Group reported. … The Solano Land Trust, which protects open lands, said in June that such large-scale development “will have a detrimental impact on Solano County’s water resources, air quality, traffic, farmland, and natural environment.”

Related article:

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

West broiling, burning despite drought relief

While California and Nevada remain virtually drought-free, climate experts say extreme heat and wildfire risk may continue plaguing the West for months. Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said during a webinar Monday that ongoing heat events across the West present a major risk to vulnerable communities, despite a good water supply outlook for the region. Joseph Casola, the regional climate services director at the National Centers for Environmental Information, called the drought outlook “relatively rosy for California and Nevada.” Data shows few pockets of drought in both states, aside from several areas along the California-Oregon border. Many reservoirs across California sit above their average holding capacity thanks to the water year’s extended periods of late-spring rain and snow storms.

Related articles: 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Environmentalists ‘ecstatic’ over Kamala Harris candidacy

… Harris, a Californian who has previously described climate change as an “existential threat” that must be treated with a sense of urgency, has prioritized investments in clean energy jobs, air and water protections, fossil fuel accountability, climate action and environmental justices… … Harris’ environmental platform stands in stark contrast to that of Republican nominee Donald Trump, whose previous climate record includes rolling back more than 100 climate regulations and appointing climate change deniers to senior posts in the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Interior. Project 2025, touted as a road map for a Republican administration, outlines plans to expand oil and gas drilling, dismantle the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and its offices — including the National Weather Service — and other steps that would address the Biden administration’s “radical climate policy” and “unprovoked war on fossil fuels,” according to the document.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news State Water Resources Control Board

News release: Since launch of landmark state program, 900,000 more Californians have access to safe, affordable drinking water

Five years after its launch, the state of California’s landmark Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience (SAFER) drinking water program has made significant progress in advancing the human right to water. In the five years since the program was established, the State Water Resources Control Board has distributed more than $1 billion in grants to disadvantaged communities – over two-and-a-half times the amount of grants provided during the five years prior. During this time, the number of people served by failing water systems has fallen from 1.6 million to 700,000 – a net gain of 900,000 more Californians who now have safe and affordable drinking water.

Aquafornia news The Washington Post

A post-fire ‘nightmare’ in New Mexico, six floods in three weeks

Ruidoso, a scenic town of nearly 8,000 in southern New Mexico, is now at the mercy of an enduring, double-barreled disaster. Two massive fires broke out last month along the mountains encircling the town, torching more than 25,000 acres, burning nearly a thousand homes and killing two people. Then, eight times and counting since June 21, including Saturday, floodwaters have cascaded down those same mountainsides into the village. It’s a worst-case scenario that may become more frequent as weather extremes intensify in the American West. Studies suggest climate change is increasing the risk that severe rainfall comes in the wake of wildfires. Increasingly hot and dry conditions breed fiercer blazes. Warming air can also hold more moisture, leading to more intense storms. The burn scars from fires can elevate the flooding risk for more than five years, as vegetation regrows.

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

Opinion: Colorado must prioritize restoring rivers instead of unnecessarily delivering municipal water via pipelines

Despite decades of evidence, there is still a false binary choice being hoisted upon Coloradans by municipalities and water development entities — either we almost completely dewater our rivers as they flow through lower elevation communities, decimating river health, river recreation and local economic opportunities, or we provide municipal water to rapidly growing suburban cities on the Front Range. Instead, our state government should help prioritize river restoration by championing in-channel water delivery projects. Water should be left in river channels until it reaches the nearest adjacent diversion point to its delivery location. Hundreds, if not thousands of ditches, tunnels and pipelines already exist, and basin-wide assessments of these diversion points were done under the Colorado Water Plan. 
—Written by Evan Stafford, communications director for American Whitewater

Related news release and blog:

Aquafornia news Public Policy Institute of California

Blog: Rethinking stormwater—from waste to treasure

Unmanaged stormwater can be a flood hazard and a contaminant. But when it’s properly managed, stormwater actually can benefit communities, creating green spaces and recharging aquifers. We spoke with Karen Cowan, executive director of the California Stormwater Quality Association (CASQA), to learn more about this underappreciated resource. … Sustainable stormwater management is the very definition of opportunity. Stormwater capture involves putting water in the ground through smaller street greening projects or big infiltration basins, and lots of approaches in between. We want to shift how we view rain—to embrace it as a good thing, rather than see it as a toxic waste stream. The governor’s Water Supply Strategy identifies stormwater capture as one of the state’s top priorities; investment and incentives will help.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Manteca Bulletin

Harder works on tunnel death blow

Congressman Josh Harder uses the State of California’s own words to make his case to make it impossible for the $20 billion Delta bypass tunnel to be built. It would: Increase salinity, devastate San Joaquin County agricultural production, deteriorate critical ecological systems that fish rely on, land a severe economic blow to the region. And just how would Harder make it impossible from his position in Congress to pull the plug on a state water project pushed by urban Southern California and large southern San Joaquin Valley corporate farm concerns? Harder is pushing for the adoption of legislation directing the Army Corps of Engineers not to issue a required permit to allow federally controlled Central Valley Project water — essentially flows from Shasta Dam — to be diverted into the proposed tunnel south of Sacramento. Without the permit or the participation of the federal Bureau of Reclamation, the tunnel can’t be built or the water diverted. 

Aquafornia news California Trout

Blog: Protecting California’s waters: Leveraging outstanding national resource waters designation

Climate change is driving record-setting droughts, uncontrolled wildfires, and extreme temperatures, all of which jeopardize our water security. At CalTrout, we believe in taking proactive measures to safeguard our watersheds. Waiting until the damage is done is not an option – the time to act is now. Fortunately, we have a powerful tool at our disposal: the Outstanding National Resource Waters (Outstanding Waters) designation.   After years of studies, campaign building, and advocacy, the North Coast Regional Water Quality Board approved CalTrout’s request to designate Elder Creek and Cedar Creek as Outstanding Waters, the first step in the official designation process. Over the next few months, our experts will be collaborating closely with the Board to secure these critical protections – an important step towards ensuring water security for all Californians, people, and wildlife. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news Marketplace

Rising sea level will affect 2 million in U.S. by 2050, analysis finds

… Since the late 1800s, sea level has risen globally by about 8 inches. It’s expected to rise about another foot by 2050. Along some of California’s coast, that means as much as 5 feet worth of beach per year could be eroding by 2050. A report from the Union of Concerned Scientists finds that 2.2 million U.S. residents will be affected by rising tides by 2050. And by the end of the century, that rate could triple. … The report finds that nationwide, at least 1,100 pieces of critical infrastructure — schools, hospitals, power plants — could be flooding monthly by 2050 because of sea level rise. … The recommendations in the report include elevating buildings, flood-proofing them, and if necessary, relocating them.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Sun News

Federal funds to empower Nevada tribes as climate challenges mount

Recent federal investments in climate resilience for Indigenous communities in Nevada have included funds to modernize tribal power grids against wildfires, build water storage for people reliant on well water and bring electricity to homes. U.S. Rep. Steven Horsford, D-Nev., and Matthew Dannenberg, a senior tribal liaison for the U.S. Department of Energy, gave a glimpse Monday into infrastructure upgrades that will help Nevada’s tribal nations better cope with climate change. Nevada tribal communities have access to more than $813 million between the Inflation Reduction Act, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the American Rescue Plan, all of which were passed by Congress and signed into law during the Biden-Harris administration.

Related article:

Aquafornia news San José Spotlight

San Jose water rate hikes could drop

The for-profit company feeding water to six Santa Clara County cities may agree to walk back its plan for a 22% water rate hike over three years. State officials are in the process of developing a settlement with the San Jose Water Company that would adjust its controversial January proposal, after residents during hearings this summer questioned how working families or seniors on fixed incomes could absorb the increases. “(The settlement) would see the rate increases more aligned with anticipated inflation,” Richard Rauschmeier, program manager of the California Public Utilities Commission’s Public Advocates Office, told San José Spotlight.

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Sewage spill spoils summer plans at two Los Angeles beaches

Two Los Angeles-area beaches have been shut down for more than 48 hours — amid an intense heat wave across parts of California — not because of sharks or lack of lifeguards, but because several thousand gallons of untreated sewage have spilled into a nearby creek, stinking up summer plans for beachgoers, officials said. An estimated 15,000 gallons of sewage was discharged on Saturday afternoon in a neighborhood roughly seven miles east of the Santa Monica Pier, entering the Ballona Creek, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health said in a news release.

Related article:

Aquafornia news AgNet West Radio Network

Adverse weather and flooding take a toll on Monterey crop values

According to the latest Monterey County Crop Report, adverse weather and flooding took a toll on crop values last year. The 2023 report shows a 6.1 percent decline in crop values from the previous year, with a total production value of $4.35 billion. Crop values were impacted by market demand and labor challenges. However, the decrease was mainly due to severe flooding in January and March, and below-average temperatures.  Extensive flooding damaged over 20,000 acres of farmland, and the cool weather in spring and summer further delayed crop growth. “Impact to commodities from the weather were tempered to some extent by market demand for the high value crops produced in our region,” Monterey County Agricultural Commissioner Juan Hidalgo said in the report.

Related article:

Aquafornia news KRCR

PG&E to boost Feather River flows, warns of class 5 rapids this weekend

If you’re planning to be on the north fork of the Feather River this weekend, PG&E urges you to use caution as they plan to increase flows to the area on July 27 and 28. PG&E says they’re increasing flows on the Rock Creek Reach part of the river near the community of Storrie for whitewater recreation. They say it’ll have class 3, 4, and 5 rapids, which are only for skilled paddlers and not for people hoping for a little tubing. Flows will gradually reduce on Sunday afternoon.