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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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Aquafornia news Manufacturing Dive

Tracking PFAS legislation across the US

PFAS are everywhere. Manufacturers have been using “forever chemicals” for their durability and resistance to heat and water, adding them in countless everyday products for decades, such as cell phones, laptops, medical devices, textiles and food packaging. … California, Maine and Minnesota have taken the strictest actions to restrict the use of fluorochemicals, but other states are following suit. Minnesota and others are also enacting legislation mandating manufacturers publicly report their use of PFAS. Manufacturing Dive is tracking the status of bills related to PFAS oversight and use during states’ legislative sessions in 2025 and beyond, with updates to be added over time. Read on for the status and details of each bill.

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news Stocktonia (Calif.)

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Trump cuts to Delta levee repair projects could put Stockton in jeopardy

The Trump administration is proposing to cut the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ construction budget next fiscal year by more than half, a move that could devastate levee restoration projects in the Delta. The proposed cuts, which would reduce the construction budget by 53% compared to the amount previously allocated, could include work on the San Joaquin Basin Project in Stockton, said U.S. Rep. Josh Harder, D-Tracy. The basin project is directed at protecting 300,000 residents from flooding. Harder is one of 12 members of Congress who sent a letter urging that funding be restored. The congressional members sent the letter to the chairperson and ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee and the Energy and Water Subcommittee. … Besides the San Joaquin Basin Project, the letter lists other environmental works that are in jeopardy. One involves 42 miles of American River levees protecting Sacramento and the Natomas Basin. Another includes 41 miles of levees along the Sacramento River and its ship canal that would protect West Sacramento.

Other Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta news:

Aquafornia news CalMatters

These 4 million acres of Calif. forests could lose protection

The Trump administration’s plan to repeal a rule prohibiting logging and road construction in undeveloped parts of national forests would strip protection from more than 4 million acres within California’s borders.  U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced on Monday that she will act to rescind the “roadless rule,” developed during the Clinton administration, to allow “for fire prevention and responsible timber production” on more than 58 million acres of national forests. … These roadless areas are considered important for providing habitat for more than 200 threatened or endangered species of wildlife, including owls, salmon and frogs, and for protecting vital watersheds. … U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman, a Democrat representing Northern California coastal communities and parts of Trinity and Six Rivers national forests, said the revision would threaten watersheds that provide clean drinking water, the rights of tribes and local communities, and the power of forests to hold onto climate-warming carbon. 

Other public land and national forests news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Kern River plaintiff alleges region’s groundwater plan ignores harm to river flows

In a comment letter to the state Water Resources Control Board, one of the plaintiffs in the ongoing lawsuit over Kern River flows alleges information has been withheld from the region’s groundwater plan to the detriment of the river. Water Audit California states a number of entities, including the City of Bakersfield and its main drinking water purveyor California Water Services, “…failed to disclose the adverse impacts that their groundwater extraction is having on interconnected surface waters, thereby causing injury to the public trust and its biological components,” according to the June 20 letter. … Water Audit contends that diverting Kern River water into groundwater recharge basins that are then pumped for drinking water, creates an interconnectivity that may affect stream flows. … Kern’s plan states that there are no areas of interconnectivty in the subbasin per the definition under SGMA regulations, which is that there must be a continuous connection between underground and overlying surface water. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news University of Washington

News release: Strategic transactions of Colorado River rights could help conserve water and restore fish habitat

… Climate change has exacerbated shortages, with studies indicating that recent Colorado River flows are near their lowest in at least 2,000 years. That has had severe consequences for fish: Of the 49 fish species native to the Colorado River Basin, 44 are already threatened, endangered or extinct. … New research led by University of Washington water policy expert Philip Womble found that a market-based approach to managing water could provide more reliable supplies for farmers, communities and industry. The right market design and a little extra investment could also help threatened fish species. The study, published June 20 in Nature Sustainability, details a new system for leasing rights to water from the basin while reallocating some water to imperiled habitats. Among the paper’s most substantial findings, researchers estimate that strategically spending 8% more than under the cheapest water conservation program could nearly triple the ecological benefits.  

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news NOAA Fisheries

News release: Anchovy dominated diets off the West Coast pose new dangers for salmon

A vitamin deficiency likely killed as many as half of newly hatched fry of endangered winter-run Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River in 2020 and 2021. These new findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The deficiency of thiamine, or Vitamin B1, is linked to large-scale shifts in the ocean ecosystem. These shifts changed the prey adult salmon consume before they return to West Coast rivers to spawn, scientists reported. They said the longtime loss of habitat and water has already weakened many California salmon populations. Further declines from thiamine deficiency or other impacts may lead to their extinction. The deficiency syndrome can also affect salmon runs like the Central Valley’s fall-run that once supported valuable commercial fisheries across California. They have since dwindled to the point that commercial ocean salmon fishing in California has been closed for the last 3 years. … Anchovy manufacture an enzyme called thiaminase that breaks down thiamine and can, in turn, affect salmon that eat large amounts of the small fish.

Aquafornia news Natural Resources Defense Council

Blog: In uncertain times, tribes provide steady protection for clean water

Two years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court slashed federal Clean Water Act protection of wetlands, streams, and all of our clean water with its decision in the Sackett v. EPA case. NRDC scientists mapped the potential impact of the Sackett decision and found it devastating—threatening harmful repercussions for droughts, wildfires, flooding, wildlife, and the drinking water supply. In the absence of federal protection, the imperative to defend our shared waters falls increasingly on individuals, states, and Native American Tribal Nations. NRDC is actively working to prevent any further weakening of the Clean Water Act (which the federal U.S. Environmental Protection Agency intends to pursue) and to ensure the law remains a robust tool for all wetland and stream advocates, including Indigenous Peoples. Tribal Nations protect and manage millions of acres of wetlands in the United States, and with commitments made by the U.S. government to Tribal co-management and co-stewardship of federal lands, the amount of clean water safeguarded by Tribal Nations is growing.  

Aquafornia news The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.)

Golden mussels threaten California lakes. Napa County acts to keep them out of Berryessa

Lake Berryessa remains free of invasive freshwater mussels — for now. But the recent arrival of golden mussels in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has prompted Napa County to bolster its efforts to keep the pests out. On Tuesday, the Napa County Board of Supervisors signaled support for a new ordinance that would give county inspectors and sheriff’s deputies the authority to stop and inspect any vehicles, trailers, boats or other watercraft that could be carrying mussels — either adult or larval — at any of the lake’s resort areas. The ordinance would also allow them to issue citations, including fines and misdemeanor charges, to violators. The inspection program itself isn’t new, said Thomas Zeleny, chief deputy county counsel. The ordinance essentially codifies what the county is already doing. … Sheriff Oscar Ortiz added that existing rules lack enforcement power. Right now, there’s “no teeth” — nothing inspectors can actually write a citation for, he said.

Other golden mussels news:

Aquafornia news Politico

Trump admin scraps NOAA’s climate website

Goodbye, climate.gov, the popular online clearinghouse for federal climate science. Hello, noaa.gov/climate, a revamped website that deemphasizes the previous site’s content. Kim Doster, a NOAA spokesperson, said in an email that “NOAA is relocating all research products from Climate.gov to NOAA.gov/climate in an effort to centralize and consolidate resources. Future research products previously housed under Climate.gov will be available at NOAA.gov and its affiliate websites.” In a reader notice atop the redirected website, NOAA said the change was to comply with President Donald Trump’s May 23 executive order titled “Restoring Gold Standard Science” followed by a Monday memorandum from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy about implementing the order. “For the curious citizen, if you click on climate.gov, you get redirected and the archived components of climate.gov are buried,” said Craig McLean, the former assistant administrator for research at NOAA and a Trump administration critic.

Other NOAA cut news:

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Regional water board could remove cease-and-desist order for Ramona egg farm

Demler Brothers Egg Ranch is proposing a newwastewater handling system to address one of the major issues that resulted in a cease-and-desist order from the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board. The order against Demler Brothers, often referred to by its former name of Pine Hill, was issued in November 2023 after a three-year investigation over complaints about odors and possibly contaminated water runoff at the facility at 25818 Highway 78 in Ramona. The improper discharge of wastewater used for washing eggs produced at the ranch resulted in the contamination of two nearby creeks and stormwater basins, water board staff reported. Although water board inspectors originally found high levels of ammonium-nitrate and phosphorus at the egg ranch, later tests found almost no contaminants after the facility began putting all of the egg wash wastewater into temporary holding tanks and hauling it offsite.  The new wastewater system will feature 34 above-ground, double-lined evaporation ponds housed in four barns.

Other wastewater news:

Aquafornia news Fast Company

Like electric lights, water reuse is destined to become a necessity

… As the United States grapples with an escalating water crisis, a powerful solution is gaining momentum. Buildings can intelligently capture, treat, and reuse their own wastewater by leveraging advanced technology, data analytics, and automation to optimize every step of the water reuse process. These smart systems continuously monitor water quality and usage, automatically adjusting treatment processes to ensure safety and efficiency. While current regulations limit this recycled water to non-potable applications, the reality is that water from these systems is often treated to a level that is scientifically safe enough to drink. This isn’t about compromise—it’s about building smarter, managing water as a circular resource, and using it where it’s needed most, all within the building itself. This innovation comes at a critical moment. Nearly 45% of the lower 48 states are currently experiencing drought conditions, with the Southwest and Plains regions particularly hard-hit. 

Other water recycling news:

Aquafornia news Fortune Well

Forever chemicals are in your drinking water: Here’s how worried to be—and what to do about it

It’s not uncommon nowadays to fill a glass of water from your tap and wonder what chemicals and contaminants may be lurking in there. That’s because research has increasingly revealed that heavy metals, radioactive substances, and harmful PFAS (“forever chemicals”) are present in our water systems. … The Environmental Working Group (EWG) found that roughly 60% of the U.S. population—about 200 million people—are served by water systems that have the chemicals PFOA or PFOS in their drinking water at a concentration of 1 part per trillion or higher, which is the maximum limit for PFAS in drinking water endorsed by the EWG. Knowing there are chemicals in your water is one thing—but should you be worried? And is there anything you can do to reduce your exposure? Here’s everything you need to know, according to experts who spoke with Fortune.

Other drinking water contamination news:

Aquafornia news The National Law Review

The future of water conservation for California urban retail

Beginning January 1, 2025, the “Making Conservation a California Way of Life” regulatory framework requires urban retail water suppliers — not individual households or businesses — to adopt a series of “urban water use objectives.” And beginning January 1, 2027, the regulations require urban retail water suppliers to annually demonstrate compliance with those objectives. The objectives are calculated based on indoor residential water use; outdoor residential water use; commercial, industrial and institutional irrigation use; and potable reuse. Implementation of the objectives includes setting and meeting specific targets for reducing water use per capita, improving system efficiency, and reporting progress to state regulators. Urban retail water suppliers are also required to implement water conservation programs, support the development of drought–resilient infrastructure, and encourage customers to adopt water-saving practices such as using “climate ready” landscapes.

Aquafornia news Monterey County Now (Seaside, Calif.)

CPUC decision delay on Monterey water supply

Tomorrow, June 26, the California Public Utilities Commission was scheduled to adopt a proposed decision regarding the Monterey Peninsula’s current water supply and forecasted demand by 2050. And after already being rescheduled from the June 12 CPUC meeting by Commissioner Darcie Houck, who’s presiding over the matter, on June 24 Houck pulled it from the agenda again and rescheduled it until July 24, the CPUC’s next meeting. … The talking points discussed were a rehashing of Cal Am’s disagreement with the proposed decision, which projected a 2050 water demand of 13,732 acre-feet per year—the number Cal Am had been pushing for, and far higher than five outside estimates—and a current water supply of 11,204 acre-feet per year, which Cal Am thinks is too high. Cal Am officials also reiterated why they think the demand numbers are correct. Water demand on the Peninsula last year dipped below 9,000 acre-feet, the lowest level in decades, and the proposed decision presumes it will increase more than 4,500 acre-feet over the next 25 years. 

Aquafornia news Placer County Water Agency

News release: PCWA completes Indian Bar river access improvements just in time for summer recreation season

Good news for whitewater rafters: Improvements at Indian Bar are complete. At its June 19 meeting, the Placer County Water Agency (PCWA) Board of Directors authorized the filing of a Notice of Completion for the Indian Bar River Access Project, just in time for peak summer rafting and fishing season. Located near Foresthill, the improved site provides safer and more convenient access to one of California’s premier whitewater rafting destinations. … The $1.7 million Indian Bar project improves access to the Middle Fork of the American River just downstream of the Agency’s Ralston Afterbay (Oxbow Reservoir) near Foresthill. The Ralston Afterbay Dam is located just below the confluence of the Middle Fork American and Rubicon rivers. … The raft put in site is next to PCWA’s Oxbow Powerhouse tailrace, the channel that carries water from the powerhouse to the river’s main channel. 

Aquafornia news The Hill

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Newsom warns California isn’t ready for water scarcity

California’s existing groundwater infrastructure may fail to quench the state’s thirst in an increasingly arid future, even as officials celebrate widespread conservation achievements, Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) warned on Tuesday. “The data doesn’t lie, and it is telling us that our water system is unprepared for California’s hotter and drier climate,” Newsom said in a statement. The governor was referring to data published in a semiannual report by the California Department of Water Resources that morning. The report, which indicated California is collecting more groundwater data than ever before, showed a 2.2 million acre-foot increase in storage last year. Nonetheless, the governor’s office stressed that the Golden State still lacks adequate water infrastructure to provide Californians with the resources they will need in future projected climate conditions.

Other California groundwater news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Front Range requests state hearing over Western Slope water deal

Four major Front Range water managers have requested a state hearing to fully air their objections to a Western Slope plan to purchase historic, coveted Colorado River water rights. The Colorado River Water Conservation District, which represents 15 Western Slope counties, is leading the effort to purchase the $99 million water rights tied to the century-old Shoshone Power Plant, owned by a subsidiary of Xcel Energy. The district wants to buy the rights to protect historical water resources for Western Slope communities long into the future. Front Range water managers — Aurora Water, Denver Water, Colorado Springs Utilities and Northern Water — also want to maintain the historical flows past Shoshone which provides stability for their water supplies. They just disagree over the numbers, namely how much water is included in the deal. If the number is too high, it could throw a wrench in their water systems.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Deal that relied on Kern County water for housing 200 miles away sours, potentially leaving residents high and dry

The Kern County Water Agency is poised to cut off the only water source for a 600-home development in Stanislaus County as of June 30 unless residents there agree to a 200% increase in water rates, jacking up their bills to $600 a month. Even then, the increase will only buy a bare minimum of water through Dec. 31, according to a letter from KCWA to the Western Hills Water District. … Western Hills serves the Diablo Grande development, once planned as a sprawling 5,000-home luxury golf community in the foothills west of Patterson. KCWA put Western Hills on notice April 2 this year that it intends to terminate the 24-year-contract under which it has been delivering water to the community. KCWA’s stance is that Western Hills stopped paying the water delivery costs five years ago, racking up $13 million in debt, and KCWA can no longer carry that load. Though the water Diablo Grande residents run through their taps is actually State Water Project overseen by the Department of Water Resources, that agency is staying out of the fray.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Business Insider

As drought deepens, big tech has put nearly half of its data centers in water-scarce regions

The Colorado River runs over 1,450 miles through seven US states, carving dramatic canyons and providing drinking water for 40 million people before it crosses into Mexico. … Now, in some of the region’s driest stretches, tech companies are bringing a massive influx of water-guzzling data centers. … Documents reviewed by Business Insider show that some of these large data centers, football-field-size warehouses filled with computer servers that power the artificial intelligence revolution, could each demand millions of gallons of water a day, enough for tens of thousands of Americans. Business Insider found that 40% of the nation’s planned and existing data centers are in areas that the nonprofit World Resources Institute, which focuses on sustainability research, has characterized as experiencing “extremely high” or “high” water scarcity. … We found 24 of the largest centers, and 379 smaller ones, in the four states now negotiating over Colorado River allotments. 

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Senate rules block plan to sell federal lands under budget bill

The plan to put millions of acres of California forests, parks and other public federal lands at risk of being sold got a devastating, probably lethal, blow as the Senate parliamentarian ruled lawmakers could not consider the proposal as part of its “Big Beautiful Bill” this week. Before such legislation can be considered by the Senate, Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough has to make sure what’s in it involves fiscal policy. She decided the plan to sell the land did not meet the standard. Popular destinations near Sacramento and Lake Tahoe were on the original plan’s proposed sale list from the Wilderness Society. … Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, led the effort to sell up to 3 million acres nationwide. He vowed after the ruling to keep fighting. “Stay tuned. We’re just getting started,” he said in a post on X. … He outlined some of the steps he plans. He said he would not be “selling off our forests,” and only land within 5 miles of population centers would be eligible for sales.

Related articles: