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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 The Sacramento Bee

Opinion: Public-private action to address California’s water scarcity

… As extreme weather intensifies, securing and sustainably managing water resources will be critical to mitigating the impacts of prolonged drought, wildfire and flooding. That’s why business leaders are tapping in, with corporate stewardship activities aimed at helping secure California’s water future. We have come together under the California Water Resilience Initiative, managed by the Pacific Institute, to accelerate collective action across sectors. As part of the Water Resilience Coalition, a global effort to mobilize corporate water stewardship, the California Water Resilience Initiative has a unique opportunity to lead both nationally and globally, defining the playbook for how businesses, government and non-profits can help build water resilience at scale.
–Written by Emilio Tenuta, senior vice president and chief sustainability officer of Ecolab, and Jason Morrison, president of the Pacific Institute and head of the CEO Water Mandate.

Aquafornia news Media Matters for America

Blog: Pollution from the Tijuana River is a complex, decades-old issue. For Fox News it’s simple: Mexico is to blame.

Every year, billions of gallons of sewage and toxic industrial waste flow down the Tijuana River, across the U.S.-Mexico border, and into the Pacific Ocean. It is a complex, decades-old, transjurisdictional issue that environmentalists and governments at the local, state, and federal level have been grappling with for years. Recently, entities on both sides of the border have made some progress, but experts agree that more has to be done to address the international pollution crisis. But viewers watching Fox News would have scant understanding of the complexity of this issue, the shared responsibility for its resolution, or the progress that has been made in both the U.S. and Mexico. According to Fox and new EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, the issue is simple: Mexico is to blame.

Aquafornia news Klamath River Fund

News release: Klamath River Fund awards $1.2 million to support climate resilience and restoration

The Klamath River Fund, a program of Humboldt Area Foundation and Wild Rivers Community Foundation (HAF+WRCF), today announced $1.2 million in grants awarded to 12 organizations working across the Klamath Basin. These grants mark a significant step in the Fund’s 10-year commitment to invest in and amplify community-led climate resilience and restorative justice efforts following the unprecedented removal of four dams on the Klamath River in 2023 and 2024. … The grants invest in a wide range of organizations and projects including sustainable agriculture along the Sprague River at the Klamath’s headwaters in Oregon to the first effort to boat the length of the un-dammed Klamath by local Tribal youth.

Aquafornia news The Desert Review (Brawley, Calif.)

Imperial Irrigation District helps educators understand Valley water issues

The Imperial Irrigation District and its partners, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) and California Project WET (Water Education Today), hosted a climate change and water workshop for educators, Saturday, May 3, in IID’s Condit Auditorium.  Teachers working with students in grades 3-12 attended to learn how climate change is allegedly linked to floods, droughts, and water quality. Educators learned how the changing climate may impact California’s water resources, and Imperial Valley’s water in particular. They also discussed activities to help students understand how they can adapt to the region’s changing environment. 

Other Imperial Valley news:

Aquafornia news Stormwater Solutions

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Clean water programs see $2.4B cut in White House’s proposed FY2026 budget

In a May 2, 2025, letter to Appropriations Committee Chair Susan Collins, President Donald Trump’s FY2026 budget proposal amounts to $4.2 billion in total funding reduction in 2026 compared to 2025 for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Clean and Drinking Water State Revolving Loan programs would see the greatest reduction with an overall budget of $305 million. That amounts to $2.46 billion less than the 2025 budget. The President’s letter claims this change will place the onus on states to fund their own infrastructure while sharing additional reasoning as to why the reduction is on the table. 

Other water, environment and agriculture funding news:

Aquafornia news Rio Linda Online News

State takes bold step to save Sacramento River salmon: millions of young fish released directly into main river

In a major change of plans aimed at rescuing California’s struggling salmon populations, state wildlife officials have done something never tried before: releasing millions of young hatchery-raised Chinook salmon directly into the main stem of the Sacramento River. This historic release of roughly 3.5 million juvenile fall-run Chinook salmon happened in mid-April near Redding and Butte City. Typically, hatchery fish are released into the rivers where their hatcheries are located, like the Feather or Mokelumne Rivers. … This unprecedented move comes as fall-run Chinook salmon numbers in the main Sacramento River – the historical heart of California’s salmon fishery – are at critically low levels.

Other anadromous fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news Valley Ag Voice

SGMA creates winners and losers in Central Valley agriculture 

A decade after the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act became law, many California farmers still feel lost in the bureaucracy surrounding its implementation. A new study finds that, despite widespread awareness, real engagement remains low. According to research from CSU-WATER — an initiative encompassing 23 California State University campuses — significant logistical and representational barriers have prevented farmers from meaningfully engaging with their Groundwater Sustainability Agencies. The research is part of SGMA WAVE — short for Water and Valley Economy — a project led by CSU-WATER, a water policy initiative involving all 23 CSU campuses. The study focuses on 72 GSAs across the San Joaquin Valley counties of Madera, Fresno, Tulare, Kings, and Kern.    

Other SGMA news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal

California officials launch plan to keep invasive golden mussels out of Lake Oroville

With the recent discovery of invasive golden mussels in California waterways, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) is ramping up prevention efforts to protect Lake Oroville and surrounding State Water Project (SWP) facilities. Golden mussels haven’t been detected in Lake Oroville, Thermalito Forebay, or Thermalito Afterbay, but DWR is taking proactive steps to keep it that way. These invasive mussels can severely damage ecosystems, clog pipelines, foul boat motors, and disrupt water delivery systems. To stop their spread, DWR is partnering with California State Parks and California Department of Fish and Wildlife to implement a mandatory watercraft inspection program at Lake Oroville starting later this month.

Other California reservoir news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

California dust storms are expected to become more common. Some are ‘as big as a city’

In November 2024, powerful gusts whipped across parts of the Central Valley. The winds not only knocked out power, but they also kicked up soil particles, producing a massive dust storm. The extreme weather event dropped visibility to near zero, grinding highway traffic to a halt. Scientists expect dust storms in California to occur even more often in the future, due to climate change and human activities like construction and agriculture. … The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act may have also increased the chances for dust storms. The act, passed in 2014, limits the overdraft of groundwater in order protect groundwater basins in the long term. It has caused farmers to take some fields out of production due to decreased water access. 

Aquafornia news National Law Review

Blog: States strengthen PFAS water regulations amid federal uncertainty

… With the rapid rollbacks taking place across the federal government showing no signs of decelerating, many environmental groups have expressed concern that regulations safeguarding against PFAS contamination could soon be weakened or overturned. As a result of the unclear future of federal regulation, as well as the prevalence of PFAS in drinking water, many states have taken it upon themselves to strengthen their PFAS laws to protect their waterways. … One such example was seen in California, where state legislators introduced Assembly Bill 794 aiming to strengthen the State Water Board’s authority by empowering the Water Board to directly combat challenges to the existing federal regulation by ordering it to “establish emergency regulations that are at least as protective as current federal standards” (as of January 19, 2025).

Aquafornia news Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics, University of California

Bargaining for tribal water in California

This article documents the current status of tribal water rights
in California and explains why they differ from other states. … In 1908, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed in Winters v. U.S. that through the creation of reservations, tribes are entitled to water rights sufficient to meet their homeland needs. … The Klamath Tribes in Oregon, the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe (PLPT) in Nevada, and five reservations along the California-Arizona border hold high-priority Winters rights to surface water crossing the California state line. In each case, the sovereignty tribes were able to exert over their rights increased when tribal priorities aligned with state or federal interests.

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Southwestern Colorado farmers face short supply after dry winter

… Across Colorado, the snowpack peaked lower in major river basins than the 30-year median, according to federal data from 1991 to 2020. The peaks were often earlier than usual, and the snowpack is melting quickly — several weeks earlier than the norm in some areas. Water managers and climatologists are hoping for a rainy May and active summer thunderstorm season. In dry years, farmers and ranchers can be short on irrigation water in late summer. Reservoirs can have less extra water to carry over into the next year. Fish and aquatic ecosystems can suffer with less water in warmer rivers. Water managers across the desert Southwest are in similar situations. Western Colorado is a key water source for the Colorado River Basin, where rivers and streams send water into an immense reservoir, Lake Powell.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news U.S. Geological Survey

Blog: The threat of coastal flooding from Cascadia earthquake-driven land subsidence

Along the Pacific Northwest coast, scientists have long warned of a looming threat: a massive earthquake from the Cascadia Subduction Zone, capable of triggering tsunamis and devastating shaking. Now, new research highlights another, often-overlooked danger—the sudden sinking of the land itself and the longer-term threats posed by coastal flooding. A study authored by a team of scientists including USGS shows that a magnitude 8 or greater earthquake today along the Cascadia megathrust fault—stretching from northern California to Vancouver Island, British Columbia—could cause 0.5 to 2 meters (1.6 to 6.6 feet) of sudden land subsidence, instantly raising relative local sea levels and more than doubling the number of people, buildings, and roads exposed to coastal flooding.

Aquafornia news KSBY (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)

Los Osos water pipeline project awaiting approval from Army Corps of Engineers

The Los Osos water pipeline has been in the works for the past four years. If funded, it would connect Los Osos to the state water project, providing the town with a new source of water. The project has already been approved at the federal level, but for work to begin, the Army Corps of Engineers needs to approve the allocation of funds. A recent report from the Los Osos Community Services District’s general manager states the CSD has reached out to the Corps several times since December for an update on the project but has never received a response. 

Other pipeline news:

Aquafornia news Rio Linda Online News

Rio Linda Water District reaches $6.25 million settlement with feds over McClellan contamination allegations

The Rio Linda/Elverta Community Water District (RLECWD), has reached a major settlement in its long-running lawsuit against the U.S. government over potential groundwater contamination stemming from the former McClellan Air Force Base. The $6.25 million agreement, officially approved by the U.S. District Court on February 18, 2025, resolves the District’s claims under federal environmental laws. After accounting for legal fees, the District received $4.09 million from the settlement on March 12th. … Early news reports suggested the District, along with Sacramento Suburban Water District in a similar case, was initially seeking much larger sums, potentially over a billion dollars, to address the contamination concerns.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Ocean access in Huntington, Newport OK after sewage spill

A nearly half-mile segment of coastline in Huntington Beach and Newport Beach at the Talbert Channel reopened to surfers and swimmers Monday morning after a large sewage spill caused a weekend cessation of water activity. Orange County Health Care Agency officials on Saturday called for the temporary closure along beaches 1,000 feet to the north and south of the channel, near the mouth of the Santa Ana River, to protect visitors from potential exposure to bacteria. The spill stemmed from a blockage discovered Friday evening in a sewer line on Costa Mesa’s Mesa Verde Drive East, near Golf Course Drive, according to Scott Carroll, general manager of Costa Mesa Sanitary District.

Aquafornia news KVPR (Fresno, Calif.)

Central Valley Roots: The story behind Friant Dam

Few developments in local history have changed the Valley more than Friant Dam. From providing flood control and irrigation water to the east side of the Valley, to drying up huge portions of the river, and destroying the salmon population, the scale of the dam’s impact is undeniable. Today on KVPR’s Central Valley Roots, we explore the dam’s history. California leaders originally envisioned the Central Valley Project as a state funded effort as early as 1919. But amid the Great Depression, the state couldn’t sell the bonds necessary to fund construction. Instead the state turned to Washington. In 1935 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt approved the construction of Friant Dam.

Aquafornia news Economics Observatory

Blog: The global water crisis: what is the right policy response?

… Many experts are calling for a collective reframing of water as a scarce and essential common good. … Extraction rights and pricing systems that fail to account for the hidden effects (or ‘externalities’) that come from using this common good lead to inefficient consumption and can direct water-intensive activities to regions that are already water-stressed. … Better pricing through targeted water-use taxes and subsidies could help to manage demand, improve access and support more sustainable use. For example, chip manufacturers like Intel and TSMC have invested in building semiconductor factories (or ‘fabs’) in Arizona – a state known for its dry climate. … Better pricing could have given these companies the incentives to locate their facilitates in more water-abundant regions, easing pressure on Arizona’s water system.

Aquafornia news Christian Science Monitor

From birdies to birds: Why US golf courses are becoming nature preserves

Beside a restored creek in San Geronimo, California, birds soar where birdies once were scored. Formerly home to an 18-hole golf course, the 157-acre property has been rewilded into a thriving nature preserve. The fairway, once groomed to unnatural perfection, is now overgrown with tall grass and wildflowers. … Vitally, the creek that runs through the course’s front nine – no longer impeded by a dam – is seeing a slow return of the endangered coho salmon. … With the number of golf course closures outweighing openings every year since 2006, some are rethinking the best use of these open spaces. In states such as Florida, Ohio, Massachusetts, and California, nature is now being allowed to run its course to protect wildlife and protect against storms.

Aquafornia news CBS 8 (San Diego)

San Diego residents taste, smell chlorine in water

Some residents in San Diego neighborhoods including Pacific Beach and La Jolla told CBS 8 that they have recently picked up on a strong chlorine flavor and questioned what was happening. … Working for you, CBS 8 reached out to the City of San Diego to find out what’s causing the smell and taste. According to the city, chlorine is a standard and essential part of treating drinking water. It’s used as a disinfectant and is regularly added to water stored in local reservoirs, which are monitored weekly. … After a recent inspection, the city added more chlorine to the Bay View reservoir to ensure water quality. Some residents served by the reservoir, including in Pacific Beach, La Jolla and Soledad, may have temporarily noticed a stronger taste or smell.