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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 Writer Matt Jenkins.

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Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Arizona tries to steer away from ‘extremely draconian’ Colorado River water cuts

Arizona’s top water negotiator is working behind the scenes to avoid “extremely draconian” cuts to the state’s share of the Colorado River. It’s an eleventh-hour effort to work with the federal government, which is expected to release new rules for managing water in late July. Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, briefed the public on the process of negotiations and the state’s plans to adapt to water cutbacks. … The three states that make up the river’s Lower Basin — Arizona, California and Nevada, countered with a proposal to voluntarily cut back on water use and avoid harsher, mandatory cuts from the federal government. Now, Buschatzke is trying to convince the federal government to adopt it.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news The Stockton Record (Calif.)

Stockton declares emergency as golden mussels threaten water supply​

The Stockton City Council proclaimed a local emergency after invasive golden mussels began clogging the city’s Delta Water Supply Project Intake Pump Station, raising concerns about the reliability of the water system serving nearly 200,000 customers in northern and western Stockton. The council voted 7-0 on June 23 to ratify a local emergency proclamation issued June 19, giving City Manager Johnny Ford expanded authority to respond to the infestation. The resolution allows the city manager to expedite emergency contracts and purchases, suspend normal contracting limits, use contingency funds to cover response costs, pursue actions necessary to protect public health and maintain water operations, and seek state and federal assistance.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Large fires scorch drought-stricken Western U.S. 

After an exceptionally warm and dry winter, vast swaths of the Western United States are up in flames—and conditions could get worse.  Several large fires are burning in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, Nevada and Utah. In Colorado, three federal wildland firefighters died while battling a blaze over the weekend. … Winter weather set the stage for this early and aggressive start to fire season. As I reported in March, many Western states saw record or near-record lows in snowpack coinciding with consistently high winter temperatures, capped off by a heat wave in March that melted much of the meager reserves. … With an even hotter, dry forecast on the horizon, experts are concerned that the fires tearing through much of the Southwest could be a sign of what’s to come over the next few months.

Other drought forecast and impact news:

Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

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Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Legal battle over water use in California county ends in settlement

A long-simmering Northern California case over water use restrictions tinged with racial overtones ended Tuesday with a settlement. Siskiyou County and Sheriff Jeremiah LaRue reached an agreement with the putative class over what the latter called discriminatory traffic stops and improper search and seizure methods. The class — which includes over 1,000 people, many of whom are Asian American and live in a rural part of the county called Shasta Vista — sued in 2022. They claimed the sheriff and county used water ordinances to deprive them in an area with no public water system. County officials said they needed the ordinances to fight illegal cannabis grows. On Tuesday, Chief U.S. District Judge Troy Nunley approved the settlement agreement between the two sides.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kings County groundwater agency approves budget based on hypothetical revenue

A Kings County groundwater agency recently approved a $2.1 million budget – the minimum it will need to adhere to state regulations – based on a future assessment election that even its own manager doesn’t think will pass.  The South Fork Kings Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) approved the plan on June 18. It hinges on the county continuing an agreement to loan the GSA money as an advance on existing land assessment fees that are set to expire in 2028.  A Proposition 218 election to set new land assessment fees, which has yet to be scheduled, is expected to fail, according to South Fork General Manager Johnny Gailey. Meanwhile, growers may be asked to voluntarily pay a pumping fee as part of an “innovative revenue stream” being considered.

Other groundwater news around the West:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Public input needed on the Tule River and Deer Creek watersheds

The public’s input is being sought on ideas for long-term resilience of two Tulare County waterways at a meeting July 7 from 1 to 3 p.m. via Zoom.  The Tulare Basin Watershed Partnership is kicking off “Sequoias to the Sloughs (S2S): A Watershed Assessment and Stewardship Initiative” thanks to a $300,000 grant from the Bureau of Reclamation’s WaterSMART Cooperative Watershed Management Program. The meeting is the inaugural event of implementing the grant. The goal is to begin developing a unified vision for connecting the people, agencies, and organizations along the Tule River and Deer Creek watersheds, which begin high in the southern Sierra Nevada and wind their way to the San Joaquin Valley floor.

Aquafornia news US EPA

News release: EPA releases quarterly update on implementation of 100% solution to permanently end the Tijuana River sewage crisis

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released today its second quarterly public update for 2026 detailing the implementation of two historic agreements signed with Mexico in 2025 to permanently end the years-long Tijuana River sewage crisis. … Since the last quarterly public update in March, the Trump Administration and Mexico have taken a number of important actions to end the sewage crisis, including EPA releasing previously agreed to Border Water Infrastructure Program (BWIP) funds to begin construction on Pump Station 1 (PB-1) and Tijuana River Gates projects. Mexico is also advancing procurement and construction of critical sewer line and pump station rehabilitations. Additionally, both the U.S. and Mexico have advanced progress on a suite of actions agreed to in Minute 333, including infrastructure projects, research studies, and planning for operation and maintenance (O&M) of critical sites and systems that will account for future population growth in Tijuana.

Aquafornia news Gov. Gavin Newsom

News release: Governor Newsom announces major progress in salmon recovery efforts

Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the release of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) California Salmon Strategy for a Hotter, Drier Future: Second Progress Report — showcasing extensive progress on the 71 actions to restore salmon populations mapped out in the 2024 Salmon Strategy set by the Governor. In the last two years, the state has fully completed 49% of the actions and partially met or advanced progress on 51% of the actions towards safeguarding salmon populations and their habitats. … The progress led by the state, combined with recent wet winters, has created a strong foundation for improving habitat, rebuilding salmon populations, and applying new science to fisheries management.

Other fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

Bigger than San Francisco Bay, Shasta Lake has an image problem

… For the fourth year in a row, Shasta Lake is over 90% full. At this capacity, its shoreline is longer than that of San Francisco Bay and Lake Tahoe. … Built in the 1940s, Shasta Lake and its dam are a water valve and storage tank for around 41% of the state’s supply into the Central Valley Project, the aquatic backbone of California. Water that passes through one of the highest concrete dams in the country irrigates the valley’s numerous farms before spilling out through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta into San Francisco Bay. It also keeps the rivers under human control, shielding those who are downstream from major flooding. The Bureau of Reclamation manages Shasta Lake with four main priorities: store water for the Central Valley Project, generate hydroelectric power, control potential floods to protect farms and cities like Redding, and provide recreation opportunities for Californians and visitors. 

Other California reservoir news:

Aquafornia news Cowboy State Daily (Cheyenne, Wyo.)

Cheyenne officials haven’t said who polluted its reuse water system

Speculation is growing over whether a data center could be linked to a rare bacterium discovered in Cheyenne’s reuse wastewater system earlier this year, as city officials continue to withhold the identity of the industrial user responsible for the discharge. Four days after the Cheyenne Board of Public Utilities publicly disclosed the contamination, which happened in February, officials have yet to identify either the company or the industry involved, saying legal and regulatory reviews are still underway. … The Board of Public Utilities has fielded multiple public records requests as residents demand to know what industry is behind the hazardous discharge, who the offender is and why the public wasn’t notified as soon as the contaminant was discovered in February.

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.)

South Tahoe Public Utility District delivers exceptional drinking water quality, report states

The South Tahoe Public Utility District has released its 2025 Water Quality Consumer Confidence Report, confirming that the community continues to receive safe, reliable, and high-quality drinking water that meets or exceeds all state and federal drinking water standards. Each year, water providers across the country are required by the Safe Drinking Water Act to prepare and distribute a Consumer Confidence Report to inform customers about the quality of their drinking water. The District’s 2025 report highlights the results of thousands of water quality tests conducted throughout the year and provides detailed information about the source and treatment of South Lake Tahoe’s drinking water.

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

SJV Water recognized in statewide journalism contest

We’re proud to announce that SJV Water was recognized for its outstanding journalism in the statewide 2025 California Journalism Awards contest by the California News Publishers Association. We won two first place awards in our division, one for our weekly newsletter “The Splash” and the other for best enterprise reporting for our video series “Who Owns the Kern River?” … Our entry for “enterprise reporting” was unusual as it wasn’t a print entry but video. Our goal was to help viewers understand at least some of the complexities of how the ownership of the Kern River has evolved over the years, who gets how much water and when.

Aquafornia news Gov. Gavin Newsom

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Gov. Newsom appoints veteran attorney to lead Department of Water Resources

… Thomas Gibson, of West Sacramento, has been appointed Director at the California Department of Water Resources. Gibson has been Chief Deputy Director at the California Department of Water Resources since 2024, where he was Chief Counsel from 2021 to 2024. He held multiple positions at the California Natural Resources Agency from 2014 to 2020, including Deputy Secretary and Special Counsel for Water, Undersecretary, and General Counsel. Gibson held multiple positions at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife from 2007 to 2014, including General Counsel and Assistant Chief Counsel. He held several roles at Best Best & Krieger LLP from 2002 to 2008, including Partner and Associate. 

Aquafornia news Western Water

The Colorado River states are deadlocked and the river is crashing. Will a ‘grand bargain’ finally get its day?

For the past 20 years, the Colorado River has been operated under a set of guidelines negotiated between the seven states that depend on the river. Those guidelines expire this year, and after five years of grinding negotiations over a new agreement, the upstream states of Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and New Mexico remain deadlocked against the downstream states of California, Arizona and Nevada. … That has set up a showdown over a legal time bomb that’s been ticking away at the heart of the Colorado River Compact since the river’s guiding document was signed more than 100 years ago. The Lower Basin states believe the Compact promised them a minimum delivery of water sent down the river from the Upper Basin. The Upper Basin states believe the Compact promised them a fixed amount of water that they could rely on to meet future growth. As the river’s flows have dwindled, those two supposed guarantees are proving to be irreconcilable.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

After bold pledge, EPA shelves microplastics testing in U.S. drinking water

For the next five years, the Environmental Protection Agency has indicated it will not require public water utilities to test for microplastics or pharmaceuticals in drinking water, according to a proposed rule published in the Federal Register. On Friday, the EPA submitted a list of chemicals it plans to test for under the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule, a mandatory testing program used to collect information about concerning chemicals in drinking water that could be harming human health. It did not include microplastics or pharmaceuticals. The omissions come after announcements by EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin earlier this year that his agency was designating microplastics and pharmaceuticals priority contaminants for testing.

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news The Denver Post (Colo.)

U.S. Supreme Court takes water dispute between Colorado, Nebraska

The U.S. Supreme Court will weigh in on a legal battle over one of Colorado’s critical water sources as a neighboring state seeks to use more water from the South Platte River. The nation’s highest court on Monday announced it would hear the case, in which Nebraska officials claim Colorado water administrators are violating a century-old water compact by failing to send enough of the river’s water across the border. They also say Colorado officials are interfering in the neighboring state’s efforts to build a canal that would allow it to take more of the river’s water. Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser on Monday denied Nebraska officials’ allegations that the Centennial State was violating the 1923 South Platte River Compact.

Related:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

California’s historic dam removal notches another big win for salmon

When four dams were torn down along the California-Oregon border two years ago, scientists were stunned by the large numbers of salmon that moved so quickly up the newly unobstructed Klamath River. This month brought another striking development. A Chinook salmon was detected going up the river in Oregon, past the former dam sites, and it was not part of the fall run of fish that’s already been racing up the Klamath in late summer and in early fall. It was a much rarer fish: a spring-run salmon, which migrates earlier in the year and has long struggled to survive on the West Coast. … The success of the run, on top of the fall run, stands to increase the prevalence, diversity and resilience of struggling West Coast salmon.

Other anadromous fish news:

Aquafornia news KGET (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kern County conservation district says Ridgecrest data center would ‘undermine’ decades of progress

A Kern County conservation district has announced it is opposing the potential data center slated to be built in the Ridgecrest and Inyokern area, citing low water levels. The Eastern Kern County Resource Conservation District submitted a letter of opposition to the California Energy Commission saying the project would create “significant environmental impacts” and would “undermine decades of local and state efforts to achieve groundwater sustainability” in the area if built. … If approved, the project — formally named the Inyokern RB Data Center — would pull water from the Indian Wells Valley Groundwater Basin to support its cooling towers.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Craig Daily Press (Colo.)

What the 2026 drought means for ranchers in Northwest Colorado

Northwest Colorado is no stranger to dry years, but 2026 is shaping up to be one for the books. With a record-low snowpack, rising temperatures and extremely limited runoff, the State of Colorado, as of June 4, has declared a statewide drought emergency, leaving ranchers across the Yampa-White-Green River basin facing difficult decisions that affect both their livelihoods and their way of life. … This year, the impacts are already being felt across pastures, hay fields and water systems. Many ranchers are reporting lower forage production, dry stock ponds and reduced irrigation supplies. As a result, some have made the tough choice to reduce herd sizes earlier than planned, while others are hauling water long distances just to meet basic livestock needs. 

Other drought impact news: