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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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Aquafornia news Utah News Dispatch

Friday Top of the Scroll: Governor declares drought emergency as Utah dips into reservoir ‘savings’

Gov. Spencer Cox declared a state of emergency Thursday, noting every county is in a state of severe or extreme drought after a dry winter marked by record warmth robbed Utah of its snowpack and left rivers and streams running low. The declaration opens the door for farmers and ranchers to tap into federal funding and loans managed by the state. It also gave state leaders another opportunity to urge homeowners to cut back on watering their lawns and replace some of their grass with less thirsty plants. … Cox said about two-thirds of residential water is used outdoors and pleaded with Utahns to stay vigilant and avoid watering too much. But he said any restrictions are a decision for local leaders and water districts, not for state officials.  

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hoover Dam gets $52M for wide-head turbines from Bureau of Reclamation

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has freed up $52 million that water managers will use to replace three old turbines at Hoover Dam as forecasters expect Lake Mead levels to plunge to historic lows over the next two years. Previously, the federal agency had said extremely low reservoir levels could cause a 40 percent reduction in hydropower — a concerning sign for utilities that rely on it throughout Nevada, California and Arizona. Older turbines cannot generate power below 1,035 feet in elevation at the reservoir, and hydropower levels would have dropped from 1,302 megawatts to 382 megawatts, the agency said. … Record-low Lake Mead levels are coming largely due to the Bureau of Reclamation’s move to reduce flows out of Lake Powell — a decision made to ensure water can keep flowing in the face of the worst runoff season on record.

Other Colorado River Basin funding news:

Aquafornia news Politico

Congress cracks the door to regulating data centers

Republicans and Democrats took a bipartisan step — or perhaps more precisely, a tiptoe — toward putting Congress’ imprint on the debate over the costs of data centers. As the House Appropriations Committee hammered out a $58 billion fiscal 2027 energy and water spending bill Wednesday, members reached rare consensus on a bipartisan amendment that would empower the Energy Department to start regulating data centers. … The bipartisan amendment, which would spur the Energy Department to improve data centers’ water and energy efficiency, was a signal that both parties are feeling the public pressure around energy and data centers ahead of the midterms.

Other data center water use news around the West:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

Spring-run chinook salmon are swimming in the north Yuba River for the first time in a century

For the first time in roughly a century, spring-run Chinook salmon are swimming in the North Yuba River. And the program that put them there just got funded for another year. The Yuba Water Board of Directors approved a $500,000 grant to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife on Tuesday to continue the salmon reintroduction program in the upper reaches of the North Yuba River watershed. The two-year-old pilot program has already placed hundreds of thousands of salmon eggs and adult fish into a 12-mile stretch of gravel riverbed above Downieville. The process works in two phases. CDFW biologists inject pre-fertilized eggs directly into the gravel at the bottom of the river, mimicking natural spawning conditions. They also release adult salmon to lay eggs naturally. 

Other anadromous fish news:

Aquafornia news & the West (Stanford University)

In search of water, farmers undermined the San Joaquin Valley. Can collective effort raise their fields, canals – and prospects?

Of all the risks farmers face in the San Joaquin Valley – floods, droughts, fluctuating commodity prices, labor and its costs – one now dominates their lives. The very land they work is sinking beneath their feet. This phenomenon, known as subsidence, threatens agricultural and other infrastructure and incurs staggering repair costs. … Subsidence has strained relations among farmers who disagree on which pumping – or whose – causes the problem, how to pay for repairs, and how to satisfy the various needs of the state and the owners and managers of the damaged canals.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Public Policy Institute of California

Report: Tribal water rights in California

… Tribal water rights are an important—and often poorly understood—component of California’s water rights system. These rights are essential to the economy and well-being of California’s Tribes in the same way that water rights are critical for its cities and agriculture. Tribal water rights also play an increasingly significant role in regional water management in California and on the Colorado River. … This report aims to shed light on Tribal water rights. To understand the current state of these rights, we provide an overview of their history, an analysis of the approaches that have helped Tribes succeed in quantifying their water rights, and a review of the contemporary exercise of these rights—including in basins where water is fully allocated. We conclude with a brief discussion of opportunities under federal and state law for other Tribes to quantify or otherwise protect their water resources. 

Other tribal water news around the West:

Aquafornia news KGET (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Senators Padilla, Schiff introduce bill combatting invasive golden mussel

U.S. Senators Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla introduced new legislation aiming to curb the spread and eradicate the invasive golden mussel across California. The two senators, both Democrats, introduced the golden mussel Eradication and Control Act of 2026 to expedite wiping out the invasive mussel. … Padilla said the bill would invest in “immediate steps” to prevent the mussel’s invasive by implementing new technology, inspection stations and rapid response programs to better address this invasive species and protect our fragile Delta ecosystems,” Padilla said. Since arriving in California in October 2024, golden mussels have wreaked havoc on water systems and infrastructure across the state, as the mussels latch onto pumps and pipes compromising water delivery, clogging water systems and impacting agricultural production.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

Embattled Tijuana River sewage contractor wins more work

The Trump Administration awarded a new, no-bid contract to a company that’s being sued for allegedly failing to keep the Tijuana sewage crisis at bay. And two men who work for agencies on either side of the contract also worked together previously at the Environmental Protection Agency during Trump’s first term. In April, the federal government re-hired Veolia, one of the world’s largest private operators of water, waste and energy services, to run the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant at the U.S.-Mexico border. Veolia has been the private contractor operating and maintaining the plant for years. But recently it became the target of several lawsuits filed by residents, a Coronado school district and environmental groups that allege the plant has violated the Clean Water Act under Veolia’s stewardship.  

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Mother Jones

Locals didn’t think Roundup was being sprayed near Lake Tahoe. So I went to find out.

… Public uproar has echoed across the Tahoe area since April, when our yearlong Mother Jones investigation revealed that, in California, the fastest-growing use of glyphosate—the main ingredient in Roundup—is to spray forested areas, including this massive new project around Lake Tahoe. … As our investigation revealed, the deployment of glyphosate in California’s forestlands has been growing for decades, driven in part by the worsening fires, as companies and government officials scramble to harvest burned wood and replant trees for future timber sales. Glyphosate is among the effective methods—and the Forest Service says the cheapest—to get pine trees to grow back faster, as it kills any other plant that might compete for sunlight, soil nutrients, and water.

Other Lake Tahoe watershed news:

Aquafornia news The Seal Beach Sun (Calif.)

Seal Beach City Council OKs water related plans

After a public hearing, the City Council on May 11 unanimously approved the Seal Beach 2025 Urban Water Management Plan and the 2025 Water Shortage Contingency Plan. The plans were state-mandated. … California law requires urban water suppliers that serve more than 3,000 customers—or supply more than 3,000 acre-feet of water a year—has to submit an Urban Water Management Plan to the California Department of Water Resources every five years. … “Imported supplies are obtained through MWDOC, a member agency of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (Metropolitan), while local groundwater is extracted from the Orange County Groundwater Basin, which is managed and replenished by the Orange County Water District (OCWD),” [Public Works Director Iris] Lee wrote.

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Trump official says lawmakers open to waiving environmental rules along Colorado River

As the drought-stricken Colorado River lurches toward a sprawling water and power crisis, lawmakers are beginning to discuss an escape hatch: waiving or streamlining environmental rules. “Several weeks ago, I met with the 14 senators from the Colorado River Basin, and on a bipartisan basis, several of them said, ‘Look, if we have a real crisis on the Colorado and we need to get things done, and if there are any environmental statutes that are slowing things down, tell us what they are and maybe we can legislate to clear out some of the unhelpful bureaucratic paperwork,’” acting Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Scott Cameron said during a House Natural Resources Committee hearing Wednesday. 

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Source New Mexico

NM Gov. Lujan Grisham declares drought and wildfire emergency

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Wednesday declared a statewide emergency due to widespread drought and severe wildfire conditions, which mobilizes various state agencies to provide affected communities with resources. The governor’s executive order cites the state’s historically low snowpack, high spring temperatures, severe winds and ongoing wildfires. It directs the state’s Drought Task Force to ensure communities receive “available information and resources to enable them to prepare for and respond to drought conditions and conserve and protect New Mexico’s water supplies.” Coinciding with the executive order, the governor’s office publicized a new website — the Drought Information Portal.

Other drought news around the West:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

California Supreme Court flooded with briefs on Kern River case from outside groups

More than a dozen “friend of the court,” briefs have been filed with the state Supreme Court debating whether a local judge erred when he ordered that enough water be kept in the mostly dry Kern River bed through Bakersfield for fish. The Attorney General’s office, a slew of environmental and farm groups, along with far flung water districts, economic development agencies, fisheries groups and even a northern California tribe and crab boat association all weighed in on the fight for a flowing Kern River. The attention from such a wide array of groups reflects just how high-stakesthe outcome of this case will be as it involves constitutional questions that could affect water rights and conservation efforts on rivers throughout the state.

Other river rights news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Salmon are at risk with federal plans to give farmers more water from Shasta Lake, critics warn

The Trump administration says it will increase the water it’s sending to Central Valley farmlands this year from Shasta Lake, the state’s largest reservoir. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said agricultural water agencies south of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta will receive 25% of their total contracted amount, up from an initial 20%. Cities and towns will also get more from the federal canals that are part of the Central Valley Project. The agency cited “modest improvements” in reservoir levels after some rainstorms in April. Environmental and fishing groups reacted to Tuesday’s announcement with concern, saying that taking too much water out of Shasta Lake threatens to harm Chinook salmon by depriving them of vital cold water in the Sacramento River in the late summer and fall.

Other fishery news:

Aquafornia news CNN

What previous Super El Niños can tell us about the next one

The coming “Super” El Niño is poised to affect the lives of hundreds of millions of people worldwide as it strengthens through the year into the winter season. It may also alter ecosystems for decades to come, judging from the repercussions of past intense El Niños. … However, El Niño does not instigate individual weather systems so much as dial up or down the odds for particular conditions to prevail at a certain time of the year. … In the US, for example, El Niño’s influence tends to peak during the winter months, with weaker correlations with weather patterns at other times of the year. And during the winter, El Niño’s role is to put its thumb on the scale and raise the odds of repeated atmospheric river events affecting California and wetter-than-average conditions across the southern tier of the US.

Other El Niño news:

Aquafornia news KRCB (Rohnert Park, Calif.)

Coalition proposes alternate plan to address state water needs

A new coalition of advocates released their plan to address California’s water problems. The Water Renaissance Plan for California addresses current water strategies that the coalition claims are outdated, unreliable, and costly. … The long-proposed Delta Conveyance Project, DCP, also known as the Delta Tunnel, has been supported by various California Governors. It would distribute water from the Sacramento River to the south, but its cost has continued to rise and now is estimated to be over $20-billion dollars. The new Water Renaissance coalition opposes this plan, and offers an alternative … including reducing water use, recapturing water, and restoring groundwater to reach the goal.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Spectrum News

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to rollback PFAS drinking water standards, eliminate filtration requirements

Earlier this week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced it will rollback maximum contaminant levels for four per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in drinking water and extend the compliance period for two other PFAS chemicals. The proposed rule would rescind regulations set under the Biden administration for PFHxS, PFNA, HFPO-DA and PFBS, which is a mixture of these three PFAS chemicals. The new rule would remove the requirement for municipalities to install filtration to remove these specific chemicals. … The EPA says it is drafting a new rule that would implement new standards on “key industrial categories” that discharge PFAS in an effort to keep the chemicals out of the water supply.

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Bills would authorize $60 million in federal funds to fight golden mussels

California Senators Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla introduced the “Golden Mussel Eradication and Control Act of 2026” on Wednesday that would, if passed, create a task force to partner with state and other entities to develop best practices for dealing with the invasive species that has rapidly infested the state’s water ways. This bill is a companion to one introduced in June 2025 by Rep. Josh Harder (D-Turlock), H.R. 3717, in the House of Representatives, which was referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, and in addition to the Committee on Natural Resources. Both bills would authorize $15 million a year over the next four years to be given in grants by the task force to its various partners for research and development.

Aquafornia news KSL (Salt Lake City)

Formal protests start to pour in for Stratos data center’s 2nd water rights change request

Just hours after a second water rights change application for the proposed Stratos data center was published for public notice, hundreds of formal protests started to pour in. The application was filed with the Utah Division of Water Rights on April 28, though the formal period for public response opened up Wednesday morning. “I’m encouraged. I think it’s important for the public to weigh in,” General Counsel for Friends of Great Salt Lake, Rob Debuc, said. The organization had previously called for protests against an earlier water rights change application that called for 1,900 square acre-feet of water. This second application only asks for 11 square acre-feet, but Dubuc pointed out there’s likely more to come, as he said the process for the massive project will likely be unusual.

Other data center water use news around the West:

Aquafornia news City News Service

Tijuana Slough among state’s most polluted beaches, report finds

The Tijuana Slough at the Tijuana River Mouth ranked among California’s most polluted beaches, while Playa Blanca near Tijuana was listed as the state’s worst beach in Heal the Bay’s annual Beach Report Card released Wednesday ahead of Memorial Day weekend. The environmental nonprofit’s 2025-26 report placed the Tijuana Slough ninth on its annual “Beach Bummer” list of beaches with the poorest summer dry-weather water quality grades because of elevated bacteria levels and chronic pollution concerns. According to Heal the Bay, Playa Blanca and the Tijuana Slough continue to be heavily impacted by transboundary wastewater flows from Baja California, although efforts are underway on both sides of the border to reduce sewage discharges and improve infrastructure.

Other water quality news: