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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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  • 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 Los Angeles Times

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Trump administration spends $540 million on California water projects

The Trump administration announced Tuesday it will spend $540 million on water infrastructure projects in California, much of it to repair aging and sinking canals in the Central Valley. The largest share, $235 million, will be used to rehabilitate the Delta-Mendota Canal, which carries water to farmlands. An additional $200 million will help continue repairs on the Friant-Kern Canal, another major conduit for water in the valley. … The Interior Department said it also will spend $40 million to begin a plan to raise the height of Shasta Dam — a proposal that growers and water agencies have supported. … The plan to raise the dam and expand the reservoir is strongly opposed by tribes, fishing advocates and environmental groups.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news The Daily Republic (Fairfield, Calif.)

‘Critical’ water protection bill goes before Senate committee

A mixed coalition of 60 Northern and Southern California interests, as well as environmentalists, are backing legislation they consider critical to protecting the state’s water supply. Solano County also has sent a letter of support for Senate Bill 872, which goes before the Senate Environmental Quality Committee today (March 18). … The environmental group, Restore the Delta, agrees, noting the bill by Sen. Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, addresses two “major threats” to California’s water supply: aging levees in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and sinking canals in the State Water Project. The legislation calls for $300 million annually from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund over 20 years.

Other Delta news:

Aquafornia news CBS Colorado

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis activates task force to address drought effects across the state

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis says concerns over record warmth and the low snow pack prompted his decision to activate the state’s Drought Task Force on Tuesday. The task force will study drought conditions statewide and report on their effects on farmers, cities, and other areas. … Activating the Drought Task Force is phase two of the state’s Drought Response Plan. They’ll monitor snowpack, precipitation, temperature, streamflow, soil moisture and reservoir storage. If conditions worsen, the state will move into phase three. The governor will declare an official drought, and water restrictions could be implemented.

Other drought and snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

California report offers a controversial way to save Mono Lake

To save California’s celebrated yet very parched Mono Lake, the city of Los Angeles needs to stop taking water from the basin, or at least sharply curtail its draws. That’s the takeaway from a new, state-commissioned report on how to revive the depleted saltwater body, widely known for its extraordinary tufa towers and curious alkali shores. But that’s not the only takeaway. Even if Los Angeles is to halt pumping from the remote eastern Sierra watershed — and the city has no intention of doing so — the report says Mono Lake will still struggle to rise to healthy heights, due to the drying effects of climate change.

Other Mono Lake news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Hobbs advocates for Arizona’s place on Colorado River, infrastructure funds, trade agreement in D.C.

Gov. Katie Hobbs delivered a keynote address in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday at a U.S. Chamber of Commerce event ahead of a new federal infrastructure bill. At the Keep America Moving: Transportation, Infrastructure, and America’s Future event, Hobbs used her speech to emphasize Arizona’s importance in infrastructure advancements, the need for Colorado River water solutions and international trade agreements. “Let me be very clear, this administration’s goals rely on Arizona receiving our fair share of Colorado River water,” she said. “It relies on Arizona-made missiles, Arizona-made semiconductors and Arizona-grown agriculture.”

Related articles:

Aquafornia news SFGate

Study finds huge problem with California farms’ missing manure

California farms are drastically undercounting the amount of manure they accumulate each year, which could adversely affect the state’s water supply. The undercount could be more than 200 times what recent farm reports show — likely as much as 44,000 tons of unrecorded manure — a new study from Stanford University’s Environmental and Natural Resources Law & Policy Program found. … The regional boards are required to monitor farms’ annual reports detailing manure and wastewater to prevent adverse effects and ensure water quality, but the study found that many of the regulations aren’t adequately enforced. 

Other water quality news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California pledges to open 7% of its land and waters to Indigenous tribes

California unveiled a plan Tuesday to bring at least 7.5 million acres of land and coastal waters under the care of Indigenous tribes. … The new policy, set by the California Natural Resources Agency, aims to start healing the harm caused by the state’s actions to bar tribes from their homelands and criminalize their cultural and land management practices. These actions not only harmed Native communities, whose cultures and ways of life are intimately tied to the plants, animals and landscape of their homelands, but also caused well-documented harm to ecosystems through the loss of biodiversity, takeover of invasive species, degradation of water quality and increase in wildfire risk.

Other tribal land and water news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Sacramento advances 25-year plan for Lower American River

The Sacramento City Council on Tuesday voted to advance a major water-management plan for the Lower American River, marking another green light the region’s key water supply partnership needs before the agreement is fully approved. Tuesday’s decision made Sacramento City Council the 21st member to give the agreement a thumbs up, with about 10 more boards and councils still to go for the powerful partnership, or the Water Forum. … The pact was designed to last through 2030 and updated then. But it soon ran up against the direct impacts of climate change, prompting the members to accelerate the timeline and push to adopt an updated plan years earlier than originally planned.

Other river management news:

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

Bureau of Reclamation offering up to $200K for ideas to stop invasive mussels

As invasive mussel species continue to spread across the state, both local and national agencies, such as the US Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), are exploring every avenue to stop them. Now, they’re offering up some serious money for the right idea to help stop the spread of these shellfish. The three-phase ‘Halt the Hitchhiker’ program is offering up $200,000 for the winning proposal, with cash prizes offered at each phase for winning ideas. The push stems from continued concern about invasive shellfish such as the Quagga, Zebra and more recent Golden Mussels.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news Circle of Blue

Blog: In search of ‘earned hope’ on the Colorado River — a conversation with photographer Pete McBride

For more than two decades, the Colorado-born photographer Pete McBride has documented the overwhelming beauty and the gathering threats to the Colorado River. Now with the lowest snowpack on record in his home state and the basin’s reservoirs approaching historic lows, McBride is stepping out from behind the camera to write a book detailing a lifelong love affair with his “backyard river.” Part memoir and part travelogue from his National Geographic and other magazine assignments, Witness to Water is a cry from McBride’s heart about a river ecosystem being strained to the breaking point.

Other water art and media news:

Aquafornia news Lookout Santa Cruz (Calif.)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: After years of closure, California salmon fishing set to reopen this spring — with tight limits

For the first time in four years, salmon fishing seasons will open in California for both commercial and recreational use this spring. … The sport fishing season will open first, on April 11 in ocean waters south of Pigeon Point, about 30 miles north of Santa Cruz. The commercial season, which has been closed in the state since 2023 due to low stock numbers, is set to open in California in mid-May, with a final date and regulations to be set in mid-April. The recreational fishery had only limited openings in 2025 following closures in 2023 and 2024 for the same reason. … The goal of the restrictions is to ensure plenty of adult fish return to the spawning grounds [in rivers] and hatcheries this fall, said the CDFW. 

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news Denver Gazette (Colo.)

Did Colorado’s snowpack peak a month early at a record low? Some signs point to ‘yes’

Has Colorado’s snowpack peak already come and gone? Maybe – and if so, it would be the earliest snowpack peak on record with records dating back to 1987. Those who have been following along with the state’s snowpack since the start of the season already know that the winter of 2025-2026 has brought record-setting dryness to the Centennial State [location of Colorado River headwaters]. … On March 8, statewide snowpack hit a snow-water equivalent of 8.4 inches – and it hasn’t managed to climb to 8.5 inches since. In fact, as of March 14, the state was at 8.2 inches, showing a snowpack decline that hasn’t been seen yet this year.

Other snowpack news around the West:

Aquafornia news The New Republic

The American West is drying up. Can the market help?

… [T]he [Colorado] river’s 46 reservoirs, including the enormous man-made Lake Powell and Lake Mead, now stand more than two-thirds empty, according to a recent report by the Colorado River Research Group. … “We are not running out of water,” said Rhett Larson, professor of water law at Arizona State University and one of the [Colorado River Water Users Association] conference’s keynote speakers. “We are running out of cheap water.” … Amid this ongoing tussle, a few lonely voices, including a right-wing Arizona state representative named Alexander Kolodin, have been proposing a seemingly radical solution: What if we just … gulp … let the market decide?

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Smart Water Magazine

From backup supply to natural infrastructure: what California’s new groundwater report reveals

California’s Department of Water Resources has released its most comprehensive groundwater report to date. The Bulletin 118 Update 2025 covers groundwater conditions, use, and management across the state from 2020 to 2024, offering the most detailed assessment yet of a resource that supplies around 40% of California’s total water demand in average years. … Structured around four strategic themes: maximizing groundwater infrastructure for climate adaptation, accelerating SGMA implementation, strengthening equity for frontline communities, and improving data and monitoring tools, the report amounts to a call for California to move from reactive groundwater management to treating it as the cornerstone of its long-term water strategy. 

Other groundwater management news:

Aquafornia news Nevada Current

New NV top water regulator appointed, industry ties questioned by conservation groups

The Nevada Department of Conservation and Natural Resources has selected Joe Cacioppo as Nevada’s next state engineer, officials announced Thursday. Cacioppo, a licensed civil engineer, served as the Deputy Administrator at the Nevada Division of Water Resources for a month before being promoted as Nevada’s top water regulator following the abrupt departure of his predecessor in December. … The appointment of Cacioppo has attracted criticism from several conservation groups who question his ties to a firm involved in numerous water rights applications across the state.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Source New Mexico

NM U.S. Sen. Luján frees $120M for Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project

U.S. Sen Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) on Monday announced he’d successfully pressured the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to release $120 million for ongoing construction of the Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project, which, when completed, promises to provide a sustainable water supply to more than 250,000 people in northwest New Mexico. The project to divert water via a 300-mile pipeline from the [Colorado River tributary] San Juan River to the Navajo Nation and areas nearby was finalized in 2010 when the federal Interior Department and the Nation finalized the latter’s water rights settlement. Congress has authorized up to approximately $1.8 billion for the project.

Other water infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Public Policy Institute of California

New Salton Sea research suggests a surprising path forward

Managing the Salton Sea remains a thorny issue for California. We spoke with Pacific Institute’s Michael Cohen and UC Riverside’s William Porter about recent research that might point toward cost-effective ways to protect public health. … Michael Cohen: In the past three to four years, there have been strongly worded news articles saying that the Salton Sea is a toxic sump that’s killing people. That’s exaggerating how bad the situation is. … This report tries to synthesize what other reports are saying about pollution sources in the region. We wanted to raise the question of what’s the best use of limited public funds.

Other Salton Sea news:

Aquafornia news Westside Current (Los Angeles)

LA Council fights federal wetland & oil drilling push

The City Council has adopted a resolution led by Councilwoman Traci Park opposing a federal effort that could weaken protections for wetlands and small waterways, adding the city’s voice to a growing fight over environmental safeguards along California’s coast. Park’s resolution pushes back against a Trump administration proposal to redefine which waters and wetlands are protected under the Clean Water Act. Local officials and environmental advocates have argued the change would strip federal protections from many wetlands and streams. Park said those areas play an important role in filtering pollution, protecting water quality and reducing flooding during storms.

Other wetland news:

Aquafornia news USA Today

Opinion: Privatizing weather forecasts is deadly. We need NWS

This time last year, the administration of President Donald Trump tried to decimate one of the nation’s premier scientific institutions, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. … It is heartening that, through tireless advocacy on Capitol Hill, multiple rallies and litigation, those who understand how critical this organization is to our daily lives have succeeded in pushing back on the attack and persuading Congress to fund NOAA at a steady level. … As we look to the future, we also have a chance to think about how the agency should evolve, and consider critically what works and what does not.
– Written by Craig N. McLean, former assistant administrator and chief scientist of NOAA Research.

Aquafornia news FISHBIO

Blog: Golden mussel patrol — detector dogs are on the scent

Even though golden mussels were only detected in California in October 2024, they pose a significant and immediate threat to the state’s waterways. … Unfortunately, many of the common inspection programs and methods—like boat inspections or eDNA—can be costly, labor intensive, and slow. While these methods offer comprehensive results, the rapid spread of golden mussels requires tools that deliver immediate answers as boaters enter waterways. Luckily, a new solution is on the rise: dogs that can smell invasive species. From time on the treadmill to weekly weigh-ins, golden mussel-sniffing dogs are treated like star athletes at Mussel Dogs, an Oakdale-based canine training and environmental consulting business.