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 Trump administration on Wednesday renewed a streamlined
permit program for oil pipelines, highways and other projects
that disturb wetlands and streams, while making data centers
eligible as well. The Army Corps of Engineers finalized for the
next five years its nationwide permit program, which allows
infrastructure purported to have minimal adverse effects on
water quality to get faster approvals under the Clean
Water Act. … In addition to allowing data centers to
qualify for the permits, the agency added a new
category for environmental projects that help fish pass through
dams.
In a decision that could complicate Gov. Gavin Newsom’s push to
build a giant water tunnel and remake California’s water
system, a state appeals court has rejected the state’s plan for
financing the project. The 3rd District Court of Appeal ruled
against the state Department of Water Resources’ plan to issue
billions of dollars in bonds to build the 45-mile tunnel
beneath the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. … If the
appeals court decision stands and the ongoing case doesn’t
bring a different conclusion, it might lead the Newsom
administration to revise its plan for financing the project.
Officials could also petition for the California Supreme Court
to hear the case.
Much of the western U.S. has started 2026 in the midst of a
snow drought. That might sound surprising, given the record
precipitation from atmospheric rivers hitting the region in
recent weeks, but those storms were actually part of the
problem. … A region can be in a snow drought during
times of normal or even above-normal precipitation if
temperatures are warm enough that precipitation falls as rain
when snow would normally be expected. This form of snow drought
– known as a warm snow drought – is becoming more prevalent as
the climate warms, and it’s what parts of the West have been
seeing so far this winter.
With months still left of winter, California’s major reservoirs
are holding about 129 percent of historical water levels for
this time of year. Officials with the state’s Department of
Water Resources say that’s welcome news after years of drought,
but it doesn’t mean California’s water challenges are
completely over. … Above average reservoir levels give
water managers more flexibility as they head into warmer months
and irrigation season, when demand rises and rain typically
fades. It also reduces the immediate risk of shortages for
farms, cities, and ecosystems.
Are you an emerging leader passionate about shaping the future
of the Colorado River Basin? If so, consider applying for our
2026 Colorado
River Water Leaders program to deepen your
knowledge of the iconic Southwest river, build leadership
skills and develop policy ideas with a cohort to improve
management of the region’s most crucial natural resource.
Applications are due Jan. 26, 2024 and you can find
application
materials here along with mandatory program dates.
Registration is also open for our Water
101 Workshop – The Basics & Beyond. Join us March
26 for this once-a-year primer on California’s most precious
natural resource detailing the history, geography, and legal
and political facets of water in California.
Over 10,000 feet above sea level in Sequoia and Kings National
Parks dozens of weather station towers are sprinkled amongst a
forest of towering trees. These towers house antennas and
sensors designed to collect valuable water
data used by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Sacramento District and many of its partners. Though these
stations are built to withstand extreme weather, there comes a
time — about every 50 years or so — when the stations need a
little more than routine annual maintenance. This was the
case for two USACE-operated weather stations that were rebuilt
in 2025: Upper Tyndall near Mt Whitney, in the Kern River
watershed, and Mitchell Meadow near Cedar Grove, California, in
the Kings River watershed.
Water recycling treats wastewater so it can be used for
drinking water, farming, housing, and industry. Communities
across the U.S. also turn to water recycling to increase
existing water supplies. The Bureau of Reclamation selected 5
projects in Southern California and Utah to receive grants
worth about $308 million for developing water recycling
projects. Projects will serve rural, suburban, and urban
communities. Agency officials identified ways to address
challenges they had implementing the initial grant program. We
recommended the Bureau document the experience so that Congress
can improve the program if it is revised or reauthorized.
One year after the January 2025 fires devastated communities
across Los Angeles, the region is still reckoning with how its
infrastructure performed and whether it should be modified to
perform under increasingly extreme conditions. The anniversary
has sharpened an urgent policy question with far-reaching
consequences: as urban wildfires become more frequent and
severe, what role can water systems realistically play in
protecting lives, supporting emergency response, and guiding
resilient rebuilding? A new UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation
publication, Water Systems’ Wildfire Fighting Capacities and
Expectations: Workshop Synthesis Report, begins to answer this
question.
With farmland prices sagging and new irrigation rules coming,
diversified farmer Michael Vander Dussen didn’t hesitate to
spend $1.4 million for 321 acres in west Fresno County, as an
insurance policy of sorts. Vander Dussen admits he isn’t
as interested in the land as much as its access to water. He
recently planted a field of pistachio trees nearby, and he
wants to make sure they survive. … Vander Dussen said
both properties are in the same GSA, groundwater sustainability
agency. And he intends to fallow a portion of the new property
that is located west of Raisin City and south of Kerman.
… The Fresno Bee has started tracking these types of
agriculture land sales using an AI tool that we developed to
more efficiently share this news with you.
Residents of a Green Valley neighborhood are voicing their
concerns over plans to remove grass from their community park,
a move driven by Assembly Bill 356 and the Southern Nevada
Water Authority’s (SNWA) efforts to conserve water by
eliminating nonfunctional turf. The SNWA defines nonfunctional
turf as irrigated grass that does not provide functional use.
However, neighbors near Wingbrook Avenue argue that the grass
in their park is functional. … The SNWA asserts that
removing nonfunctional turf will help reduce Colorado River
consumption and protect the community’s water supply.
Since Modesto Irrigation Director Larry Byrd voted to squash an
investigation into himself last month, some, including experts,
have wondered how he was allowed to do that. … In
September, MID launched an investigation after Byrd was
publicly accused of either stealing or misusing the district’s
canal water. The investigation found that Byrd’s previous
answers to some of the accusations against him were impossible.
However, the report, scientific and data-reliant, failed to
clearly implicate Byrd. But had Byrd recused himself, the
investigation would have continued.
Top water officials from the seven Colorado River Basin states
will return to the negotiating table next week, reportedly in
sequestered fashion, to try to make headway over how to cut
water use. Starting Monday, the negotiators will meet for four
days in Salt Lake City, sources said, and two people familiar
with the long-stalled talks say attendance will be sharply or
at least unusually limited. Federal officials are convening the
seven-state meeting after a missed deadline in November in the
long stalemate over how to deal with the oversubscribed,
dwindling river. The U.S. Interior Department, which
typically runs the negotiating sessions, has told the states it
wants an agreement among them by Feb. 14.
As of Tuesday, California’s six largest mega reservoirs are 75%
full, holding 26% of their normal historical levels for this
date. … For the mega reservoirs, that is a sweet spot;
enough room to catch much more water for the remaining three
months of wet season. If there’s too much rain, they can
release water to prevent dangerous overflow, as we saw with
Lake Oroville back in February 2017. In fact, Oroville is
already releasing water right now. California farmers get
about 70% of their water from dams and reservoirs.
Reactions are pouring in from national, state and local leaders
following the death of U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa. … U.S.
Rep. John Garamendi, D-Fairfield, described LaMalfa as a close
friend and colleague, pointing to years of
collaboration on water infrastructure investments and
watershed protections in the Sacramento Valley. … It
also puts into question congressional influence over the Potter
Valley Project. LaMalfa was an outspoken critic of the
proposed dismantling of project, but opposed retaining the
Scott and Cape Horn dams without a replacement plan. He only
recently began speaking out more about the project, given he
was hoping to earn the vote of the Mendocino County communities
directly impacted by it.
Scientists at UC Berkeley’s Central Sierra Snow Laboratory were
busier than ever this season — even before receiving over 4
feet of snow around Christmas. The modest research
station, located in a forested area a few miles outside
Truckee, meticulously collects snowfall measurements at Donner
Summit, continuing a practice that began nearly 150 years ago.
These records make for one of the world’s longest running snow
datasets, providing important insights into long-term changes
to the Sierra snowpack, a cornerstone of California’s
water supply.
The dreaded, destructive golden mussel has
become an urgent topic among San Joaquin Valley water agencies
prompting near daily meetings on how to combat the tiny mollusk
that is clogging pipes and equipment from Stockton to Arvin.
… After golden mussels were discovered in the
Arvin-Edison Water Storage District late last year, Friant did
a top-to-bottom inspection of the southern reaches of the
Friant-Kern Canal while water demands are low. Crews
looked under bridges, headgates, turnouts — every nook and
cranny where the mussel could attach itself – blasting colonies
with lethal hot water and scraping them off by hand while
chemical solutions are researched.
People are being asked to stay away from the lower Russian
River after an unknown volume of untreated wastewater spilled
from a sewage treatment plant in Guerneville during the
tail-end of a storm that drenched Sonoma County and flooded
many roads across the region. Heavy overnight rainfall — part
of the region’s prolonged atmospheric river — caused storage
ponds at the facility to overflow early Tuesday morning, said
Stuart Tiffen, a spokesman for Sonoma Water, which operates the
Russian River Treatment Plant. Affected residents were alerted
of the spill Tuesday morning, officials said. … Some of
the discharge was traveling a quarter of a mile through a
forested area before it reached the mainstem of the river,
officials said.
A vote last month by the Westlands Water District board to sign
off on the environmental impact report for a massive solar
project on Fresno County’s westside marked a major milestone in
the development of the Valley Clean Infrastructure Plan. … In
addition to generating much-needed electricity, VCIP could
boost Fresno County’s property tax revenues as well as
groundwater supplies. … VCIP will give Westlands and
private farm owners the opportunity to sell or lease land for
solar companies to develop. If Westlands sells land, it will
move onto property tax rolls and boost tax revenues for Fresno
County. … Westlands plans to retain small pockets within
sold parcels for drill sites to pump water into the ground
instead of pumping it out.
One of the biggest and most controversial talking points
surrounding the battle against the January 2025 Southern
California wildfires was water supply – or a lack
thereof. … Then-Los Angeles Fire Department Chief
Kristin Crowley was vocal about the water shortage, criticizing
city officials for not providing enough funds for the fire
department. Gov. Gavin Newsom, days after the blaze
erupted, also called for an investigation into why a
117-million-gallon reservoir in the area was out of
service. But a year has now passed, and some Altadena
residents are still frustrated about the water situation.
With salmon returning to the upper reaches of the Klamath River
following the removal of four dams, the newly established
Klamath Indigenous Land Trust (KILT) has purchased 10,000 acres
of salmon habitat for conservation. … The return of
salmon to the Klamath River has been a bright spot for Pacific
salmon along the U.S. West Coast, where dwindling populations
have resulted in three years of cancelled commercial salmon
seasons. State, federal, and Tribal authorities have invested
heavily in conservation and recovery efforts to help the
population rebound, including the removal of dams and other
fish barriers.