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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 Chris Bowman.

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Aquafornia news KRCR News Channel 7 (Redding, California)

Increased flows at Feather River prompt safety warnings from PG&E

If you’re planning to be on the north fork of the Feather River this weekend, PG&E urges you to use caution as they plan to increase flows to the area on Sept. 27 and 28. PG&E says they’re increasing flows on the Rock Creek Reach part of the river near the community of Storrie for whitewater recreation. They say it’ll have class 3, 4, and 5 rapids, which are only for skilled paddlers and not for people hoping for a little tubing. Flows will gradually reduce on Sunday afternoon.

Aquafornia news HS Insider/Los Angeles Times

Opinion: California water crisis

… As I write this today, I am less concerned with the planting of trees than I am with the water required to grow them. We must start protecting our water, and these changes must be implemented by those who currently hold power in our country. Water waste is the number one issue facing us currently. … it is still empirically evident that we are suffering through a devastating megadrought. We must take adequate steps toward conversation immediately, or we risk forever damaging our water security. Younger generations cannot implement this level of change by themselves. We must call on older members of our society to create change for the benefit of others, knowing that they may never see the positive impact of their actions.
—Written by Mitchell Katz, a student at the Buckley School in Sherman Oaks, California

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Application deadline for fallowing program for Tule basin farmers extended to Sept. 30

The deadline to apply for the Tule Land and Water Conservation Trust’s land fallowing program has been extended to Monday, Sept. 30.  More than $1.2 million is available to growers in the Tule subbasin, which covers the southern half of Tulare County’s flatlands, to participate in the third year of the program.  Those funds come from local groundwater sustainability agencies (GSAs) which collect pumping fees from landowners. The trust, formed in 2020 to help the basin navigate the requirements of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), works to match those funds with grants and private donations.

Aquafornia news E&E News by POLITICO

Thursday Top of the Scroll: San Francisco weighs bid to drop Supreme Court water case

Lawmakers in San Francisco are launching a last-ditch effort to kill the city’s lawsuit challenging federal water pollution requirements, weeks before Supreme Court oral arguments are set to begin. The city has accused EPA of including unreasonably vague requirements in a wastewater permit for one of its sewage treatment plants. The language in the permit is designed to protect water quality and is widely used in permits for municipalities nationwide. San Francisco says it’s virtually impossible to follow. But on Tuesday, San Francisco Supervisor Myrna Melgar introduced a resolution urging the city attorney’s office to drop the case. … Despite the case’s local origins, the outcome could have broad ramifications for wastewater permits and limit EPA’s ability to control the release of sewage and other contaminants, legal experts said.

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Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lake Mead to rise 10 feet with Colorado River conservation

Five U.S. Bureau of Reclamation conservation agreements targeting California farmers were signed on Wednesday with a big intended impact. … The agreements involving the Imperial Irrigation District, Bard Water District and the Metropolitan Water District represent the last conservation efforts from “bucket one,” or the first round, of funding from Congress’ Inflation Reduction Act. Lake Mead, which provides about 90 percent of Southern Nevada’s drinking water, stands at around 1,063 feet as of September’s end — about 23 feet higher than the reservoir’s all-time low in 2022. [Reclamation Commissioner Camille Calimlim Touton] has cited aggressive conservation as a direct boost to Lake Mead’s outlook, though two heavy snowpack years in the Rocky Mountains have helped, as well. The Bureau of Reclamation predicts that the agreements will save 717,000 acre-feet of water in total. One acre-foot of water is roughly enough to serve two single-family homes for a year.

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Aquafornia news The Associated Press

Fluoride in drinking water poses enough risk to merit new EPA action, judge says

A federal judge has ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to further regulate fluoride in drinking water because high levels could pose a risk to the intellectual development of children. U.S. District Judge Edward Chen cautioned that it’s not certain that the amount of fluoride typically added to water is causing lower IQ in kids, but he concluded that mounting research points to an unreasonable risk that it could be. He ordered the EPA to take steps to lower that risk, but didn’t say what those measures should be. It’s the first time a federal judge has made a determination about the neurodevelopmental risks to children of the recommended U.S. water fluoride level, said Ashley Malin, a University of Florida researcher who has studied the effect of higher fluoride levels in pregnant women.

Aquafornia news South Yuba River Citizen’s League

News release: NID withdraws Centennial Dam proposal after SYRCL’s decade-long opposition

On September 25th, the Nevada Irrigation District voted on the future of their proposed Centennial Dam project, a $1 billion project that the South Yuba River Citizen’s League (SYRCL) has rallied the community in opposition to since its inception. … In August of 2014, the Nevada Irrigation District (NID) began planning to construct a new 275-foot-tall dam and reservoir on the Bear River between the existing Rollins and Combie reservoirs. The water agency’s proposed new 110,000 acre-foot reservoir with a 275 foot-tall dam on the Bear River would have inundated six miles of the Bear River, completely flooding the Bear River Campground, more than 25 homes and 120 parcels, hundreds of cultural and sacred Native American sites, and the Dog Bar Bridge, the only crossing of the Bear River between Highway 49 and Highway 174. … Now, NID has voted to withdraw its water rights application and to discontinue all feasibility, environmental, and other analyses in support of the proposed Centennial Reservoir Project. 

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Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Invasive rodent species found in critical Bay Area watershed

The recent discovery of a nutria in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in Contra Costa County has raised concerns of damage to the region’s fragile ecosystem from the invasive rodent species, prompting officials to ask the public to report any new sightings. Nutria are native to South America and live in waterways, such as deltas, rivers and ponds. They’re known to be invasive, destroying crops and weakening levees “to the point of failure,” said Matthew Slattengren, an agricultural commissioner for the Contra Costa County Department of Agriculture, on Wednesday. Only a handful of nutria have been spotted in the county in recent years, according to Slattengren and state Fish and Wildlife data. But officials say the animals have the potential to cause “serious damage” to the vast Delta watershed and its network of aging earthen levees — a critical water source for much of California.

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Tulare County irrigation districts try to ‘right the ship’ toward groundwater sustainability. But will it be enough?

Three Tulare County irrigation districts that recently found themselves in the state’s crosshairs over groundwater extractions and subsidence are scrambling to show officials they are getting on the right side of “sustainability.” The boards of the Terra Bella, Porterville and Saucelito irrigation districts each approved resolutions seeking to cut back the amount of groundwater farmers can pump within their boundaries. … But some say the action may be too little, too late. Groundwater allocations are actually doled out by the Eastern Tule Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA), which overlays all three districts. So, technically, the districts’ groundwater preferences are requests to the Eastern Tule GSA, which must vote separately on any future groundwater allocations.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Imperial Beach residents say Tijuana River is poisoning them

… Pollution in the [Tijuana] river has been an entrenched environmental crisis for decades, with all sides pointing fingers at one another. Residents blame politicians for failing to find a solution. Local politicians blame Congress for not funding improvements in the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, which processes raw sewage from Tijuana. The federal government blames Mexico for lax sewage regulations. The International Boundary and Water Commission says it’s not its job to collect the wastewater from unknown sources that flows into the Tijuana River. Complicating matters further: Researchers and county officials are sharply split on whether the stench is simply a nuisance or a danger to public health. Some help is on the way, potentially. Mexico’s new wastewater treatment plant is set to open this month, and there are plans to double the capacity of the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, although that project will take five years.

Aquafornia news The Conversation

Commentary: Big lithium plans for Imperial Valley, one of California’s poorest regions, raise a bigger question: Who should benefit?

… [The] Salton Sea, the state’s biggest and most toxic lake, is an environmental disaster. And the region’s politics have been dominated by a conservative white elite, despite its supermajority Latino population. The county also happens to be sitting on enough lithium to produce nearly 400 million batteries, sufficient to completely revamp the American auto fleet to electric propulsion. Even better, that lithium could be extracted in a way consistent with broader goals to reduce pollution. The traditional ways to extract lithium involve either hard rock mining, which generates lots of waste, or large evaporation ponds, which waste a lot of water. In Imperial Valley, companies are pioneering a third method. They are extracting the mineral from the underground briny water brought up during geothermal energy production and then injecting that briny water back into the ground in a closed loop. It promises to yield the cleanest, greenest lithium on the planet.

Aquafornia news California Department of Water Resources

News release: State helps local communities prepare for flood emergencies with latest round of funding

The Department of Water Resources (DWR) is awarding $1.4 million in funding for nine emergency response agencies across the state to increase their ability to respond to flood events. This funding will help put resources in the hands of local first responders tasked with protecting our communities.   California continues to adapt to an increase in extreme weather, with swings from dry conditions to dangerous flooding. The previous two winters have demonstrated the importance of planning for flood emergencies, especially at the local level.

Aquafornia news California Department of Fish & Wildlife

News release: CDFW awards $41m to critical restoration projects statewide

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) [on Sept. 25] announced the award of $41 million in grants for 20 restoration and protection projects throughout the state to benefit wetlands and meadows, Southern California steelhead and watersheds impacted by cannabis cultivation. Today’s awards continue the effort to support critical restoration projects with funding made available in late 2022 through the Nature Based Solutions Initiative and Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, funding through CDFW’s Cannabis Program, as well as funding dedicated to improving Southern California steelhead habitat through Proposition 68. These projects also support key initiatives including California’s 30×30 initiative and California’s Salmon Strategy for a Hotter, Drier Future.

Aquafornia news NOAA Fisheries

News release: 2023 Klamath River salmon fishery disaster determination

The Secretary of Commerce announced that a fishery resource disaster occurred in the 2023 Pulikla Tribe of Yurok People Klamath River subsistence salmon fishery. The determination is in response to the request from Ms. Fawn C. Murphy, Chairperson of the Pulikla Tribe of Yurok People. Secretary of Commerce, Gina M. Raimondo, working with NOAA Fisheries, evaluates each fishery resource disaster request based primarily on data submitted by the requesting official. A fishery disaster determination must meet specific requirements under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.

Aquafornia news SFGate

Tahoe is oldest lake in North America, 3rd in the world, study says

Lake Tahoe is the oldest lake in North America and the third oldest in the world, according to new research presented at the Geological Society of America’s annual meeting on Monday in Anaheim. The finding places Tahoe in the pantheon of the world’s most ancient lakes. Lake Tahoe is at least 2.3 million years old, according to Winnie Kortemeier, a professor of geosciences at Western Nevada College in Carson City, Nevada. She initially made that discovery in 2012, when she sent samples of volcanic rock she collected near Tahoe City to the U.S. Geological Survey geochronology laboratory for radiometric dating. 

Aquafornia news Desert Sun (Palm Springs, California)

Water agencies: Who is running in Mission Springs, CVWD, DWA elections?

Water district boards often aren’t a top concern for most voters, but the entities wield power over your bills and the amount and quality of water coming out of your tap or sprinkler. There are a few competitive races for seats on area boards of directors in this November’s election. … The Coachella Valley Water District, founded by farmers more than a century ago and who have long dominated the the board, now serves more customers than any other water district in the valley, including about 110,000 homes and businesses, about 1,000 agricultural accounts, and many of the valley’s 100-plus thirsty golf courses. Two seats are up for election on the Coachella Valley Water District Board: Division 2 and Division 4.

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

Critics allege ‘Good old boy network’ at Sweetwater Authority

An agency that provides drinking water to roughly 200,000 people in South San Diego County is poised to award a $150,000 consulting contract to a former employee who once sued the agency and now has close personal and political ties to its governing board members.  Directors at Wednesday’s board meeting of the Sweetwater Authority in Chula Vista will vote on awarding the $225-per-hour consulting contract to Michael Garrod, a retired engineering manager who, along with three other employees, sued the agency in 2012 for allegedly discriminating against non-white employees and retaliating against people who complained. The lawsuit was settled in 2014 with no admission of wrongdoing by the agency. Garrod withdrew his complaint after one of the other plaintiffs settled. 

Aquafornia news KGUN (Tucson, Arizona)

‘It’s hurting our ability to grow’: Why Willcox needs to lower water usage

“It’s hurting economic development,” said Willcox City Manager, Caleb Blaschke. “It’s hurting our ability to grow.” Blaschke and Willcox residents are concerned about the amount of water being used and pumped from the Willcox Playa Basin. Roughly 5,000 people rely on the City of Willcox for water.  ”In the Willcox basin, you can pump as much water as you want, and there’s no protections for residents. There’s no protections for the city,” Blaschke. He says there are over 1,600 water connections to the city waterlines, which includes businesses and residences. “I think that’s a big issue right now, is the water is not being recharged as quickly as the water is being taken out of the aquifer,” he said.

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Gov. Newsom signs trio of water bills to fix long-term water problems in tiny East Orosi

Residents of East Orosi played host to Governor Gavin Newsom Tuesday, who briefly stopped in the tiny community nestled against the foothills of northern Tulare County to sign three bills guaranteeing them an end to decades worth of dirty water flowing to their homes. … AB 805 by Dr. Joaquin Arambula (D-Fesno), which mandates a public process to determine whether an administrator is needed  for local sewer systems and empowers the state to provide technical and financial support. … SB 1188 by Senator John Laird (D-Santa Cruz) to support small water systems by providing them technical resources to prevent failure … AB 2454 by Assemblymember Alex Lee (D-Milpitas) that would require rental property owners to participate in state programs for domestic well testing and to determine if remediation is needed to make the water clean.

Related article:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles settles with Monsanto for $35 million over PCBs

Contamination of key Los Angeles waterways such as the Santa Monica Bay, Los Angeles Harbor and Echo Park Lake due to the spread of toxic chemicals is at the heart of a $35-million settlement between the L.A. City Council and agriculture giant Monsanto and two smaller companies. The City Council on Tuesday announced the payout by the companies to settle a lawsuit filed in 2022 over damage from long-banned chemicals called PCBs, which have been linked to health problems including cancer.  … The complaint sought compensation for the cost of past cleanups — and for future abatement of — polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs. The chemicals tainted and continue to pollute many Los Angeles waterways, including the Dominguez Channel, Ballona Creek, Marina del Rey and Machado Lake.

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