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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 News & Publications Director Vik Jolly

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Aquafornia news WBUR (Boston, Mass.)

Facing shortages, cities tap sewers to bolster drinking water supply

On a hot day, there’s nothing quite like a refreshing drink of water. But how would you feel if that water was sourced from the sewer? As cities across the West brace for a drier future, they’re investing in advanced water purification technology. It flushes out the contaminants in wastewater so that the murky stuff that goes down your toilet can eventually come out ready to drink at your sink. “There’s a lot of uncertainty here in terms of water resources, so we think that this is that next bucket of water that we need to tap into,” said Nazario Prieto, assistant director of Phoenix Water Services. The city of 1.6 million people is building its first advanced water purification plant that could eventually process up to 15 million gallons of wastewater a day.

Aquafornia news Animal Legal Defense Fund

News release: Settlement reached in California water use lawsuit against Foster Poultry Farms

The Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF) and Foster Poultry Farms have reached a settlement of the lawsuit filed against Foster Poultry Farms in 2020. ALDF’s complaint alleged that Foster Poultry Farms unreasonably uses water to slaughter and process chickens at its poultry-processing plant in Livingston, California in violation of Article X, section 2 of the California Constitution, which mandates that all water use in the State of California must be reasonable. While Foster Poultry Farms completely denies ALDF’s allegations regarding its water use and animal welfare practices, it has agreed to continue to work to improve water conservation and animal welfare at its Livingston poultry-processing plant, which is the largest chicken poultry-processing plant on the West Coast.

Aquafornia news Stocktonia (Calif.)

Monday Top of the Scroll: $2 billion levee project breaks ground in Stockton

Construction on a $2 billion levee project that will effectively protect more than a third of Stocktonians’ homes from flooding kicked off this week. Local government officials took part in a groundbreaking ceremony Friday off March Lane at the Tenmile Slough in Brookside to launch the Lower San Joaquin River Improvement Project. … The first phase of the project, slated for completion in late 2026, will see improvements made to just over a mile of the Tenmile Slough levee, which sits directly in the backyard of many homes in the Brookside area of west Stockton, according to a presentation on the project’s overview. About one mile of the levee will be upgraded to have a seepage cutoff wall, which is an added layer of material preventing water seeping through or under the levee.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news SFGate

Trump administration mulls intervention in California dam removal

In a major twist, the Donald Trump administration is now reviewing regional appeals to halt PG&E’s plans to dismantle the Potter Valley Project. … In an April 14 letter, the Bureau of Reclamation responded to an inquiry from Aaron Sykes, a board member of the Lake Pillsbury Alliance, which represents the homeowners and stakeholders fighting to keep Scott Dam, the structure that holds back Lake Pillsbury. In the letter, which was reviewed by SFGATE, the federal agency said funding for the project is “undergoing reviews” to ensure it aligns with an executive order President Donald Trump signed on his first day in office that directs the government to explore any “undue burden” on the “use of domestic energy resources” including, oil, coal and hydropower.

Aquafornia news Utah News Dispatch (Salt Lake City)

Cox considers emergency declaration as drought worsens in southern Utah and Lake Powell levels drop

With drought conditions worsening in southern Utah, Gov. Spencer Cox says he’s working on issuing an emergency declaration. Despite northern Utah seeing average snow this year, counties in the south are exceptionally dry. Cox said he’s currently working with local officials on the declaration, which could extend to a handful of counties in the southwestern corner of Utah that have seen a meager snowpack this winter. … Statewide, the snow water equivalent — which is basically the amount of water currently in the snowpack — is at about 78% of normal, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service, or NRCS, which tracks the snowpack at sites around the state. Much of northern Utah is between that or higher, with Snowbird’s site at 96%, and a site in Big Cottonwood Canyon at 115%. 

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

A major California city lost its river. Residents are fighting to revive it

For decades, residents of Bakersfield have lived with a river that’s little more than a channel of dust. The Kern, which pours from the snowy peaks of the southern Sierra, descends upon California’s ninth-largest city and, in all but the wettest of years, runs dry. A sandy, weed-strewn corridor is left winding unremarkably through the downtown, beside roads, beneath bridges and behind businesses. … A group of residents is trying to change that. Cooper and dozens of others are fighting to bring water back to the Kern River, hoping to create a lush, parklike centerpiece in a city best known for the sunbaked oil fields and farms that surround it. It isn’t an easy go. The river’s waters are already largely accounted for, some serving the municipal needs of Bakersfield and nearby communities, but most drawn for agriculture, the engine of the regional economy. 

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune

Plastic water bottles could get banned on the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe with senate bill

A senate bill has been introduced to the Nevada legislature this session that could prohibit the sale of plastic water bottles in Nevada Lake Tahoe communities, if passed. The bill is similar to the City of South Lake Tahoe’s ordinance that went into effect on Earth Day of last year and the Town of Truckee’s ordinance, taking effect this upcoming Earth Day. Both ban the sale of certain plastic water bottles and both municipalities lie on the California side of Lake Tahoe. Senate Bill 324 would introduce similar restrictions in communities that abut the Nevada portion of the Lake Tahoe Watershed. The proposed bills prohibits sale of disposable plastic water bottles under four liters.

Aquafornia news The Davis Enterprise

In Memoriam: Harrison ‘Hap’ Dunning, distinguished water law professor and advocate for the public trust

Upon joining the faculty at UC Davis, Hap (Dunning) initiated a course in water law, which became his passion and the focus of the rest of his professional career. In the late 1970s, he served as executive officer of the Governor’s Commission to Review California Water Rights Law. He later served on the California Water Commission and the Bay Delta Advisory Council, and he sat on the board of directors of several nonprofits, including among others The Bay Institute of San Francisco, the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation, and the Tuolumne River Trust. Much of his scholarship dealt with the application of the public trust doctrine to water rights. In its landmark decision on that topic in 1983, the California Supreme Court cited the papers from a major conference Hap organized at UC Davis in 1980. (Dunning also served on the Water Education Foundation’s Board of Directors from 1997-2014.)

Read more about his legacy:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Trump cuts would cripple NOAA’s wide-ranging science partnerships

… A new proposal from the White House Office of Management and Budget would dramatically reorganize NOAA and gut most of its climate research programs in fiscal 2026. Part of that plan includes terminating funding for NOAA’s cooperative institutes and its 10 laboratories, which are heavily staffed by CI researchers. The plan, presented last week in an OMB document known as a “passback” memorandum, is technically still hypothetical. While passbacks typically outline the priorities eventually included in the White House’s budget proposal each fiscal year, Congress must ultimately approve the president’s request. But even if Congress rejects the cuts that the Trump administration proposes for fiscal 2026, experts worry that funding for the remainder of fiscal 2025 is still in question.

Other NOAA news:

Aquafornia news The Tribune (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)

Residential wells go dry in Paso Robles Groundwater Basin

… Since the summer of 2014, the California Department of Water Resources has received 337 reports of dry wells over the basin, San Luis Obispo County groundwater sustainability director Blaine Reely said. In 2024, people pumped about 25,500 acre-feet of water more than was returned to the underground reservoir, according to the most recent annual report on the basin. The California Department of Water Resources considers the basin “critically overdrafted,” and residential property owners with dry wells are some of the first casualties of a poorly managed groundwater supply. Those residents blame farms and vineyards for pumping more than their fair share of water. According to the basin’s 2024 report, agriculture used about 94% of the water pumped from the basin.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news KGTV (San Diego)

Hundreds of IB residents sue for sewage crisis affecting health, property values

Nearly a thousand Imperial Beach residents are joining a lawsuit against the operators of the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, including Veolia Water, over the ongoing sewage crisis that has plagued the community for decades. Residents report health problems, devalued homes and diminished quality of life due to billions of gallons of sewage flowing from the Tijuana River into their community. … The lawsuit, filed by Frantz Law Group in November, is one of five similar legal actions initiated in the past year. It accuses Veolia Water of negligence and conscious disregard for community safety by exposing South Bay residents to raw sewage and contamination.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Times-Standard (Eureka, Calif.)

‘Hope dies hard’: Fishing industry reacts to CA salmon season closure

This week, the Pacific Fishery Management Council adopted recommendations for ocean salmon fishing along the West Coast; for an unprecedented third year in a row, the council has recommended closing commercial fishing off the California coast and allowing only limited commercial fishing in Oregon and Washington. … (Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations Executive Director Lisa )Damrosch told the Times-Standard that commercial fishermen have been feeling the effects of — and working to prevent — salmon population collapse in the Sacramento Valley. She stressed the PCFFA’s long-term goals of returning to a system of production hatcheries, if Californians want to continue to divert water to farming interests in Central and Southern California.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news California WaterBlog

Newly listed smelt in the Delta

Late last summer, on August 29th, 2024, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service listed the San Francisco Bay-Delta distinct population segment of longfin smelt (Spirinchus thaleichthys) as ‘endangered’ under the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA). With this decision, the Longfin Smelt joins the Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus), the longfin’s infamous cousin species, as a list species under the ESA. Longfin smelt had already been listed as ‘threatened’ under the California Endangered Species Act (CESA), but the new federal listing is a sign of the challenges that smelt and the broader Delta ecosystem face. The listing brings additional protections and new regulatory requirements that may further complicate water management in the Delta. This blog post provides an overview of this population of Longfin Smelt, explains what listing means, and then discusses ongoing work at UC Davis and beyond to recover Longfin Smelt populations.

Aquafornia news The Desert Sun (Palm Springs, Calif.)

California’s drought outlook will lead to more dust storms, poor air quality, study finds

The Climate Prediction Center’s recent dire drought outlook for California and the western United States has some more bad news: The dry, hot conditions will worsen air quality and introduce more dust and pollen allergens into the air. Meteorologists say Southern California will bear the brunt of the worst air quality and allergens, but the Central Valley may also be affected if wind patterns blow north. … The dry, hot conditions could lead to more dust storms — also called haboobs — in the region as well, meteorologists reported. Here’s what to know about how the dry, hot conditions will affect air quality in California.

Other drought news:

Aquafornia news The Stockton Record (Calif.)

Invasive mussels threatens one of California’s main waterways

California wildlife officials detected an invasive species in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta that threatens numerous ecosystems in the northern part of the state. On April 16, officials announced the Golden Mussel Task Force, a statewide interagency group aimed at curbing the spread of the invasive species. Agencies include the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, California State Parks, and the California Department of Food and Agriculture. Here’s what you need to know about Golden Mussels.

Other golden mussels news:

Aquafornia news The San Joaquin Valley Sun (Fresno, Calif.)

U.S. Ag Secretary appoints Aubrey Bettencourt to senior post

California farmer Aubrey Bettencourt has been appointed as the Chief of the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Bettencourt previously served as the President and CEO of the Almond Alliance and was the Deputy Assistant Secretary for the U.S. Department of the Interior during President Donald Trump’s first administration. … Along with her roles with the Almond Alliance and the USDA, Bettencourt comes to the NRCS after working as the Global Director of Government Relations and External Affairs for Netafilm, which is an Orbia company. 

Other agriculture news:

Aquafornia news Truthout

Blog: EPA deletes pollution tracking tools as it offers exemptions to polluters

… Advocates for communities overburdened by industrial pollution and the impacts of climate change say years of progress toward cleaner air, water and corporate accountability are at stake. … While it took down environmental justice maps and datasets, the EPA published a new webpage inviting fossil fuel and chemical companies to apply for presidential exemptions to pollution limits. … The EPA recently set up a new webpage with step-by-step instructions to apply for two-year waivers from nine major EPA pollution protections. … The rules include tougher limits on dangerous pollution from smokestacks and chemical plants, new emission standards for cars and trucks for reducing asthma and lung disease, and a historic rule designed to update water systems and protect children from lead in drinking water. 

Other EPA news:

Aquafornia news NBC Palm Springs

Video: Restoring the Salton Sea: energy, developments and solutions

California’s largest lake is shrinking—and transforming. NBC Palm Springs’ Olivia Sandusky set sail from Bombay Beach to explore the beauty, controversy, and potential of the Salton Sea. Stretching 343 square miles and sitting 226 feet below sea level, the Salton Sea is both majestic and endangered. Local photographer Kevin Key, who now calls Bombay Beach home, says he fell in love with the tranquility and surreal sunsets. But the picturesque views mask serious problems: pollution from agricultural runoff, receding shorelines, and a sharp decline in wildlife. Despite decades of restoration attempts, many question whether meaningful progress is being made. At the sea’s south end, an ambitious future is taking shape: Lithium Valley. With over 17 million metric tons of lithium beneath its geothermal brine, the area is a focal point for renewable energy development. 

Aquafornia news Nature Sustainability

Report: Impacts of agrisolar co-location on the food–energy–water nexus and economic security

Understanding how solar PV installations affect the landscape and its critical resources is crucial to achieve sustainable net-zero energy production. To enhance this understanding, we investigate the consequences of converting agricultural fields to solar photovoltaic installations, which we refer to as ‘agrisolar’ co-location. We present a food, energy, water and economic impact analysis of agricultural output offset by agrisolar co-location for 925 arrays (2.53 GWp covering 3,930 ha) spanning the California Central Valley. We find that agrisolar co-location displaces food production but increases economic security and water sustainability for farmers. Given the unprecedented pace of solar PV expansion globally, these results highlight the need for a deeper understanding of the multifaceted outcomes of agricultural and solar PV co-location decisions.

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Oak Flat is sacred to Western Apache. The Trump administration intends to approve a plan to destroy it

The Trump administration on Wednesday signaled it intends to approve a land transfer that will allow a foreign company to mine a sacred Indigenous site in Arizona, where local tribes and environmentalists have fought the project for decades and before federal courts rule on lawsuits over the project. … The federal government’s initial environmental impact statement for Resolution Copper’s mine concludes that the project will destroy sacred oak groves, sacred springs and burial sites, resulting in what “would be an indescribable hardship to those peoples.” It would also use as much water each year as the city of Tempe, home to Arizona State University and 185,000 people. It would pull water from the same tapped-out aquifer the Phoenix metro area relies on, where Arizona has prohibited any more extraction except for exempted uses like mines.