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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 Chris Bowman.

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Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

Commentary: Climate-change adaptation for California’s land, the sea and water supply

California state government and many local agencies put a premium on reducing greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change. But recent developments underscore the parallel emphasis on adapting to the effects of global warming — from advances in sea-level rise strategies to stretching water supplies to thinning forests at high risk for wildfire. The scientific consensus that global warming is an existential threat is facing renewed challenge, especially with skeptic-in-chief Donald Trump taking up residence in the White House again next month. Regardless of what one thinks about climate change, it’s a fact that the seas are rising, wildfires are more intense and drought-afflicted water supplies are shrinking. Like efforts to slow or reverse climate change, projects to adapt to it aren’t cheap. But in many cases, not making the investments can be more expensive.
—Written by Michael Smolens, columnist for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Aquafornia news SDNEWS

Two local environmental groups initiate potential lawsuit against SeaWorld

Two local environmental groups have initiated a potential lawsuit against SeaWorld San Diego alleging ongoing Clean Water Act violations in and around Mission Bay connected with the marine park’s fireworks displays and wastewater discharges. The Coastal Environmental Rights Foundation and San Diego Coastkeeper have sent a notice of intent letter to SeaWorld addressing numerous alleged violations of both its fireworks and waste discharge permits. … The letter describes “shocking amounts” of evidence collected from the waters surrounding SeaWorld’s fireworks launch barge. SeaWorld routinely discharges plastic caps, wires, trash, and other chemical-laden debris into Mission Bay in violation of multiple requirements of the regional Fireworks Permit, and fails to follow its post-event cleanup protocols, claims CERF and San Diego Coastkeeper in their notice letter. SeaWorld has defended its continuing seasonal fireworks displays as a major attraction of its annual schedule. “SeaWorld’s fireworks displays are monitored and regulated by multiple government agencies …

Aquafornia news Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation/Redheaded Blackbelt

News release: Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation’s wastewater project gets financial boost with an agreement with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

The Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Wednesday, Dec. 18, signed a ceremonial agreement that will provide the Nation with $800,000 toward extensive improvements to a 50-year-old wastewater system serving low-income households at Xaa-wan’-k’wvt (Howonquet) Village and Resort in Smith River, Calif. The Nation’s Tribal Council met with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers representatives for a ceremonial signing of the agreement, exchange gifts and enjoy a meal while taking in the view of the Smith River Estuary, just a few miles south of the California/Oregon border. Attendees discussed the wastewater system project planned for the area as well as Tolowa Dee-ni’ culture, history and environmental practices.

Aquafornia news California Department of Fish and Wildlife

News release: California Fish and Game Commission guards state waters against golden mussels, extends sturgeon fishing restrictions with added guidance

The California Fish and Game Commission (Commission) acted on a variety of issues affecting California’s natural resources at its Dec.11-12 meeting in Sacramento, including emergency action to list the invasive golden mussel as a restricted species. The Commission also acted to extend emergency regulations 90 days for the recreational catch-and-release white sturgeon season and added language for permitted catch handling. The public was able to participate in the meeting in person, via webinar and by phone. To protect California against the spread of invasive golden mussel (Limnoperna fortunei) discovered Oct. 17 at the Port of Stockton, and in the days following as far south as San Luis Reservoir’s O’Neill Forebay, the Commission added golden mussel to the list of species restricted from live importation, transportation and possession. This discovery is North America’s first; golden mussel is native to China and Southeast Asia and was likely transported across the ocean on large ships.

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Atmospheric rivers are expected to soak Washington, Oregon and California

A barrage of storms known as atmospheric rivers is expected to soak the West Coast over the next eight to 10 days, raising the risk of flooding, power outages and holiday travel disruptions leading up to Christmas in a region that has already experienced significant weather activity this season. The bulk of the rain and snow is likely to fall between British Columbia and Northern California, with Washington and Oregon poised to have some of the wettest, sloppiest weather. Several storms, including one that swept into the Pacific Northwest on Tuesday night, are stacked up in the forecast, said Marty Ralph, the director of the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at the University of California, San Diego.

Other weather & snowpack articles:

Aquafornia news The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.)

Court order forces Sonoma County to suspend non-emergency well drilling

Sonoma County has once again suspended permitting for non-emergency well drilling, this time under the order of a Sonoma County judge. The order follows an August ruling in which Superior Court Judge Bradford DeMeo determined the county violated state environmental law in its attempt to draft a controversial ordinance governing wells and groundwater use. In light of that finding, the county must halt non-emergency well-permitting until it can complete an environmental review of the ordinance in alignment with state law, the court ordered. The county received the directive Wednesday afternoon and “immediately stopped” issuing permits for non-emergency wells, said Tennis Wick, director of Permit Sonoma, the county’s planning and permitting department. But the county has not yet begun the environmental review process because it plans to appeal the decision, Wick said.

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Aquafornia news Somach Simmons & Dunn

Blog: New laws and regulations impacting California’s public agencies, water suppliers, and employers

The California Legislature and state agencies approved over 1,000 new laws and regulations which will go into effect in 2025, including a State Water Resources Control Board (State Board) regulation requiring water conservation planning and reporting, amendments to the Ralph M. Brown Act (Brown Act), significant penalties for violation of certain housing laws, and employment legislation pertaining to the use of paid leave, worker protections, and job postings. … The State Board’s regulation, Making Conservation a California Way of Life (Regulation), was adopted in summer 2024 and takes effect in 2025, implementing two laws enacted in 2018 that directed the State Board to develop a regulatory framework advancing long-term water use efficiency.  

Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: 2024 Water Leaders Cohort releases groundwater sustainability policy recommendations

Our 2024 California Water Leaders cohort completed its year with a report on its policy recommendations for ensuring the state’s over-pumped groundwater basins reach sustainability under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. The landmark law known as SGMA turned 10 in 2024 as many of the state’s sustainability plans were moving into implementation. The goal is for those basins to become sustainable by 2040 or 2042. The Water Leaders cohort of 20 up-and-coming leaders – engineers, attorneys, planners, scientists, water managers and other professionals from water-related organizations – worked collaboratively and had full editorial control on the report. 

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

Congress approves continued funding for endangered fish recovery

Endangered fish recovery programs in Colorado and three other Western states were given renewed access to federal funds thanks to a bill passed Wednesday by Congress.  Lawmakers gave the go-ahead to the Bureau of Reclamation to spend tax dollars on the programs with just days left in a lame-duck session, which adjourns Friday. The news was welcomed in Colorado, where the programs help protect four threatened and endangered species in the Colorado River and San Juan River basins. Lawmakers voted to reauthorize the federal funding for seven years for two programs: the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program — which operates in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming — and the San Juan River Basin Recovery Implementation Program — which spans Colorado and New Mexico. The total funding amount is yet to be determined. The federal government allocated about $16.6 million, total, for the two programs between October 2023 and September 2024. 

Other Colorado River articles:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

Next phase of Friant-Kern Canal repairs begins with intense scrutiny of study contract

Negotiations focusing on how Friant Water Authority will repay the Bureau of Reclamation for a $22.2 million study mapping out how to fix the northern and southern portions of the sinking Friant-Kern Canal began Wednesday in Fresno. “We anticipate these talks should go smoothly, and we look forward to the conversation,” Wilson Orvis, Friant’s chief financial officer, said at the beginning of the meeting, which went on for another three hours as both sides scoured the draft contract line by line. The details are vitally important, said one observer who is involved in multiple legal actions over how to pay for already completed repairs on one section of the canal. “Clarity would have and will avoid further disputes as has occurred with Phase 1 of the Middle Reach Capacity Correction Project,” said Sean Geivet, General Manager of the Terra Bella, Saucelito and Porterville irrigation districts. 

Aquafornia news E&E News by POLITICO

Ex-Trump official leading Interior ‘landing team’

Kate MacGregor, who served as Interior deputy secretary during the Trump administration, is leading the Trump transition effort at that department, according to a person who works for the Biden administration. MacGregor, who could return as Interior’s deputy in a second Trump term, held several other senior posts at the department under Trump, including as deputy chief of staff for policy and principal deputy assistant secretary for land and minerals management. The Trump transition landing team had not yet arrived at the Interior Department headquarters as of Wednesday afternoon, said the Biden administration source, who was granted anonymity to discuss transition details that had not been publicly announced.

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

Opinion: California’s new water war will be about AI, not agriculture

For decades, California’s water debates have centered on a familiar tension: agriculture versus urban consumption. Agriculture, which consumes 80% of the state’s developed water supply, has long dominated discussions about conservation and efficiency. Yet, a new contender is emerging, one poised to dwarf agriculture in water demand and reshape the state’s water future: artificial intelligence (AI). … For decades, agriculture has been framed as the primary focus of water conservation efforts, with farmers frequently cast as both stewards and villains of California’s strained water resources. While agriculture dominates the present, the future tells a different story. AI, fueled by data centers housing millions of servers, is on a trajectory to become a massive water consumer. These data centers rely heavily on water-intensive cooling systems to maintain the functionality of high-performance chips that power AI applications.
—Written by Dean Florez, past senator from Central Valley and a member of the California Air Resources Board

Aquafornia news The Mercury News

Despite media hype, experts unfazed by elevated radiation at Albany Bulb

A recent study found elevated levels of radiation at a former dump turned busy community space, but experts say the public has little to worry about. Similar to other public parks, the Albany Bulb was formed on top of what was previously a landfill created along the eastern edge of the San Francisco Bayfront, just north of Berkeley. The main portion of the park, about 40 acres, is owned by Albany while the East Bay Regional Parks District owns the northern stretch of land leading up to the bulb and the state owns the southern portion. … Albany was ordered to survey the Albany Bulb for radiation by the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board after staff found a letter dated March 28, 1980, from Stauffer Chemical Company to the Department of Health Services that indicated the company had been disposing of toxic waste in the old landfill between 1960 and 1971.

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

Environmentalists file suit against California climate program

A coalition of environmental groups challenged California’s leading climate regulator Wednesday, alleging that a recent update to a leading climate program will create additional pollution in the state’s San Joaquin Valley. Their lawsuit filed in Fresno county superior court calls on the California Air Resources Board to “adequately disclose, analyze and mitigate the significant environmental impact” caused by amendments to Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS). … Environmental laws “require CARB to acknowledge the obvious—that providing substantial financial benefits for the production of fuel derived from manure at factory farms incentivizes factory farm expansion,” environmentalists wrote in the complaint. But the agency “fails to adequately evaluate and mitigate their impacts, including increased local air pollution, impacts to groundwater, and climate change,” they determined. CARB’s environmental review, the petitioners concluded, “cannot support a meaningful process or informed decisions about the LCFS amendments.”

Aquafornia news California State University Monterey Bay

News release: CSUMB researchers explore different perspectives on climate change

There is almost no disagreement any longer among scientists that climate change is a reality and that its effects are already upon us. A number of researchers at Cal State Monterey Bay are engaged in work that is either measuring those effects or finding ways to combat them. Among the studies are those looking at off-gassing from agricultural fields, warmer ocean water’s impact on coral reefs, and wildlife preservation. … Arun Jani, assistant professor in the Biology and Chemistry department, is trying to determine the optimum use of nitrogen as a fertilizer in agricultural fields in the hope of reducing current levels. His projects run from fields near Soledad to test plots in Watsonville. In addition to decreased fertilizer use, Jani is also evaluating the effects of using a material called biochar in the soil and determining ideal crop rotations. … Nitrogen fertilizers not only produce nitrous oxide gas, but they can also leach into groundwater and raise levels of nitrate, a harmful chemical. The industry standard for nitrogen fertilizers is to use 150 pounds per acre. Jani’s studies have shown that much less of the chemical can be used effectively for area crops. 

Aquafornia news Desert Sun (Palm Springs, Calif.)

Imperial Irrigation District considers rate hike

Imperial Irrigation District is considering sharply raising electric rates over the next three years to meet what its senior staff and a consultant say could be a future $100 million shortfall in covering costs of service and infrastructure upgrades necessary to provide reliable power to all of Imperial County and large stretches of the Coachella Valley. The district’s budget is presently in the black, with large cash reserves available now, a close read of the consultant’s report shows. But officials stressed those could dry up in future years. The rate hikes would affect all categories of customers, including residential, agricultural, commercial and municipal if IID’s board of directors adopts the recommendations in a report prepared by NewGen Strategies and Solutions, which was presented on Tuesday. IID is not about to go bankrupt. The agency procured $318 million in various government grants for power and water programs in 2024, has applied for another $400 million, and has hefty total cash reserves, though a spokesman could not immediately provide an exact amount. 

Aquafornia news KJZZ

Listen: Drought looks different on the East Coast, and so do attitudes about water

A little more than a third of the country is experiencing some level of drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. The worst-hit areas include parts of Arizona, Utah and California, as well as some regions of Texas. But areas in New Jersey, Delaware and Massachusetts are also seeing extreme drought, and much of the East Coast is currently in a moderate drought. While this is somewhat new for those East Coasters, the West has been dealing with drought for years. But that’s not the only difference between drought in the East and drought in the West. Andrea Thompson, associate editor for earth and the environment at Scientific American, has written about this and joined The Show to discuss, starting with what some of those differences are.

Aquafornia news Civil Eats

Why are pesticide companies fighting state laws to address PFAS?

… In 2020, watchdog groups first discovered PFAS in certain pesticides, which directed national attention to whether farm chemicals might be another source of contamination. How significant of a PFAS source pesticides might be remains unresolved, especially because different highly accredited labs have produced conflicting tests. One initial study found high levels of PFAS in common pesticides, but when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) did its own testing on the same products, it reported none. Environmental groups are currently contesting the agency’s report. Regardless of those results, a few things have become clear: Based on the most commonly used global definition of PFAS, more than 60 pesticides registered by the EPA contain an active ingredient defined as PFAS. Other pesticides may contain PFAS as undisclosed additives or from chemicals leaching from the plastic containers in which they’re stored.

Aquafornia news U.S. Geological Survey

News release: New USGS dataset uncovers the Santiam River’s underwater topography to aid in fish habitat and water flow management

A new dataset for the Santiam River in Oregon, published by the U.S. Geological Survey, provides a highly detailed underwater 3D elevation map that will help support fish habitat restoration and flood modeling work.  The work was done as part of the USGS 3D Elevation Program, known as 3DEP, which uses a next-generation mapping technology to obtain highly detailed three-dimensional elevation information about the natural and constructed landscapes of the Nation, including surfaces under rivers and other inland waterbodies. Known as topobathymetric lidar, the technology uses laser pulses that penetrate water to provide accurate measurements of both the riverbed and the surrounding topography. The data are essential for understanding river dynamics, aquatic habitat conditions and flood risk. It will also be used to develop models of habitat availability for salmon and steelhead and other fish species in relation to river flow below Willamette Valley system dams.

Aquafornia news KUER (Salt Lake City)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Utah wants to shore up its Colorado River share with a water ‘savings account’

Coby Hunt’s farm field near the southeast Utah town of Green River would normally be filled with alfalfa growing up to his knees. This year, however, it was barren — pale gray dirt cracking under the late summer sun. The only green things were scraggly scraps of whatever accidental plants somehow survived without irrigation. … “It hurts,” he said as he surveyed the desolate field. “But there’s also a benefit of it looking like this, right?” That benefit is taking the water he could have used to irrigate his land and leaving it in the nearby Green River, which flows to the increasingly strained Colorado River. … Across Utah, farmers are experimenting with ways to tighten their water use as agriculture, drought and population growth collide to put pressure on the state’s limited water resources. Some are installing more efficient irrigation technology. Others are testing unconventional crops. In Hunt’s case, he’s taking some of his farmland out of commission entirely — for a time and for a price.

Other Colorado River articles: