- Fresno: $730,122,184
- Kern: $566,700,000
- Kings: $58,475,195
- Madera: $8,194,728
- Tulare: $3,300,000
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Farm Bureau Estimates Drought Costs
Friday, July 10, 2009
Survey of Local Water Use Restrictions
Thursday, July 9, 2009
SF Wants Bay Area Aquifer Reserves
Climate change has reduced the Sierra snowpack that feeds the city's main supply source, Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, and made supplies increasingly uncertain. To prepare for future droughts, SF has turned to the acquifer plan.
But San Mateo cities like Daly City and Millbrae currently rely on the acquifer for their water. San Francisco is negotiating a proposal with the cities under which they would reduce their pumping in exchange for surplus Hetch Hetchy water.
Peripheral Canal Opposition
Says assemlywoman Joan Buchanan (D-Alamo): “The canal would be [one of] the biggest public constructions ever made in the United States, equivalent to the Panama Canal, and I want to make it clear I will not vote for a Panama Canal.”
WSJ on CA Water
One focuses on the new Carlsbad desal plant - the largest in the Western Hemisphere. It hits on the problems environmentalists have with desal: too much energy and too much damage to marine life. Surfrider's Joe Geever says the Carlsbad plant, for instance, would end up "killing everything that floats" near it. Camp Pendleton and Huntington Beach have desal plants in the works.
The other reviews current water supply problems and says lawmakers have promised to tackle water once they have sorted out the budget mess. Ideas being considered:
- Build a peripheral canal
- Build more storage facilities to capture the water that, due to climate change, now falls as rain rather than snow
- Improve the current supply by better managing groundwater and fixing leaky pipes and other existing infrastructure problems
- Use more conservation measures. Says an Association of California Water Agencies spokesperson: "This is a forever change, that customers will have to start internalizing."
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
SB 457 and 458
The group is trying to build support for two bills Lois Wolk (D-Davis) has sponsored and that would give Delta communities more control over the hub of the California water supply system.
SB 457 would require the Delta Protection Commission to review general regional plans and ensure they are consistent with the resource management plan. To support the commissions activities, the bill would place a per acre foot tax on Delta water.
SB 458 would create a new conservancy -- the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Conservancy -- charged with supporting "efforts that advance both environmental protection and the economic well-being of Delta residents in a complementary manner."
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
CA Recieves Most Fed Water Recycling Funds
New California Graywater Rules
Graywater is untreated wastewater that does not include toilet discharge or other bodily waste. Since the last severe drought in the early 1990s, state law has limited the use of wastewater. Californians have been able to use it only to irrigate and that irrigation has had to be done by systems below the surface.
Last summer, the legislature passed SB 1258, which required the DHC to develop newer and looser graywater rules. The DHC had planned to implement the new rules in 2011 but has released them early becuase of the drought.
The new rules could take effect as early as August 4.