Albuquerque Journal

California water issues linger after emergency’s end

Some water-saving rules will continue

- BY SCOTT SMITH

FRESNO, Calif. — Thirsty California lawns faded to brown from a lack of water in four extraordin­arily dry years have revived to bright green in neighborho­ods across the state.

Dry riverbeds of sand and tumbleweed­s that snake their way through farmers’ fields now flow with water swelling up their banks.

Scenes like these and many others prompted California Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday to declare an end to the state’s drought emergency that had drained reservoirs and wells, devastated forests and farmland and forced millions of people to slash their water use.

The turnaround has been stark. After years of brown fields and cracked earth, monster storms blanketed California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains this winter with deep snow that flows into the network of rivers and streams that supply much of the state’s water.

Still, lifting the emergency drought order is a largely symbolic measure that doesn’t remove most of the restrictio­ns. Officials insisted they’re holding onto some conservati­on rules for the 40 million residents of the nation’s most populous state.

California uses more water each year than nature makes available, and one wet winter won’t change the long-term outlook, environmen­talists cautioned.

“Water may appear to be in abundance right now,” said Kate Poole, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “But even after this unusually wet season, there won’t be enough water to satisfy all the demands of agricultur­e, business and cities, without draining our rivers and groundwate­r basins below sustainabl­e levels.”

At the drought’s peak, citizens were urged to cut shower times and outdoor watering. Homeowners let lawns turn brown or ripped them out altogether and replaced them with xeriscapes.

The drought strained native fish that migrate up rivers, killed more than 100 million trees, and forced farmers in the nation’s leading agricultur­al state to rely heavily on groundwate­r, causing the ground to sink. Some growers tore out orchards.

Brown declared the emergency in 2014, and officials later ordered mandatory conservati­on for the first time in state history.

Even now, the governor has kept the drought emergency in place for four counties, most of them at the state’s farming heartland, where emergency drinking water projects will continue to help address diminished groundwate­r supplies.

More than 900 families, mostly in Tulare County, a farming powerhouse in the San Joaquin Valley, are struggling even to find drinking water after their wells dried up and have to turn to charities for bottled water or tanks for their yards.

In the inland region of Southern California east of Los Angeles, streams and groundwate­r basins are still at historical­ly low levels, and rainfall has been below average for nearly two decades. It would take the equivalent of three consecutiv­e years of aboveavera­ge precipitat­ion to refill the basins.

The rest of the state shouldn’t forget water-saving strategies either. Cities and water districts throughout the state will be required to continue reporting their water use each month, said the governor’s order, which also bans wasteful practices, such as hosing off sidewalks and running sprinklers when it rains.

Water conservati­on will become a way of life in the state, said Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the State Water Resources Control Board, who led conservati­on planning.

“This drought has been one for the record books, but it won’t be our last or longest,” said Marcus. “It’s a wake-up call and we can’t hit the snooze button.”

And Brown was circumspec­t in his dramatic announceme­nt: “This drought emergency is over, but the next drought could be around the corner.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Frank Gehrke, chief of the California Cooperativ­e Snow Surveys Program, conducts the first snow survey of the season at Phillips Station near Echo Summit, Calif., in January.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS Frank Gehrke, chief of the California Cooperativ­e Snow Surveys Program, conducts the first snow survey of the season at Phillips Station near Echo Summit, Calif., in January.

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