Daily News (Los Angeles)

State to end restrictio­ns on use of water

- By Adam Beam

California Gov. Gavin Newsom ended some of the state's water restrictio­ns Friday because a winter of relentless rain and snow has replenishe­d the state's reservoirs and eased fears of a shortage after three years of severe drought.

Newsom was careful not to declare the drought to be over, noting water shortages remain in the Klamath River basin along the California-Oregon line and in densely populated Southern California, which relies heavily on the struggling Colorado River system to supply millions of people.

But Newsom did say he would stop asking people to voluntaril­y cut their water use by 15%, a request he first made nearly two years ago while standing at the edge of a nearly dry Lopez Lake in the state's Central Coast region — a lake that today is so full from recent storms it is almost spilling over.

“None of us could have imagined ... a few months ago that we'd be where we are today,” Newsom said Friday from a farm northwest of Sacramento that has flooded some of its fields with excess water so it will seep undergroun­d and refill groundwate­r basins. “Are we out of the drought? Mostly — but not completely.”

Newsom's call for voluntary conservati­on had mixed results. California­ns did reduce their water use, but only by 6.2% overall, according to data from the State Water Resources Control Board. Newsom never ordered statewide, mandatory water restrictio­ns — but he did require water agencies to impose some limits on their customers.

Friday, Newsom said he was easing those rules. That change will impact people in different ways depending on where they live. For most people, it means they won't be limited to watering their lawns on only certain days of the week or at certain times of the day. Other restrictio­ns will remain in place indefinite­ly, including a ban on watering decorative grass for businesses.

“We've got to conserve as a way of life,” Newsom said.

Newsom could ease some restrictio­ns in part because California's reservoirs are now so full that cities will get more than double the amount of drinking water this year compared to a previous allocation announced last month. Now, water districts that serve 27 million people will get at least 75% of the water they requested from state supplies. Last year, they only got 5% as California endured three of the driest years ever since modern recordkeep­ing began in 1896.

“This wet winter, which has led to a large increase in our (water) allocation, is not a signal that we can relax,” said Adel Hagekhalil, general manager of the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California - a district that supplies water to 19 million people. “It is an alarm to act and accelerate our efforts to respond to rapidly changing conditions, including conservati­on, storage, recycling and reuse.”

Last week the district ended mandatory drought restrictio­ns for about 7 million people who rely almost exclusivel­y on state supplies for their water.

California and the western United States have been in an extended drought for about two decades, a period of abnormal dryness punctuated by occasional intense seasons of storms. It would be tough for a governor “of a large, diverse state that has very diverse water supplies and water demands” to say when a drought has started or ended, said Jay Lund, vice director for the Center for Watershed Sciences at UC Davis.

Lund said the drought is over from many perspectiv­es in California, including urban water supply and reservoirs. But it's not over for the state's fragile ecosystems and the groundwate­r aquifers that were depleted during recent drought years.

“We might never recover them completely,” he said.

Three years of little rain or snow in California had depleted reservoirs to the point the state couldn't generate electricit­y from hydroelect­ric power plants. It dried up wells in rural areas and state officials had to truck in water supplies for some communitie­s. And it reduced the flow of the state's major rivers and streams, killing off endangered fish and other species.

But since December, no less than 12 powerful storms have hit California, packing so much rain and snow that meteorolog­ists call them “atmospheri­c rivers.” These storms have flooded homes, closed ski resorts and trapped people in mountain communitie­s for days with no electricit­y, prompting emergency declaratio­ns from President Joe Biden.

Water has been steadily pouring into the state's reservoirs since December. Of California's 17 major reservoirs, 12 of them are either at or above their historical averages for this time of year.

And more water is coming. Statewide, the amount of snow piled up in the mountains is already 223% above the April 1 average — the date when the snowpack is typically at its peak. Most of that snow will melt in the coming months, flowing into reservoirs and posing more flooding threats downstream.

 ?? ADAM BEAM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks during a news conference from a farm in Dunnigan on Friday. Newsom announced an end to some drought restrictio­ns and calls for water conservati­on, following a series of winter storms that have dramatical­ly improved the state's water supply outlook.
ADAM BEAM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks during a news conference from a farm in Dunnigan on Friday. Newsom announced an end to some drought restrictio­ns and calls for water conservati­on, following a series of winter storms that have dramatical­ly improved the state's water supply outlook.
 ?? BRONTË WITTPENN — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Huge amounts of snow are seen after a series of storms blasted communitie­s surroundin­g South Lake Tahoe on Jan. 4. California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday announced an end to some drought restrictio­ns and calls for water conservati­on following a series of winter storms that have dramatical­ly improved the state's water supply outlook.
BRONTË WITTPENN — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP Huge amounts of snow are seen after a series of storms blasted communitie­s surroundin­g South Lake Tahoe on Jan. 4. California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday announced an end to some drought restrictio­ns and calls for water conservati­on following a series of winter storms that have dramatical­ly improved the state's water supply outlook.

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