Houston Chronicle Sunday

California’s drought deepens as wet season is anything but

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California is experienci­ng one of the driest starts to spring in decades, data showed Friday, and absent a heavy dose of April and May showers the state’s drought will deepen and that could lead to stricter rules on water use and another devastatin­g wildfire season.

New readings showed the water in California’s mountain snowpack sat at 38 percent of average. That’s the lowest mark since the end of the last drought in 2015; only twice since 1988 has the level been lower.

State officials highlighte­d the severity of the dismal water numbers as they stood at a snow measuring station south of Lake Tahoe, where the landscape included more grass than snow. At the deepest point measured there, there was just 2.5 inches of snow.

“You need no more evidence than standing here on this very dry landscape to understand some of the challenges we’re facing here in California,” said Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources. “All California­ns need to do their part.”

Nearly all of California and much of the U.S. West is in severe to extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Last July, California Gov. Gavin Newsom asked people to cut their water use by 15 percent compared to 2020 levels, but so far consumptio­n is down just 6 percent. State reservoirs are filled far below normal levels.

About a third of California’s water supply comes from melted snow that trickles into rivers and reservoirs. April 1 is when the snowpack typically is at its peak, and the date is used as a benchmark to predict the state’s water supply in the drier, hotter spring and summer months. The next few weeks will be critical to understand­ing how much of the melting snow is ending up in state reservoirs instead of evaporatin­g or seeping into parched ground.

The nearly 11 inches worth of water sitting in snow in the Sierra Nevada along California’s eastern edge is the lowest reading since the depth of the last drought seven years ago, when California ended winter with just 5 percent of the normal water levels in the mountains, according to the department.

The numbers mark a disappoint­ing end to California’s winter, which began with heavy December storms that put the snowpack at 160 percent of the average. But there has been little precipitat­ion since Jan. 1.

A storm that brought significan­t rain and snow to parts of the state earlier this week did little to change the course of the drought. And warmer than usual temperatur­es have led to the snow melting and evaporatin­g faster than normal, state officials said.

Newsom’s administra­tion has faced some criticism for failing to adopt more aggressive statewide conservati­on mandates, as former Gov. Jerry Brown did when he called for a 25 percent cut in water use in 2015, in the fourth year of the drought. That was a mandate, unlike Newsom’s call for a voluntary 15 percent reduction.

The state has banned people from watering their lawns after rain. But the administra­tion broadly says local government­s are best poised to adopt further restrictio­ns. On Monday, Newsom called on the state water board to consider requiring local government­s to move into the second phase of their drought contingenc­y plans, which assume a 20 percent water shortage.

Newsom has directed the state water board to consider a ban on watering ornamental grass, such as that on roadway medians or in office parks. Dr. Newsha Ajami, a water expert at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, suggested that should also apply to grass on residentia­l lawns if it’s “visually pleasing but has no other function.”

 ?? Justin Sullivan / Getty Images ?? Sean de Guzman, manager of the California DWR Snow Surveys Program, conducts a snowpack survey on Friday near Twin Bridges, Calif.
Justin Sullivan / Getty Images Sean de Guzman, manager of the California DWR Snow Surveys Program, conducts a snowpack survey on Friday near Twin Bridges, Calif.

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