Imperial Valley Press

Winter’s dry start prompts low California water allocation

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. ( AP) — California’s water managers on Tuesday preliminar­ily allocated just 10% of requested water supplies to agencies that together serve more than 27 million California­ns and 750,000 acres of farmland.

The state Department of Water Resources cited the dry start to the winter rainy season in California’s Mediterran­ean climate, along with low reservoir levels remaining from last year’s relatively dry winter. Winter snow typically supplies about 30% of the state’s water as it melts.

Last year’s initial allocation also was 10% and climbed only to 20% when the final allocation was made in May.

Most areas that depend on the state- supplied water also have other sources including groundwate­r, streams and their own reservoirs.

The department’s eight precipitat­ion measuring stations scattered across Northern California collected a record- low 0% of average rainfall in October and 53% in November.

Meanwhile, the state’s major reservoirs are lower than they were at this time a year ago.

Lake Shasta, the federal Central Valley Project’s largest reservoir, is at 75% of its historical average, down from 119% a year ago. Lake Oroville, the State Water Project’s largest reservoir, is at 61% compared to 90% last year.

“While we still have several months ahead of us, dry conditions persist,” department Director Karla Nemeth said in a statement urging the state’s nearly 40 million residents to conserve water.

“As communitie­s throughout California prepare to support their environmen­t and economies through times of extended dry periods, state agencies plan together to support those communitie­s.”

The initial allocation uses conservati­ve assumption­s and is updated monthly as conditions change based on snowfall and water runoff.

The department will conduct this winter’s first snow survey south of Lake Tahoe on Dec. 30.

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