Imperial Valley Press

2024 Salton Sea Management Program annual report submitted to State Water Board

- STAFF REPORT

SACRAMENTO — The California Natural Resources Agency has submitted its 2024 Annual Report on the Salton Sea Management Program (SSMP) to the State Water Resources Control Board, prepared in compliance with Order WR 2017-0134.

According to a California Natural Resources Agency press release, the report provides specific updates on the SSMP’s activities in 2023 and planning for future projects, ongoing partnershi­ps to help the SSMP meet its goals, community engagement, and next steps. English and Spanish versions of the report can be found at www.saltonsea.ca.gov under the Featured Documents heading.

Significan­t, measurable progress continued at the Salton Sea in 2023. The largest restoratio­n project in the Sea’s history neared completion, which will suppress dust and restore habitat across thousands of acres at the south end of the Sea. In other areas along the Sea, hundreds of acres now host native vegetation recently planted to suppress dust over coming decades. These plants have taken root, are growing, and are beginning to serve their purpose. This year also witnessed the first major investment by federal agencies to stabilize the Sea; the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n granted $70 million to accelerate local restoratio­n projects. This funding is being put into action to start expanding the Species Conservati­on Habitat Project by an additional 1,000 acres.

Great progress also occurred to accelerate additional improvemen­ts under the current Phase 1: 10-Year

Plan, according to the release. Key planning and permitting advanced high-priority restoratio­n projects and key staff positions were filled on the Salton Sea Management Program to ramp up this work. Partnershi­ps have strengthen­ed with community groups and leaders that are helping shape our efforts at the Sea, and a long-planned Community Needs Report is nearing completion to galvanize further improvemen­ts at the Sea.

“While we share constructi­ve progress in this annual report, we recognize that significan­t work remains ahead, and we must continue to accelerate and broaden our work at the Sea,” the release reads. “Partnershi­ps with communitie­s, Tribal government­s, interested parties, and local, state, and federal agencies are crucial to achieving the goals of the SSMP,” it reads.

The annual report and the status of the SSMP will be the focus of an allday public workshop convened by the State Water Board on May 22, 2024. Details for this workshop are available on the State Water Board’s Salton Sea program webpage.

In addition, the SSMP team plans to hold two in-person community workshops in the Salton Sea region and an online webinar in advance of the State Water Board’s workshop. The SSMP team will provide an overview of the report, share project updates, and answer questions on the work completed by the SSMP during 2023. These meetings are being planned for early May. More details on these community workshops are forthcomin­g and will be announced via the SSMP e-Newsletter and on the SSMP website.

 ?? PHOTO COURTEST OF CALIFORNIA NATURAL RESOURCES AGENCY ?? Aerial view looking north of the Species Conservati­on Habitat New River diversion system, the East and West Sedimentat­ion Basins, and the New River and its riparian vegetation.
PHOTO COURTEST OF CALIFORNIA NATURAL RESOURCES AGENCY Aerial view looking north of the Species Conservati­on Habitat New River diversion system, the East and West Sedimentat­ion Basins, and the New River and its riparian vegetation.

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