Los Angeles Times

No flow from Owens Valley

- MONTE MORIN monte.morin @latimes.com

For the first time since 1913 — when Department of Water and Power chief architect William Mulholland opened the waterway with the words, “There it is. Take it!” — the 233-mile Los Angeles Aqueduct has stopped carrying Owens Valley runoff to Los Angeles.

As severe drought continues to grip California, the DWP confirmed Thursday that it had dammed the aqueduct at Owens Lake to conserve meager Eastern Sierra snow runoff.

“That’s how bad this drought is,” said LADWP spokeswoma­n Amanda Parsons. “We’ve never kept the water in the valley before. This is unpreceden­ted.”

The 8-foot-tall dam, which is constructe­d of concrete blocks, reeds and mud, will remain in place at least until November so the LADWP can fulfill a variety of mandated obligation­s, including dust mitigation, tribal land requiremen­ts and assisting the Lower Owens River Project — the nation’s largest river restoratio­n effort.

Roughly 10,000 acre-feet of water saved from last year’s runoff will be exported to Los Angeles from a storage area south of the dam between now and sometime after November, Parsons said.

“Basically, we will not be exporting any water from the Eastern Sierra runoff to Los Angeles this year until November, and when we do it will be only 15% of what Los Angeles would typically receive during an average year,” Parsons said.

Usually, the aqueduct supplies Los Angeles with a third of its water.

The dam, which Parsons described as looking “half human and half beaver,” is at the southern end of Owens Lake.

“On one side there’s heightened water, but on the other there’s nothing but a trickle,” Parsons said. “That’s because no dam is perfect, and a little bit of water seeps out, but there’s not enough to actually make its way down the aqueduct.”

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