Los Angeles Times

Brown says California’s long drought finally over

Governor also stresses the need to continue conservati­on efforts.

- By Bettina Boxall

Startlingl­y green hills, surging rivers and the snowwrappe­d Sierra Nevada had already signaled what Gov. Jerry Brown made official Friday: The long California drought is over.

Brown issued an executive order that lifts the drought emergency in all but a handful of San Joaquin Valley counties where some communitie­s are still coping with dried-up wells.

He also made it clear that the need for conservati­on is not going away.

“This drought emergency is over, but the next drought could be around the corner,” Brown said in a statement. “Conservati­on must remain a way of life.”

Five years of relentless­ly sunny winter weather took a toll on California. In a move that showed the seriousnes­s of the threat, Brown ordered a statewide 25% cut in urban water use, and California­ns came close to meeting it by taking shorter showers, flushing less and accepting it when restaurant­s did away with the once obligatory glass of water. Cacti took root in yards where lawns once flourished.

The Sierra Nevada, now buried in snow, will be streaked for decades with miles-long brown swaths of pine trees that the drought weakened for beetles to kill. Years of low river flows pushed imperiled native fish closer to extinction.

Hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland went unplanted. Central Valley water tables plunged, and farmland sank as growers pumped ever more groundwate­r to make up for lost irrigation deliveries. Faucets spit air in small farm towns with waterless wells.

on the whole, this intricatel­y plumbed state proved to be surprising­ly resilient in the face of what, by some measures, was the worst drought on record.

“We did remarkably well,” said Jay Lund, director of the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences.

Despite water shortages, agricultur­e — the state’s biggest water user — enjoyed record revenue in 2012, 2013 and 2014 thanks to soaring nut and dairy prices.

Though drinking supplies had to be trucked to some rural communitie­s, the effect in most metropolit­an areas was mainly limited to people boasting about every drop they saved, tsktsking at wasteful neighbors.

The water shortages barely put a dent in the state economy.

“How much reduction in the gross domestic product of California occurred because of a 25% reduction in urban water use? Almost nothing!” Lund exclaimed. “Nobody has even bothered to calculate it, it’s so small.”

Every major drought teaches California water lessons.

In the wake of the last prolonged drought, from 1987 to 1992, the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California constructe­d a big reservoir in Riverside County to boost regional reserves. Those supplies helped carry the Southland through this drought.

In recent decades, water districts expanded recycled water programs and promoted indoor conservati­on with rebates for waterthrif­ty appliances. That kept a lid on demand even as the population grew.

“In the late ’80s drought, we learned how much we can save indoors. In this drought we learned how much we can save outdoors,” said Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the State Water Resources Control Board, which had the prickly task of enforcing the urban cuts.

Nudged by generous turf rebates from water districts, homeowners up and down California ripped out their shriveled lawns and replaced them with succulents and drought-tolerant native plants.

“There’s a societal change in our attitudes — not just about watering use but what makes for a beautiful outdoor ornamental landscape that’s part and parcel of a major mind-set shift for many California­ns,” Marcus said.

Even more profound was the state’s willingnes­s to finally join the rest of the West in regulating groundwate­r use. A 2014 law requires regional agencies, over the course of the next two decades, to develop and implement plans to stop the chronic over-pumping that has depleted what amounts to California’s biggest reservoir: the vast Central Valley aquifer.

“Lo and behold, [the state] noticed this and said ‘Oh, we can’t keep doing this forever,’ ” Lund said. “It was only the third year of the drought and we got a groundwate­r law.”

The formal end to the drought emergency in most of the state won’t have much of a practical effect because the urban cuts were significan­tly relaxed last year, when El Niño storms in Northern California loosened the drought’s grip and big reservoirs began to refill.

This year, a procession of atmospheri­c rivers — bands of atmospheri­c vapor that blow in from the Pacific Ocean — finished off the drought. Statewide reservoir storage is above average. The statewide snowBut pack on April 1 was the seventh-heaviest on record, going back to 1950.

Statewide precipitat­ion from October through March was not far behind the record wet year of 1983.

But with climate change expected to accentuate the typically dramatic swings in California weather, the Brown administra­tion is adopting plans to embed conservati­on in the state’s water ways. A ban will continue on wasteful practices such as hosing down driveways or watering in the rain.

The state water board is developing water budgets for urban agencies that will go into effect in 2021. They will be more f lexible than the drought cuts and will take into account local factors such as summer temperatur­es, evaporatio­n rates and population.

But the board will give each urban water district a number for how much water it can use in total every year. How the agencies meet that target will be up to them. If they fall short, in 2025 the board can start demanding conservati­on steps.

Stubborn as this drought was, “it won’t be our last or longest in the years to come,” Marcus said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A DEPLETED Bay Bridge Marina at Lake Shasta, top, and in May 2016 after being replenishe­d with rain and snowmelt. The Brown administra­tion is adopting plans to embed conservati­on in the state’s water behavior.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A DEPLETED Bay Bridge Marina at Lake Shasta, top, and in May 2016 after being replenishe­d with rain and snowmelt. The Brown administra­tion is adopting plans to embed conservati­on in the state’s water behavior.
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