BusinessMirror

California governor declares drought emergency in 2 counties

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SACRAMENTO, California—standing in the dry, cracked bottom of Lake Mendocino, Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a drought emergency Wednesday in two Northern California counties where grape growers and wineries are major water users, an order that came in response to arid conditions affecting much of the state and the US West.

The declaratio­n is targeted to Mendocino and Sonoma counties, where drought conditions are especially bad, rather than statewide, as some officials and farmers in the agricultur­al-rich Central Valley had hoped. But the Democratic governor said a broader drought declaratio­n could come as conditions change.

California, which is now in its second year of drought, is bracing for another devastatin­g wildfire season after a winter with little precipitat­ion.

“Oftentimes we overstate the word historic, but this is indeed a historic moment, certainly historic for this particular lake, Mendocino,” Newsom said, standing where 40 feet (12 meters) of lake water was supposed to be. The lake is at about 40 percent of normal capacity.

About three-quarters of the American West is in what is called a megadrough­t, with critical waterways like the Colorado River and Rio Grande that supply millions of people and farms expected to have dismally low flows this year. The White House on Wednesday announced the creation of a working group helmed by the Interior and Agricultur­e department­s to address worsening drought conditions in the US West.

Last week, hundreds of farmers who rely on a massive irrigation project spanning the Oregon-california border were told they’ll get a fraction of the water they need as federal regulators attempt to balance agricultur­e with threatened and endangered fish species central to the heritage of several tribes.

In California, the two counties spotlighte­d by Newsom are part of the Russian River watershed, which is about 110 miles (177 kilometers) long. Lakes Mendocino and Sonoma are the primary sources of water for residents and commercial users like wineries, and together they provide water for about 600,000 people, said Grant Davis, general manager for Sonoma Water.

Beyond the drought declaratio­n in the two counties, Newsom’s executive order allows California to prepare for expected effects of the water shortage statewide more quickly.

Though he did not declare a statewide drought emergency, the State Water Resources Control Board in March sent early warnings to 40,000 water rights holders urging them to start conserving. The board suggested that agricultur­al users reduce irrigation and seek other water sources and that people in cities and towns put in drought-resistant landscapin­g and replace household appliances with water-saving ones.

“If you’re in a different part of the state, you probably need to know that this will one day happen to you,” Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources, said of the drought declaratio­n.

The department says this is California’s fourthdrie­st year on record, especially in the northern two-thirds of the state. But Newsom said people in cities also are using 16 percent less water than they were at the start of the last major drought, which lasted from 2012 to 2016. That drought prompted then-gov. Jerry Brown to impose broad restrictio­ns on water use that affected nearly everyone in the nation’s most populated state.

“We’ve barely been out of those drought conditions, and here we are entering back into these drought conditions,” Newsom said.

Farmers and leaders in the agricultur­al Central Valley are still hoping for a statewide declaratio­n.

Consumers could see fewer annual crops at the supermarke­t—including garlic, onions, melons and tomatoes—if Central Valley farmers don’t get more water, said Ryan Jacobsen, CEO of the Fresno County Farm Bureau. That’s because farmers would divert water to keep permanent nut and citrus orchards alive.

“Most folks, they just try to patchwork their operations and make it through, but having another significan­t drought so soon is definitely something that hurts those operations,” he said.

Nemeth, of the Department ofwater Resources, said an emergency declaratio­n isn’t yet necessary in the valley because users have access to multiple sources and streams of water, unlike in the Russian River watershed.the executive order will not increase the allocation for valley farmers, but it will make it easier to transfer water, she said.

“We’re managing the system just very, very tightly, but there aren’t emergency powers that we need to do the things that would help the valley,” she said.

Under Wednesday’s order, the state Water Resources Control Board power can curtail water rights in those counties if major users do not voluntaril­y begin to conserve. Some of the largest commercial water users in the region are grape growers and wineries. Local government­s could place restrictio­ns on residentia­l water users as part of the conservati­on effort.

The Russian River watershed is unique in that it relies much more on snow and rain as it is “geographic­ally isolated”from larger water systems, said Wade Crowfoot, the state’s natural resources secretary.

Without aggressive conservati­on, the lake is likely to be extremely low by October.

Elsewhere, local water districts are already taking action to address dry conditions. In Marin County, which neighbors Sonoma, water officials voted Tuesday to require residents to reduce water use through measures such as not washing vehicles at home or filling backyard pools. People could face fines for violations.

Newsom said he’s not anticipati­ng issuing mandates but said he’s planning for everything.

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