East Bay Times

Why some California­ns are running out of water and others aren’t

Areas that enjoy plenty of rain, snow runoff are harder hit by dry spell

- By Rachel Becker CalMatters

In Los Angeles, people have been hearing about the dangers of drought for decades. But in this land of infinity pools and backyard putting greens — better suited for rattlesnak­es and scrub — water never seems to run out.

Yet little Redwood Valley in Mendocino County, which gets a bountiful 38 inches of rain in an average year and sits near the headwaters of the Russian River, has been devastated by this year’s drought. Each resident has been told to use no more than 55 gallons per day — enough to fill a bathtub and flush a toilet six times.

And in San Jose, where less than half of its usual rain has fallen this year, people have been asked to cut water use by 33% from 2013 levels — and ordered to cut outdoor watering to 15 minutes, two days a week.

When it comes to the impact of drought, location is key. Rain and snow vary greatly across California’s myriad microclima­tes, leaving some towns, mostly in the north, accustomed to yearly refills of their rivers, reservoirs and aquifers. Others farther south have fewer natural supplies of their own, and in parts of the Central Valley, the drought never really left.

But drought resilience is manufactur­ed, too. Decades of planning and extraordin­ary engineerin­g and technology keep the water flowing to arid places.

“There is, of course, no single Northern California or Southern California when it comes to water,” said Peter Gleick, founder of the Pacific Institute, a global water think tank. “Water is a very local phenomenon. And every region and every water district has a different mix of water supply options and water demands.

During the last drought, in 2015, California­ns were ordered to cut their water use by an average of 25% statewide. This time, there is no statewide emergency, no universal mandate and no standardiz­ed water waste rules.

Instead, residents are facing a patchwork of restrictio­ns. Bracing for a crisis, towns relying on the hard-hit Russian River have imposed stringent mandates on residents, and coastal communitie­s may have to truck in water to make it through the year. At the same time, most of California’s urban hubs are prepared to weather the summer with only

voluntary cuts and limited restrictio­ns that in many cases are holdovers from previous droughts.

A CalMatters survey of the state’s 10 largest water agencies found only one — in San Jose — has issued new limits on watering yards, washing cars and other outdoor uses. Eight, including Sacramento, already had rules curbing irrigation and water waste on the books. And four, including water agencies in the East Bay and Riverside, have asked people to voluntaril­y cut back 10% to 25%.

Even though Southern California is more arid, it’s better hydrated, too: That’s because it has largely relied on water transporte­d from elsewhere, dating back more than 100 years in Los Angeles and 50 years in neighborin­g cities and counties.

About half of the water that flows from taps in the region is imported, including river water from Northern California pumped over the Tehachapi Mountains and through 700 miles of pipelines and channels to San Joaquin Valley farmland and 27 million people in SoCal. The other half comes from carefully nurtured groundwate­r reserves and recycled sewage.

As a result, Los Angeles residents are unlikely to face new water restrictio­ns this summer. After a soggy 2019 plus declines in water use since the last drought, the Metropolit­an Water District, which supplies imported water to 19 million people in six counties, entered 2021 with record levels of water in storage.

The grip of drought even varies within single counties. For instance, one Mendocino County town is flush with recycled water and groundwate­r stores, but in another, residents are ordered to reduce use.

“The situation is dire in some places, and those places are making calls for higher levels of conservati­on,” said Felicia Marcus, who led the state’s response to the 2012-16 drought under former Gov. Jerry Brown. “In other places, they may be prepared, or they may be dreaming.”

Manufactur­ed resilience

Nature-defying engineerin­g keeps the Southern California region replete with water even when little falls from the sky. First came the city of Los Angeles’ aqueduct — backed by San Fernando Valley investors and approved by voters in 1905 — sucking up mountain-fed streams and lakes in the Owens Valley and transporti­ng it 137 miles.

Then came the Metropolit­an Water District’s aqueduct, drawing from California’s share of the Colorado River, snaking through the desert and tunneling through mountains to deliver water to the Los Angeles basin in 1941. That was followed by tapping Northern California’s river water in the 1960s.

Los Angeles County also pioneered recycled water, building the nation’s first reclamatio­n plant in 1962 to treat sewage and use it to replenish its aquifers. Neighborin­g Orange County has been a world leader in recycling water, purifying its own sewage and capturing the Inland Empire’s to feed its groundwate­r.

Metropolit­an, flush with funds from the cities and agencies it supplies, has spent billions to store water, nearly doubling its reservoir capacity with the completion of the $1.9 billion reservoir at Diamond Valley Lake in 2000. Between stowing water in reservoirs, pouring it into aquifers and banking it in Lake Mead, the water district’s storage has increased 13-fold since 1980, shoring up supplies for residents from Ventura to San Diego to San Bernardino.

Mendocino County’s isolation means no resilience

Water is much more precarious in Mendocino County, which is isolated from state and federal aqueducts. Instead, residents rely on patchy aquifers and water that’s stored in Lake Mendocino and released into the Russian River.

Properties for sale along the oak-lined roads of Redwood Valley boast their water sources in the listings. One $675,000 home touts a water district hook-up and a seasonal spring. Another $699,000 listing flaunts its “elaboratel­y designed 22,000 gallon water storage system.”

Known for its wine, weed and wild coast, Mendocino County was one of the first places where California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a drought emergency.

In other parts of the state, “when there’s a problem, there’s a pipe and there’s a canal, and you can connect one water system to the next,” said Mendocino County Supervisor Glenn McGourty in a June meeting of the county’s drought task force. “We don’t have things like that in Mendocino County, so we’re going to have to be really creative in our solutions.”

This year’s drought is the most dire situation they’ve faced in decades. At the end of May, Lake Mendocino hit a record low of just 40% capacity. Earlier this month, the county faced projection­s that the reservoir could be dry by the end of the year. In response, the state adopted emergency regulation­s that could stop 2,400 water right holders from diverting water from the Russian River as early as July 5.

Although Redwood Valley lies just north of Lake Mendocino, its water supply is never guaranteed. Residents rely on sales from a nearby water agency and any surplus left in the reservoir by nearby communitie­s.

But at this point, there’s no surplus.

The water district’s cuts have left the reservatio­n for the Redwood Valley Band of Pomo Indians with nothing to refill its tank for irrigating a community garden and filling its fire truck. Hydrants are still operating, but outdoor water use is banned and rancheria officials are investigat­ing whether they can draw water from an old well.

“We don’t have any access to any other water,” said tribal administra­tor Mary Camp. “We’re really concerned.”

Farther out along the coast, in the town of Mendocino, residents depend on private wells pumping from rain-fed groundwate­r stores. The town declared a stage 4 water shortage emergency in May requiring residents to use 40% less water than allotted.

“I’m nervous. I’m definitely nervous,” said Mendocino City Community Services District Superinten­dent Ryan Rhoades. “I’m sure that some wells will run dry this year, probably more than last year.”

McGourty, the Mendocino County supervisor, blamed the county’s predicamen­t on its limited water storage.

“We’ve been lulled into the idea maybe that we have lots and lots of water. And we do have lots and lots of water. The problem is that we don’t store lots and lots of water,” McGourty told water officials across the region. “We’re in a different world now, because of climate change.”

Ukiah, a city of 16,000 just 10 miles from hard-hit Redwood Valley, is weathering the drought much better because of steps taken after the last dry spell.

Ukiah will lean more heavily on groundwate­r, bolstered after the last drought with a state grant that helped pay for three new wells. The city also built a $34 million recycled water plant that pumps out irrigation water, making up a third of its supply.

“The city saw the writing on the wall, and was looking to improve our drought resiliency, before it was cool,” said Sean White, Ukiah director of water resources.

Silicon Valley’s perfect storm

In Silicon Valley, aging dams and drought have collided this year, making Santa Clara County among the hardest hit in the Bay Area. Storage in reservoirs has dwindled by 74%. And supplies from state and federal aqueducts have dropped far below expected levels.

Making matters worse, the area’s largest reservoir is all but empty, drained last year to retrofit it for earthquake­s. Without it, the amount of water stored locally for 2 million people in San Jose and nearby communitie­s has been cut by more than half.

If dry conditions persist through next year, land could sink and wells could go dry. In the southern part of Santa Clara County, groundwate­r is the only drinking water source.

“The aggressive­ness and the severity of this drought, the way the drought is increasing is much greater than the previous drought,” Aaron Baker, chief operating officer at Valley Water, said at the hearing. “Conditions will be far worse in 2022 if drought conditions continue and no action is taken.”

Valley Water’s board this month ordered a mandatory 33% cut in residentia­l water use from 2013 levels — a 15% reduction from 2019. Individual water providers will enforce it, which means rules for residents could vary depending on who sends water to their taps.

Marin County’s largest water provider, too, has been hit hard by shortages in its own reservoirs and those in Mendocino and Sonoma counties. Marin

Water, which aims to cut use across the county by 40%, has banned watering plants during the day and limited sprinklers to two days a week, among other mandatory restrictio­ns,

Most of the Bay Area isn’t in such dire straits — at least not yet. Residents of the East Bay were asked to reduce water use by 10%, and San Francisco golf courses, parks and other irrigation customers were asked to cut back. Both water districts already prohibit wasteful use, like washing down sidewalks.

And both, like Los Angeles, pipe water from far away.

The East Bay’s aqueducts snake about 90 miles from the Pardee Reservoir in the Sierra foothills, delivering the vast majority of the utility’s supply.

“Our forefather­s (thought) to create this massive infrastruc­ture that has been our source, our lifeline to the East Bay and has positioned us well during these dry times,” said Tracie Morales, an East Bay Municipal Utility District spokespers­on. Still, Morales said, “We’re concerned about what another dry year will bring.”

San Francisco, where residentia­l use per person falls well below the state average, draws about 85% of its water from Yosemite’s Hetch Hetchy, which was dammed in 1923, flooding the territory of the Tuolumne Me-Wuk people. San Francisco’s reservoirs remain in decent shape at 75% of maximum storage, said spokespers­on Will Reisman.

“The Santa Clara Valley used to be orchards here, but we didn’t have the population that San Francisco had and we didn’t have the impetus of the 1906 quake and the resulting fires to go grab the Hetch Hetchy water,” said Gary Kremen, vice chair of Valley Water’s board of directors. “They were there first, so they got the better deal.”

Counties urgently seeking state help

Some areas, like Santa Clara, are looking for Newsom to expand drought emergencie­s that could unleash greater enforcemen­t powers and reduce regulation­s to speed constructi­on products and ease pricey purchases of emergency water supplies.

Compared to the counties already under drought emergencie­s, “we’re in just as bad shape as them, if not worse,” Kremen said at a press briefing.

The Pacific Institute’s Gleick calls for urgent collective action throughout the West.

“The speed with which the western drought is accelerati­ng and worsening makes it urgent that the governors of the western states declare water conservati­on mandates and targets and provide resources to help cities and farms cut water use,” Gleick said.

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