El Dorado News-Times

Drought over? Spring outlook finds relief — and flood risk

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. (AP) — Record snowfall and rain have helped to loosen drought’s grip on parts of the western U.S. as national forecaster­s and climate experts warned Thursday that some areas should expect more flooding as the snow begins to melt.

The winter precipitat­ion wiped out exceptiona­l and extreme drought in California for the first time since 2020, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion reported Thursday in a seasonal, nationwide outlook that came as parts of the state are under water. In neighborin­g Nevada, flood warnings were in effect and rushing water prompted some evacuation­s overnight in one of Arizona’s tourist towns.

Elsewhere, NOAA’s forecast warned of elevated flood risks from heavy snowpack this spring in the upper Midwest along the Mississipp­i River from Minnesota south to Missouri.

Despite the receding drought, experts cautioned that the relief may be only a blip as the long-term effects persist from what has been a stubborn dry streak.

Groundwate­r and reservoir storage levels — which take much longer to bounce back — remain at historic lows. It could be more than a year before the extra moisture has an effect on the shoreline at Lake Mead that straddles Arizona and Nevada. And it’s unlikely that water managers will have enough wiggle room to wind back the clock on proposals for limiting water use.

That’s because water release and retention operations for the massive reservoir and its upstream sibling — Lake Powell on the Utah-Arizona border — already are set for the year. The reservoirs are used to manage Colorado River water deliveries to 40 million people in seven U.S. states and Mexico.

Lake Powell could gain 35 feet (11 meters) as snow melts and makes its way into tributarie­s and rivers over the next three months. How much it rises will depend on soil moisture levels, future precipitat­ion, temperatur­es and evaporatio­n losses.

Paul Miller, a hydrologis­t with the National Weather Service’s Colorado Basin River Forecast Center, said that sounds like a lot of water for one of the nation’s largest reservoirs, but it still will be only one-third full.

 ?? AP, File) ?? Esteban Sepulveda holds his dog Milo while leaving his home in Pajaro Valley, Calif., March 12, 2023. Record snowfall and rain have helped to loosen drought’s grip on parts of the western U.S. as national forecaster­s and climate experts warned Thursday, March 16, that some areas should expect more flooding as the snow begins to melt. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group via
AP, File) Esteban Sepulveda holds his dog Milo while leaving his home in Pajaro Valley, Calif., March 12, 2023. Record snowfall and rain have helped to loosen drought’s grip on parts of the western U.S. as national forecaster­s and climate experts warned Thursday, March 16, that some areas should expect more flooding as the snow begins to melt. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group via

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