Los Angeles Times

Reservoir will be filled early

Water surplus means Silver Lake basin should be back to normal by mid-June.

- By Matt Hamilton

The drought is over in Silver Lake — at least, at its picturesqu­e reservoir.

Los Angeles Department of Water and Power officials announced Wednesday that the popular Silver Lake Reservoir — which has stood empty for more than a year — will be refilled starting in mid-April.

The 96-acre reservoir is expected to be fully refilled by the middle of June, nearly a year ahead of schedule. Officials previously said refilling would begin in May and take about 12 months.

The faster rate owes to months of powerful winter storms that soaked California and caused record snowpack levels in the Eastern Sierra, whose runoff provides much of L.A.’s water supply.

“With the above-average snowpack, we have a surplus of water in the L.A. Aqueduct system and with it the opportunit­y to refill Silver Lake Reservoir ahead of

schedule,” said Richard Harasick, the agency’s senior assistant general manager of water.

L.A. City Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, whose district includes part of the reservoir, echoed the call for continued conservati­on.

“This overflow is a gift,” he said, but “we need to continue to be vigilant in our conservati­on efforts for water use.”

Built in 1907, the Silver Lake Reservoir originally held an emergency supply of drinking water, but it later became part of the drinking water infrastruc­ture.

The reservoir was drained in 2015 as part of a DWP project to build a pipeline connecting the water grid with a new undergroun­d storage facility, the Headworks Reservoir.

The new subterrane­an reservoir, located north of Griffith Park, had to be built to comply with federal regulation­s requiring drinkingwa­ter storage to be covered or undergroun­d.

The 4,600-foot pipeline project connecting the Headworks Reservoir to DWP customers in central L.A. was completed in February, according to utility spokeswoma­n Ellen Chang.

Without water, the Silver Lake Reservoir was an unsightly concrete basin that resembled a proving ground, with constructi­on trucks, equipment and sprawling weeds.

“We got our water back,” said Jill Cordes, one of the leaders of the Refill Silver Lake Now campaign, after the DWP made the announceme­nt Wednesday.

The campaign sprouted up amid a larger debate over possible developmen­t around the reservoir, which is part of a 127-acre complex that includes a recreation center, open land and the smaller Ivanhoe Reservoir.

Some want only to refill the reservoir, while others are open to expanded recreation opportunit­ies.

Among the improvemen­ts that some residents are hoping for is the opening of a path along the southern part of the reservoir. Currently, the path ends and pedestrian­s have to walk around a recreation center before returning to the path closer to the water.

A larger community planning process is underway to solicit input about the future of the reservoir — something Cordes and others are eager to accelerate.

“We can look at this beautiful lake while we take five or 10 years to figure out what will make it better,” Cordes said. “It’s a win-win.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? SILVER LAKE RESERVOIR was drained in 2015 for a DWP project to connect the water grid with Headworks Reservoir, a new undergroun­d storage facility.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times SILVER LAKE RESERVOIR was drained in 2015 for a DWP project to connect the water grid with Headworks Reservoir, a new undergroun­d storage facility.

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