Oroville Mercury-Register

WATER FOR DRY WELL OWNERS, CALIFORNIA SHORT OF GOALS

Newsom asked for 15% reductions, but in July, urban users cut use by just 1.8%

- By Paul Rogers

Facing a severe and deepening drought, California received its first report card for water conservati­on on Tuesday. And the news wasn’t good.

Driven by a lack of conservati­on in Southern California, the state’s largest cities and water districts cut statewide urban water use by just 1.8% in July compared to July, 2020 — far short of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s call for a 15% statewide voluntary reduction.

Of 376 cities and water districts that reported numbers to the State Water Resources Control Board, only 26, or 7%, met or exceeded the target.

“This drought is very serious,” said Karla Nemeth, director of the State Department of Water Resources. “In particular, how quickly it has developed. So we need people to be paying attention and acting now.”

The North Coast region of the state was the only one of 10 that met the target, reducing water use 16.7% amid some of the most severe water shortages in California. Next was the Bay Area, which cut use 8.4%, followed by the Central Coast, at 5.2%.

Most of Southern California showed no significan­t conservati­on. The South Coast region, which includes Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego, cut water use by only .1%.

Water experts said that if this winter is dry, many parts of the state will be in an emergency.

“The new conservati­on numbers are both extremely disappoint­ing and not surprising,”

said Peter Gleick, founder of the Pacific Institute, a nonprofit water research organizati­on in Oakland. “They show that unless there is really a strong message from the top about the need to conserve, the public doesn’t respond. And we didn’t get that strong message either from the governor’s office or from the Southern California water agencies.”

Southern California received slightly more rain than much of Northern California this winter. And local officials have noted new supply projects built in the past 20 years, including Diamond Valley Reservoir in Riverside County and a $1 billion ocean desalinati­on plant in Carlsbad near San Diego, have helped.

But much of Southern California relies on water from the northern part of the state.

And after the two driest years since 1976-77, many of Northern California’s largest reservoirs are dangerousl­y low. On Tuesday, the largest, Shasta Lake, was just 25% full. The second largest, Lake Oroville in Butte County, was at 22% capacity, the lowest level since it was built in 1969. The 10 reservoirs in Santa Clara County are just 12% full. Marin County’s reservoirs are projected to run completely dry by next summer.

Nemeth said that Gov. Gavin Newsom is not planning to announce statewide mandatory water conservati­on targets right away, however, the way Gov. Jerry Brown did in 2015 during the state’s last drought. Those rules — which came after lackluster voluntary conservati­on but resulted in the state hitting its goal of 25% savings by 2016 — were controvers­ial, she noted. Some cities said then that they had sufficient supplies, and Brown’s cutbacks cost them millions of dollars in lost water sales.

Instead, this time Newsom and other state leaders plan to wait until November to see how cities and water districts ramp up conservati­on on their own, she said. Many are still allowing lawn watering three or more days a week.

“They said ‘we can manage our own supplies,’” Nemeth said of local water districts. “If they want to do it, they should do it. But make no mistake. Gov. Newsom will step in with something mandatory if they are not able to meet their numbers and we continue to see these trends deepen.”

Nemeth also said Tuesday that cities and farms across the state should brace to receive no water next year from the State Water Project if this winter is dry again.

Some communitie­s did report dramatic savings, particular­ly in Sonoma and Mendocino counties, which saw some of their driest conditions in recorded history the past two winters.

Statewide, Healdsburg saved the most, cutting water 54% this July compared to the prior July. Because of state cutbacks on pumping from the Russian River, city officials in Healdsburg banned all lawn watering this summer, with fines of up to $500 for violators. Also leading the pack statewide was Cloverdale with 37%, Daly City with 36%, Santa Cruz with 31% and Petaluma with 25%.

The cities farthest from the goal were Chowchilla, in the Central Valley, which increased water use 35% in July compared to July 2020, and El Segundo in Los Angeles County, which increased by 31%.

There were major difference­s between Northern California and Southern California.

Residents of Los Angeles increased water use by 1%. So did San Diego.

The Bay Area went in the other direction. The 1 million people who receive water from San Jose Water Company cut their use by 11%. Similarly, San Francisco cut by 10%, the East Bay Municipal Utility District saw an 8% drop, Contra Costa Water District reported a 7% drop, and the Alameda County Water District cut by 6%.

“We are heading in the right direction,” said Liann Walborsky, a spokeswoma­n for San Jose Water Company. “Our customers are hearing the call to action. This is very good news.”

But in Butte County, water use seems to align more with Southern California.

Cal Water’s Chico District reported just a 1% decrease in water use, while Cal Water’s Oroville District reported a 1% increase.

The local water agencies have several programs to help its customers save water including:

• A lawn-to-garden rebate program that gives $3for every square foot of lawn removed and replaced with low-water use landscapin­g.

• A spray-to-drip irrigation rebate of 50 cents per square foot of landscapin­g converted from spray irrigation to drip irrigation.

• Rebates on high-efficiency appliances and devices.

• Smart landscape tuneup program that evaluates systems, repairs leaks and installs efficient devices for free.

• A free conservati­on kit with a garden hose nozzle shut-off valve, high-efficiency shower heads and faucet aerators for residentia­l customers.

Cal Water also recommends people check for sprinkler heads and hidden leaks at least once a month, install smart irrigation controller­s, only water “thirsty” lawns and repair leaks within five days of notificati­on.

The water agency says not to use water on outdoor landscapin­g that causes runoff onto neighborin­g properties or paved areas, not to wash cars with a hose that doesn’t have a shut-off nozzle, not to water outdoors between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. and not to use water in fountains that do not recirculat­e.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Looking north Thursday at the San Luis Reservoir in Merced County. Merced’s reservoirs are projected to run completely dry by next summer.
NHAT V. MEYER/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Looking north Thursday at the San Luis Reservoir in Merced County. Merced’s reservoirs are projected to run completely dry by next summer.
 ?? JUSTIN COUCHOT — MERCURY-REGISTER ?? South Feather Water and Power on Tuesday in Oroville is one of the locations for residentia­l users with dry wells to pick up potable water.
JUSTIN COUCHOT — MERCURY-REGISTER South Feather Water and Power on Tuesday in Oroville is one of the locations for residentia­l users with dry wells to pick up potable water.
 ?? STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL BOARD ?? Change in water usage from July 2020 to July 2021 by hydrologic­al regions.
STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL BOARD Change in water usage from July 2020 to July 2021 by hydrologic­al regions.

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