Newsom is about to cut the water allocations to just 10%. Yet at the same time he is using tax dollars meant to build water facilities to demolish FOUR dams—with no replacement of water. California does not have a lack of water, it has Newsom and the Democrats trying to drive up the cost of living, kill agriculture and force people to leave the State.
“California water agencies serving 27 million people will get 10% of the water they requested from state supplies to start 2024 due to a relatively dry fall, even though the state’s reservoirs are in good shape, state officials said.
The state’s Department of Water Resources said there was not much rain or snow in October and November. Those months are critical to developing the initial water allocation, which can be increased if conditions improve, officials said.
Note they refuse to take responsibility for cutting the water supply—and the media never challenges them on it. Why are people leaving California—for a glass of water.
After Dry Fall, California To Allocate Just 10% of Water Supply Requests
SF Standard, 12/4/23 https://sfstandard.com/2023/12/04/california-state-water-supply-allocation-2024/?utm_campaign=SF%20Standard%20Daily&utm_medium=email&utm_source=SF%20Standard&utm_content=latest-news-list
California water agencies serving 27 million people will get 10% of the water they requested from state supplies to start 2024 due to a relatively dry fall, even though the state’s reservoirs are in good shape, state officials said.
The state’s Department of Water Resources said there was not much rain or snow in October and November. Those months are critical to developing the initial water allocation, which can be increased if conditions improve, officials said.
“California’s water year is off to a relatively dry start,” Karla Nemeth, director of the Department of Water Resources, said in a statement Friday. “While we are hopeful that this El Niño pattern will generate wet weather, this early in the season, we have to plan with drier conditions in mind.”
El Niño is a periodic and naturally occurring climate event that shifts weather patterns across the globe. It can cause extreme weather conditions ranging from drought to flooding. It hits hardest December through February.
Much of California’s water supply comes from snow that falls in the mountains during the winter and enters the watershed as it melts through spring. Some is stored in reservoirs for later use, while some is sent south through massive pumping systems.
The system, known as the State Water Project, provides water to two-thirds of the state’s people and 1,172 square miles of farmland. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which services Los Angeles and much of Southern California, relies on the state for about one-third of its water supply.
California officials make initial water allocations every year on Dec. 1 and update them monthly in response to snowpack, rainfall and other conditions.
This year’s allocation, while low, is still better than in recent years when the state was in the depths of a three-year drought. In December 2021, agencies were told they would receive no state supplies to start 2022, except for what was needed for basic health and safety. That allocation eventually went up slightly.
A year ago, the state allocated 5% of what agencies requested. By April, though, the state increased that allocation to 100% after a drought-busting series of winter storms that filled up the state’s reservoirs.
Currently, most of the state’s reservoirs are above average, including Lake Oroville, the agency’s largest.
Adel Hagekhalil, general manager of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, said allocations will hopefully increase, but there’s no counting on it, and the state is wise to proceed with caution.
“We must be prepared for the possibility that these dry conditions will continue,” Hagekhalil said in a statement.
It is hard to find any part of California that is not mismanaged . Population explosion and water storage less than 1960. Federal funds refused to raise dams. Farm lands left fallow and small towns trucking water. China shell companies buying fallowed land. The smell of incompetence and or corruption is everywhere.