Water Education Foundation

NatGeo’s News Watch: Going without clean water

Posted by: Maven on December 11, 2011 at 6:30 am

From National Geographic’s News Watch:

“When temperatures dropped to one degree Fahrenheit and my pipes froze this week, I was reminded of how lucky we are, under most circumstances, to be able to turn a valve and watch copious amounts of clean water flow into our sinks, showers, toilets, and washing machines.

In the U.S., we use an average of 100 gallons each day for washing, cooking, cleaning, drinking, (and lawn watering).

This doesn't account for the water that's required to grow our food, manufacture our computers, or refine the fuels we rely on to drive our cars and keep our homes, and water, warm. … “

Continue reading from National Geographic’s News Watch by clicking here.

Column: Water cures all of Bay-Delta’s ills

Posted by: Maven on December 7, 2011 at 8:13 am

From Outdoors columnist Pete Otteson at the Stockton Record:

“If there ever was conclusive evidence that the health of the Delta and the fish that dwell there respond to good quality water and runoff that cleanses the entire estuary, look what’s happening. What we’re seeing is a result of the heavy winter of 2010, and the entire fishery is celebrating.

Take your pick among anadromous species such as striped bass, sturgeon and Chinook salmon. Each has responded with excellent fall runs thanks to the abundant year that allowed enough water to flow through the system and out the Golden Gate. … “

Continue reading this column from the Stockton Record by clicking here.

Webcast link for today’s Natural Resources Committee hearing on Endangered Species Act litigation

Posted by: Maven on December 6, 2011 at 6:30 am

The House Natural Resources Committee will hold a hearing this morning on Endangered Species Act litigation. It is scheduled to start at 10AM EST (7AM PST).

You can read the agenda here. The witness list was never published but includes Brandon Middleton of the Pacific Legal Foundation. You can find a written copy of his testimony here.

The webcast link is here. (The hearing will be in the 1324 hearing room.)

Delta National Park blog on Wanger: “Providing drainage services” to where?

Posted by: Maven on December 4, 2011 at 7:18 am

From the Delta National Park blog:

“Why all the hand wringing over news that Judge Wanger, in his new career as attorney Wanger, will be representing Westlands Water District

First, so what Second, is it really a surprise, especially after his final, September ruling/rant The case he is involved in is an important one, and a similar thematic of the relationship between shifting ideological winds, fact and science is likely to play out in it.

As we know from Judge Wanger's last rulings, lots of science is, like a Jackson Pollock painting, open to too much interpretation. … “

Continue reading from the Delta National Park blog by clicking here.

Alex Breitler’s blog: Help wanted

Posted by: Maven on November 30, 2011 at 7:19 am

If you’re qualified to build the peripheral canal/tunnel/thingie, Alex Brietler knows where you can find a job.

Green Roots blog: Using military expertise to help take down the San Clemente Dam?

Posted by: Maven on November 30, 2011 at 7:05 am

From the Planning & Conservation League’s Green Roots blog:

“Recently, John Woodly, the former Assistant Secretary of the Army of Civil Works, wrote an article citing previous Administrations' efforts to utilize unique government expertise in public and private sector projects. Specifically, he highlighted a dam removal project in North Carolina as an example of a collaborative effort that brought together civilian biologists and engineers to work with military demolition experts as means of “getting more from each appropriated dollar. Fortunately, as Woodly noted in the recent article, California too has a dam removal project ripe for government funding.

The San Clemente Dam Removal Project provides an excellent opportunity to maximize the use of public dollars to achieve multiple objectives. The project will remove an unsafe dam, help to restore a vibrant ecosystem along the Carmel River, and in the process can provide prime training for military personnel. … “

Continue reading from the Green Roots blog by clicking here.

Commentary: Can’t live by scenery alone: California’s environmental lobby wages war on rural property owners

Posted by: Maven on November 30, 2011 at 6:39 am

From Stephen Greenhut, posted at the City Journal:

” “Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul alike,\” wrote John Muir, in one of his many celebrations of the majesty of the Yosemite Valley. The Scottish-born founder of the Sierra Club recognized that man does not live by bread alone. His latter-day followers, however, seem to have forgotten that man cannot live by natural beauty alone, either. An urban-based environmentalist movement wants to lock up ever-expanding swaths of rural land so that no one can build on them or even work on them. Many rural residents are convinced that California's powerful environmental lobby wants to “rewild\” the landscape and drive them away, turning their communities into glorified playgrounds for urbanites.

The state's urban areas are massive. Los Angeles County is more populous than 43 states. One of my favorite sights,from a nighttime descent into any one of Southern California's airports,is the Los Angeles basin spreading out endlessly like successive strings of Christmas tree lights. The San Francisco Bay Area is home to more than 7 million people. California has cities few people have heard of that are more populous than major cities in the Midwest. Big-city voters, especially those who live west of the coastal ranges, are far removed from the ranchers, miners, loggers, and farmers who inhabit the state's rural regions. … “

Continue reading this commentary by clicking here.

Lodi-area politicians blast Bay Delta Conservation Plan MOA

Posted by: Maven on November 29, 2011 at 8:08 am

(Original headline: “Local politicians blast Delta plan”. The media seems to be shortening their headlines to read “Delta Plan” instead of specifying the BDCP MOA. I am changing headlines to reflect this, but I wonder what this is doing in the minds of the general public that may not understand the difference.) From the Lodi News-Sentinel:

“Elected officials from the Lodi area are among those trying to convince authors of a plan that may send Delta waters to the southern San Joaquin Valley and Los Angeles Basin to change their minds.

The sticking point is a “memorandum of agreement” to the Bay-Delta Conservation Plan that the U.S. Department of the Interior adopted in September.

State Sen. Lois Wolk, D-Davis, says that the memorandum of agreement was made among several water agencies and contractors, not Northern California water interests or Delta property owners who rely on the water for the success of their businesses and agricultural production.

“It’s very worrisome,” Wolk told the News-Sentinel on Monday afternoon. … “

Continue reading from the Lodi News-Sentinel by clicking here.

Errata file posted for Section 18 of DSC’s draft EIR

Posted by: Maven on November 28, 2011 at 7:35 am

From the Delta Stewardship Council:

“An errata file has been posted on the draft EIR page on the DSC website. The file affects Section 18 of the draft EIR. It is labeled: “DEIR Errata (dated November 22, 2011) : Replacing pages 18-5, 18-6, 18-8, 18-14, 18-18, 18-19.

The entire draft EIR can be reviewed here. The errata file can be reviewed here.”

Photo gallery: Interesting shots of marine life and tide pools along the San Diego coast

Posted by: Maven on November 26, 2011 at 5:52 am

Check out this photo gallery of tidepool pictures taken by San Diego Union-Tribune readers by clicking here. (Hat tip to Matt Weiser’s / Mike Lee’s twitter feed!)

Weekend wrap up: DWR announces initial SWP allocation, the QSA heads to court, Miller and Matsui blast the BDCP, MWD defends its rates for San Diego, plus more …

Posted by: Maven on November 21, 2011 at 8:00 am

Welcome to Monday! Here’s your weekend update:

On Friday afternoon, the Department of Water Resources announced an initial allocation of 60 percent of requested deliveries to State Water Project contractors for 2012.

Today, the appeals court in Sacramento is set to take up the QSA issue; On Saturday, both the San Diego Union-Tribune and the Los Angeles Times covered the story. The AP’s story is below this post.

The BDCP was back in the news with this video segment from Wednesday’s public meeting posted at the Central Valley Business Times and Dan Bacher’s commentary that the BDCP agreement is opposed by 242 organizations. Also making news on Saturday, the Union Democrat reported on the water district’s allegations against the feds regarding the salmon on the Stanislaus River.

On Sunday, the SacBee reported on what climate change could mean for California and the Wall Street Journal ran a story about how the draining of lakes affects local communities. Also, Congressmembers Miller and Matsui called the BDCP a political power play, MWD’s Randy Record says Metropolitan’s rates for San Diego are fair, and Lois Henry wrote a column on how Kern water is causing mayhem up and down the state.

Those are just the highlights; be sure to scroll down to see the all the weekend stories….

LAST WEEK’S MOST POPULAR ITEMS: Commentaries received top billing last week, with Tom Elias’s column on our state’s shaky water deals being the most popular, followed by Tom Birmingham’s commentary on the BDCP in last Sunday’s Sacramento Bee. Opportunity Green’s report from the forum on Southern California water moderated by David Nahai was third most popular, followed by the LA Times article on Old Sacramento’s underground tour.

CALENDAR NOTES: With the holiday this week, nothing on the calendar except for the BDCP Finance Working Group meeting on Tuesday.

May this week bless you with plenty to be thankful for!

Webcast link for today’s Delta Stewardship Council meeting

Posted by: Maven on November 18, 2011 at 7:30 am

On the calendar for today:

The Delta Stewardship Council will be meeting today from 09:00am to 3:30pm. You can find the meeting notice here. The meeting will be webcast here: http://cal-span.org/Broadcast/DSC.asx or you can watch the webcast on your smartphone by clicking here.) One of the highlights of today’s meeting is a panel discussion of Delta stressors.

Weekend wrap-up: Klamath Dams removal bill introduced, La Niña is back and Birmingham defends the BDCP … plus a busy week ahead on the calendar!

Posted by: Maven on November 14, 2011 at 6:00 am

Not a terribly busy weekend around here, but it’s certainly an action packed week ahead for water meetings on the last full week before the upcoming holiday:

WEEKEND HIGHLIGHTS:   In Friday’s news, a bill was introduced in Congress to implement removal of the Klamath Dams,   one of the partners in the Baja desalination deal is selling their stake, and the Delta National Park blog responded to the CWB’s sewer analogy and stressors in the Delta.   On Saturday, the Fresno Bee reported on the growing La Nina, but the most popular item was about Occupy’s message being heard in the Delta.   On Sunday, commentaries dominated the news, with Thomas Birmingham saying the BDCP is following the law, the Record Searchlight saying the Klamath Dams are not ‘perfectly good dams’ at all, and Bonham of the DFG saying that everyone needs to work together to solve the problems in the Scott and Shasta river valleys.   Of course, for the full update, you’ll have to scroll down ….

LAST WEEK’S TOP STORIES:   The most read item last week was  Alex Breitler’s blog post on the BDCP.   Top news stories were the follow-up on the Bradford Island landowner and the Fresno Bee story about the lawsuit over irrigation drainage.   Many of you also clicked out to find out more about Nunes’ Sacramento Delta and Salmon Preservation Act.

CALENDAR NOTES: It’s a busy week ahead on the calendar! Wednesday is the last day to submit your comments on the BDCP’s MOA. Also on Wednesday, the Delta Conservancy will meet as will the California Water Commission,   and later that afternoon, the BDCP will hold a public meeting. On Thursday, the California Water Commission continues its meeting, the Delta Stewardship Council begins the first of a two-day meeting, and the Bureau of Reclamation will host a meeting on the Grasslands Bypass Project. On Friday, the Delta Stewardship Council meeting continues.   Those are just the highlights – you can check out the full calendar here.

WEBCASTS FOR THIS WEEK: The BDCP Public Meeting, the California Water Commission meeting and the Delta Stewardship Council meeting will all be webcast. The links will be posted at 7:30am on the days those meetings are in session.

May you have a productive and enjoyable week!

Happy Veterans Day

Posted by: Maven on November 11, 2011 at 7:39 am

Today, we pause to honor America's Veterans and celebrate their enormous contributions to our way of life.

Few have given more to this nation than those who have served in the armed forces.

Please take a moment today to give thanks to and for our veterans who have served our country admirably and honorably.

Have an enjoyable day!

Column: Endangered Species Act not right tool for water problems

Posted by: Maven on November 9, 2011 at 8:12 am

Here’s an column written by John Fleck (of the Inkstain blog) about the Endangered Species Act, years and millions of dollars spent, and distrust between stakeholders … and it’s not about the Delta! (Even though it’s not about California, I post it here because there could be some parallels here.) From the Albuquerque Journal:

“It was hard to sit through last week's exhaustive, two-day meeting of the Middle Rio Grande Endangered Species Collaborative Program without concluding that the tools we're trying to use to deal with the Rio Grande silvery minnow are broken.

The evidence boils down to this: A Fish and Wildlife Service chart handed out near the end of the meeting suggests the endangered minnow survived this year of epic drought without a population crash.

But no one is quite sure what that means, because more than a decade and at least $145 million into the program, the participants can't agree on the most useful way to count fish. … “

Continue reading this column from the Albuquerque Journal by clicking here.

Numbers of fish returning are up in Battle Creek

Posted by: Maven on November 9, 2011 at 6:22 am

From the Tehama Daily News:

“Larger numbers of threatened Chinook salmon have returned to spawn upstream in newly restored habitat on North Fork Battle Creek, the Bureau of Reclamation and its partners in the Battle Creek Salmon and Steelhead Restoration Project announced Wednesday.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has been performing fish monitoring for many years in Battle Creek.

This fall, over four times the number of spring-run Chinook salmon redds (nests built by fish) were seen further upstream in North Fork Battle Creek, above where the Wildcat Diversion Dam once stood, than in previous years. … “

Continue reading from the Tehama Daily News by clicking here.

Tuesday’s top of the scroll: Salmon vs. stripers policy stirs emotions

Posted by: Maven on November 8, 2011 at 7:35 am

From the Chico Enterprise-Record:

“Interest is so high in proposed changes to striped bass fishing rules that the state Department of Fish and Game has had to find a larger room for a meeting on the subject Tuesday night.

The meeting will be in the town of Rio Vista, which is near the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

Fish and Game wants to change the rules to help solve a problem.

The problem, according to the state agency, is that striped bass, a non-native fish, are devouring young salmon, a native fish, some of which are listed as endangered.

Fish and Game has proposed changing the angling rules so more striped bass will be caught. The agency hopes that will spare the lives of more young salmon and other endangered fish. … “

Continue reading from the Chico Enterprise-Record by clicking here.

MORE COVERAGE:

SEE ALSO:

TO ATTEND TONIGHT’S MEETING:

Weekend wrap-up: Delta Plan draft EIR, Nunes and Hetch Hetchy, update on DFG’s striped bass workshop, and more

Posted by: Maven on November 7, 2011 at 7:48 am

Welcome to Monday!   It was a busy weekend around here. To get the full update, you’ll need to scroll down to read it all, but here are some highlights plus a few important calendar notes:

DELTA STEWARDSHIP COUNCIL DRAFT EIR UPDATE: On Friday, the Delta Stewardship Council released its long awaited draft EIR on the Delta plan (you can find the draft EIR here). ACWA expressed their concerns in a statement released later that day. On Saturday, the report was covered by the Contra Costa Times, the AP via the San Francisco Chronicle, and the Stockton Record.

NUNES SAYS CHARGE SAN FRANCISCO MORE FOR USE OF HETCH HETCHY: Also on Saturday’s scroll, Congressman Devin Nunes, mulling over a possible run against Feinstein, sent a letter on Friday to the members of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction suggesting that a portion of the debt reduction could be achieved by charging San Francisco more for the use of Hetch Hetchy. Click here to read the letter.     Nunes also plans to introduce new legislation, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Salmon Preservation Act.   In other Hetch Hetchy news, KQED produced a segment on the Hetch Hetchy retrofit.

STRIPED BASS UPDATE: The Department of Fish and Game released their proposed striped bass regulation changes, plus moved the meeting to a larger venue. Click here for more information from Department of Fish and Game. Also, Dan Bacher has more on the proposed changes and reaction from the fishing community.

SISKIYOU COUNTY: Redding’s Record Searchlight published a trio of stories highlighting the challenges and growing tensions in rural Siskiyou County: Tensions mount in idyllic Siskiyou County in fight over dams, salmon, DFG sued on all sides over Shasta, Scott rivers’ coho, and Siskiyou sheriff’s life-and-death rhetoric alarms tribes, environmental groups.

ALSO IN THE NEWS THIS WEEKEND, The Sacramento Bee says the Bay Delta Conservation Plan is headed down a perilous path, and the Salton Sea Authority prepares to push its own restoration plan to save the beleaguered sea.

LAST WEEK’S TOP STORIES were this Contra Costa Times article about the landowner pushing for control of Bradford Island, followed closely by the San Francisco Chronicle story on the water contractors and the Bay-Delta Conservation Plan.   The most-read blog posts were the Inkstain post on the Endangered Species Act and Barry Nelson’s post on fixing the Delta.

CALENDAR NOTES FOR THIS WEEK: Besides the DFG striped bass workshop mentioned above, the Department of Water Resources and the Bureau of Reclamation have scheduled the 2011 Integrated Annual Review of Coordinated Operation of the CVP and SWP on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.   The meeting will be webcast and the links posted at the top of the scroll on the days the meeting is being held. Friday is Veteran’s Day, a state and federal holiday.

May you have an enjoyable day!

Commentary: Valley drowns in water politics

Posted by: Maven on November 1, 2011 at 8:58 am

From the Fresno Bee, this commentary by Terry Phillips:

“There is no single resource more important to our quality of life than water.

The Kern County Water Agency recently commemorated its 50th anniversary with a day-long conference at Bakersfield College. Participants were interested in working together to plan for the Central Valley’s future water needs.

One popular proposal was the construction of a tunnel bypassing the Delta bottleneck to bring water into our region. Despite its estimated $13 billion price tag and a fifteen-year completion timeline, this idea has been gaining traction among various stakeholders. Other suggested ways to rehydrate our dry fields include desalination plants and more recycling.

Unfortunately, some political forces are attempting to drown our common interests — and our common sense. … “

Continue reading this commentary at the Fresno Bee by clicking here.

California water plight gets lifeline from technology

Posted by: Maven on November 1, 2011 at 8:53 am

From the Western Farm Press:

“How California can use the latest technology to solve its water supply crisis is the focus of a new Public Broadcast System program co-sponsored by the California Farm Water Coalition.

“This is really a celebration of the creativity and leadership that everyone from family farmers in the Central Valley to the public water agencies that serve our largest cities have implemented in addressing one of California’s biggest challenges for the future,” says Mike Wade, executive director of the California Farm Water Coalition.

The program, “Stretching Our Water Supplies,” will be broadcast on public television stations in California, Oregon and Nevada beginning in November. It is produced by Huell Howser as part of his long-running series on life in California for public television. … “

Continue reading from the Western Farm Press by clicking here.

USGS on YouTube: A study in stream ecology

Posted by: Maven on November 1, 2011 at 8:24 am

From the USGS, posted on YouTube:

“In this episode we explore how scientists for the USGS National Water Quality Assessment Program investigate the ecological health of rivers and streams across the United States. Focusing on a recent sampling effort along the Minam River in northeast Oregon, this video highlights USGS sampling methods for fish, macroinvertebrates (bugs), algae, and habitat. Join us, as we show biometric data can be used to assess the health of streams, only in this episode of the USGS CoreCast.”

Webcast: State Water Board meets today; Update from the Delta watermaster on the agenda

Posted by: Maven on November 1, 2011 at 7:30 am

The State Water Board will be meeting today from 9am to 3pm.   You can read the agenda here.   The last item on the agenda is the update from the Delta watermaster and the presentation of a report to the board,  Statements of Water Diversions and Use: Providing a Better Picture of Water Use in the Delta.

The meeting will be webcast.   You can find webcast information here.

Press release: High Court declines smelt case, but Pacific Legal Foundation’s “save our water” fight continues

Posted by: Maven on October 31, 2011 at 7:59 am

The Pacific Legal Foundation has issued this response:

“”It is disappointing that the Supreme Court chose not to review the federal government’s intrusive and destructive Delta smelt regulations,” said PLF staff attorney Brandon M. Middleton. “But while we’re disappointed, we’re also determined. The legal fight against those regulations goes on, as PLF is active in other litigation over the federal biological opinions for the Delta smelt and other species. Those federal edicts were based on phony science, but their effect has been all too real: They’ve caused devastating water cutoffs that put businesses, farms, and communities on the endangered list.”

“We’ll also keep challenging the feds when they arrogantly ignore the constitutional limits on their power,” said Middleton. “The Delta smelt regulations are far from the only example of federal officials issuing regulations for local species without constitutional authority. We will litigate this issue until the Supreme Court ultimately agrees to take it up. This is a long-term battle to stop federal intrusion that robs people of their livelihoods and liberties, and undermines the basic framework of the Constitution.” … “

Read the full text from the Pacific Legal Foundation by clicking here.

Spectacular time-lapse video of Condit Dam removal

Posted by: Maven on October 31, 2011 at 6:35 am

From National Geographic (hat tip to the Water Sisweb!):

“For 98 years, the 125-foot high Condit Dam in southeastern Washington State held back the White Salmon River, creating a serene lake, but choking off the waterway to salmon. Wednesday, in an historic effort, the dam was dramatically breached, and ecologists hope the increased flow of water will restore the waterway to fish and other aquatic organisms, as well as the birds and mammals that rely on them. … “

Check out the video and continue reading from National Geographic by clicking here. (Note: The really cool part on the video starts at about 1:10 or so.)

Peter Gleick: Bad science leads to bad policy, no matter your political beliefs

Posted by: Maven on October 29, 2011 at 6:43 am

From Peter Gleick at the Huffington Post:

“Anti-science mania is sweeping parts of the United States. This isn’t new — there is a long history of irrational, pseudoscientific, or downright anti-scientific thinking and political culture here — ironic, given how much our founding fathers like Benjamin Franklin valued science. Examples include creationism, moon-landing denialism, claims linking vaccines to autism, denials that tobacco causes cancer long after the science was in, and especially the denial of climate change and global warming. This anti-science mentality is especially discouraging given how vital America’s scientific and technological strengths are to our economic and political strengths.

For reasons that a political scientist or sociologist would have to explore, this is a problem especially of the Republican right. For example, it is most evident in the lockstep, ideological denial of the realities of climate change by nearly all of the Republican presidential candidates and congressional representatives. … “

Continue reading from Peter Gleick at the Huffington Post by clicking here.

Murky Waters: Helix Water District limits input of directors and public in hiring general manager

Posted by: Maven on October 28, 2011 at 7:42 am

From the East County Magazine:

“Without calling for a vote, Helix Water District Board Director DeAna Verbeke announced during the October 19 board meeting that a subcommittee of two board and two staff members, not the full board, will handle screening applications to replace retiring General Manager Mark Weston. Verbeke then appointed herself and board member Chuck Muse (who was absent), to comprise the subcommittee charged with narrowing the field of applications to a handful for the full board to review.

Her announcement drew gasps from the audience and was made over the persistent objections of board member Kathleen Hedberg and the public.

Taking the action without a vote puts the jurisdiction in legally murky water, an attorney specializing in open government laws has informed ECM. … “

Continue reading from East County Magazine by clicking here.

Water Culture blog: Ethics of agricultural water transfers

Posted by: Maven on October 26, 2011 at 7:32 am

From the Water Culture blog (hat tip to John Fleck’s twitter feed):

“California farmers are being paid not to plant so Los Angeles and nearby cities can use the water that would otherwise go to (mostly low value) crops, says an article in the New York Times yesterday. The water is worth a lot when reallocated to urban use, so it’s not hard to offer farmers a lot of money for the privilege of borrowing their water for a season. The blowback from this kind of arrangement is that local farming economies — the ancillary services that depend on crop production as the base of a large economic pyramid (with the bankers on top, but we won’t go into that!) — get undermined when some farmers stop producing. When a lot of farmers stop producing, the local economy suffers even more, and the speculation is that, as with climate change, there is probably a tipping point where local farming-based economies will collapse. … “

Continue reading from the Water Culture blog by clicking here.

Reps, residents and ranchers worry about water exporters control over Delta plan

Posted by: Maven on October 24, 2011 at 7:20 am

From Dan Aiello at the Examiner:

“At an oversight hearing in Sacramento last week, Assemblymember Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael),chairman of the Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee voiced concern that water exporters will have unprecedented control over the content and focus of a plan that would steer the state's water policies for the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta over next fifty years.

The hearing on the Bay-Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP) was the fifth held by Huffman, whose district is stretched from the Delta, the largest wetlands estuary west of the Mississippi, west to coastal communities north of the Golden Gate – many of which are dependent on commercial fishing of the endangered Delta Salmon. … “

Continue reading from the Examiner by clicking here.

First icy star-disc hints at source of Earth’s water

Posted by: Maven on October 21, 2011 at 6:06 am

From Science Daily:

“For the first time, astronomers have found a planet-forming disc around a star that is awash with frozen water. The discovery adds credence to the idea that Earth got its water from comets : especially as the disc seems to contain enough water to fill Earth’s oceans thousands of times over.

Hot water vapour has previously been detected in the inner part of the planet-forming discs of nascent, alien solar systems. But this is too close to the central star to be incorporated into the forming planets.

By contrast, the new observations are of water in the form of ice grains, which can exist only in the frigid outer reaches of a planet-forming disc. It is there that they can ultimately coalesce into planets and comets. … “

Continue reading from Science Daily by clicking here.

Wave of state actions could hike water rates; Possible air board vote, future projects mean more long-term costs

Posted by: Maven on October 19, 2011 at 9:02 am

From the San Diego Union-Tribune:

“Already paying more for using less water, Californians are being warned to brace for even higher rates in the coming years as the state moves on a number of fronts to slow global warming, protect the environment and build a reliable supply network.

Most immediately, the California Air Resources Board on Thursday is expected to approve a sweeping plan to attack greenhouse gas emissions that, by some accounts, could cost the San Diego County Water Authority at least $5 million a year and perhaps much more over time, according to one analysis.

The prospect of higher water fees alarms San Diego County Supervisor Ron Roberts, who also sits on the state air board. … “

Continue reading from the San Diego Union-Tribune by clicking here.

SEE ALSO: The California Water Wars blog covers the story here: Air and Water

Democratic members defend science, Federal scientists at subcommittee hearing

Posted by: Maven on October 18, 2011 at 7:24 am

From the House Committee on Science, Space & Technology:

“Today, at a hearing titled, “The Endangered Species Act: Reviewing the Nexus of Science and Policy,\” the Democratic Members of the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology's Investigations and Oversight Subcommittee examined the problem of political interference with science at the Fish and Wildlife Service. Witnesses before the Subcommittee included Judge Craig Manson, former Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Fish and Wildlife and Parks, and Mr. Douglas Vincent-Lang, Acting Assistant Director of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

Mr. Manson faced pointed questions about his tenure at Interior, during which his then-deputy, Ms. Julie MacDonald, used her post and his support to run roughshod over science staff in the Fish and Wildlife Service. The Inspector General at Interior found that Mr. Manson had enabled and supported Ms. MacDonald's behavior and that her misconduct had cost the taxpayer hundreds of thousands of dollars, at a minimum. … “

Continue reading by clicking here.

California waters show widespread pollution

Posted by: Maven on October 16, 2011 at 7:02 am

From the San Francisco Chronicle:

“Those bracing dips in the local lake or river may not be as healthy as they were cracked up to be judging by a new list of polluted waterways released last week by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Recent tests have found more toxic material, bacteria and pollution in California rivers, streams, bays and lakes than has ever been documented before, according to the federal agency. … “

Continue reading from the San Francisco Chronicle by clicking here.

David Zetland commentary: Southern California’s real water problem : pricing

Posted by: Maven on October 14, 2011 at 8:14 am

From the San Diego Union-Tribune, this commentary by David Zetland:

“Most “water crisis\” stories explore the mismatch between limited supplies and increasing demands and how current scarcity will result in shortage.

Scarcity is not the problem, as it can induce changes in supply and demand. We all understand how those changes happen with gasoline. Consumers respond to higher prices by driving less, carpooling, buying smaller cars, and so on. Producers, likewise, look for new energy sources. At some point, supply and demand balance and gasoline is available : even if it's expensive.

A crisis, or shortage, results when scarcity is ignored and people do not change their behavior. Price controls during the 1970s oil crisis kept people from understanding that gasoline was scarce. Consumers lined up for “cheap\” gas that wasn't there; oil companies : unsurprisingly : did not look for oil for which they'd be paid pennies on the dollar. … “


Continue reading David Zetland’s commentary at the San Diego Union-Tribune by clicking here.

The Dry Garden: How to capture rain

Posted by: Maven on October 8, 2011 at 6:38 am

From the Los Angeles Times Dry Garden column:

“With the first rain of the season comes a question: How best to capture it for the garden There is no single answer. Each property has dramatically different opportunities and challenges. Get it right and rainy season becomes a time of unrivaled beauty and pleasure. Get it wrong and you can ruin your house, or your neighbor's.

TreePeople have a good basic guide. Across much of the Los Angeles basin, water can be banked by following the basic recommendation to direct plastic gutter extenders into planting beds. Take care that the grade of the garden slopes away from the foundation of your house. It is not a good idea to inundate the footing of a structure. … “

Continue reading from The Dry Garden by clicking here.

Fees to increase for many state water programs

Posted by: Maven on September 28, 2011 at 8:47 am

From the California Farm Bureau Federation:

“Fees will be going up for a variety of water-related programs and services. The State Water Resources Control Board voted last week to shift nearly $25 million in new or increased program fees to participants in the programs.

The decision was made after the state cut nearly all General Fund support for board programs. Adopted as an emergency fee-setting regulation, the increases are effective for the 2011-12 fiscal year that began July 1.

Basically, the Legislature shifted the shared cost of water quality programs from taxpayers to permit fee payers, which in this case is largely the state’s farmers and ranchers. … “

Continue reading from the California Farm Bureau Federation by clicking here.

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