• 'Why was no one held accountable?' Gray calls for state audit over wate

    From Democrat Incompetence@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 30 22:17:51 2022
    XPost: ca.water, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    Assemblyman Adam Gray says he has asked California’s Legislative Audit Committee to audit the Department of Water Resources and State Water
    Resources Control Board after the state miscalculated Sierra Nevada water.

    According to a news release from Gray’s office, the loss of 700,000 acre-
    feet of water last year prompted his audit request. Gray said the water
    could have supplied 1.4 million California homes for a year.

    “Why was no one held accountable after the state grossly miscalculated how
    much moisture was actually stored in the Sierras last year?” Gray, D-
    Merced, said in the release.

    Other public agencies, including a federal agency that measures the
    snowpack and local irrigation districts, didn’t make similar mistakes, according to Gray’s office.

    The Department of Water Resources released an unknown quantity of water
    before the spring runoff last year, just before last year’s drought that
    saw some domestic wells go dry and some cities run out of water
    completely.

    Juvenile salmon in the Sacramento River and its tributaries were also
    victims of the water loss, Gray’s office said.

    “The water is long gone,” Gray wrote in an opinion column published Monday
    on CalMatters. “All we are left with is questions.”

    The announcement of the audit comes the same day as new restrictions
    ordered by Gov. Gavin Newsom, who mandated that cities and local water
    agencies reduce their water usage and tighten conservation rules.

    While he didn’t agree to institute mandatory urban water use statewide, he ordered urban water agencies to follow through on the second phase of
    their water shortage contingency plans. Those plans are meant to take
    effect when water shortages approach 20%.

    Just last month, the Department of Water Resources released nearly three
    times the normal water flows from Lake Oroville, the largest state-
    operated reservoir despite climatologists all over the country warning of
    a resumption of the drought, according to the news release.

    “Until we understand what has gone wrong with the agencies charged with managing California’s water, we cannot understand how to fix the problem,”
    Gray wrote.

    Drought concerns linger
    The announcement comes just weeks after the state announced a cutback to
    5% in water deliveries from the State Water Project, citing continuing dry weather. That in itself was a reversal from its previous allocation
    increase in January, signaling how much state officials are grappling with California’s characteristic wild swings in weather.

    Amid the state’s water woes, Merced Irrigation District officials are
    doing their best to deliver water to local growers despite the challenges
    from the state.

    MID officials just announced last week the completion of a $6 million main canal rehabilitation to bolster water delivery to Merced-area farmers,
    although surface water allocations from the district were reduced while
    costs went up.

    The latest effort by the state to mitigate the effects of the drought
    might come too little, too late for many growers here, especially since officials with MID worried in a recent board meeting that the wet season
    wasn’t wet enough to yield more than one acre-foot of water in the dry
    season for many of the farmers it serves.

    The Bay Delta plan, which was introduced by the state several years ago
    and will divert 50% of Merced County’s share of Lake McClure water,
    exacerbate those woes.

    https://news.yahoo.com/why-no-one-held-accountable-120000382.html

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