Gov. Jerry Brown, standing on a patch of brown grass in the Sierra Nevada that is usually covered with several feet of snow at this time of year, on Wednesday announced the first mandatory water restrictions in California history.
“It’s a different world,” he said. “We have to act differently.”
Brown was on hand Wednesday as state officials took stock of historically abysmal levels of snowpack in the Sierra Nevada amid the state’s grinding drought.
Brown ordered the California Water Resources Control Board to implement mandatory restrictions to reduce water usage by 25%. The water savings are expected to amount to 1.5 million acre-feet of water over the next nine months.
Other elements of Brown’s order would:
–Require golf courses, cemeteries and other large landscaped spaces to reduce water consumption.
–Replace 50 million square feet of lawn statewide with drought-tolerant landscaping as part of a partnership with local governments.
–Create a statewide rebate program to replace old appliances with more water- and energy-efficient ones.
–Require new homes to have water-efficient drip irrigation if developers want to use potable water for landscaping.
–Ban the watering of ornamental grass on public street medians.
–Call on water agencies to implement new pricing models that discourage excessive water use.
–Require agricultural to report more water usage information to the state so that regulators can better find waste and improper activities.
–Create a mechanism to enforce requirements that water districts report usage numbers to the state.
That rain has helped refill the state’s reservoirs. As of Monday, Lake Oroville — the keystone reservoir of the California State Water Project, which delivers water from Northern California to the south — was at 51% of itscapacity, compared with 49% a year ago. Lake Shasta, the state’s largest reservoir, had about 150 billion gallons more water in it Monday than it did a year ago.
In early March, state officials also announced that customers of the State Water Project will get 20% of their contract requests, compared with only 5% in 2014.
But Central Valley farmers without senior water rights are likely to get no supplies from the valley’s big federal irrigation project for the second year in a row. And in April, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which imports supplies from Northern California and the Colorado River, is expected to consider rationingregional water deliveries, as it did during the 2007-09 drought. That decisionwill have a ripple effect throughout the Southland as local agencies react, probably by increasing water rates and adopting stricterconservation measures.
In a first step toward bolstering such measures, the State Water Resources Control Board beefed up its emergency drought regulations this month, directing urban agencies to limit the number of days residents can water their yards.
The board also warned that it would impose tougher restrictions in coming months if local agencies don’t ramp up conservation efforts.
At the time, board Chairwoman Felicia Marcus called the state’s minuscule snowpack “just terrifying.”
“We are not seeing the level of stepping up and ringing the alarm bells that the situation warrants,” Marcus said.
Brown and lawmakers have responded to the drought with new legislation, including a $1-billion plan the governor signed last week.
It includes $127.8 million for food and water supplies and immediate measures to protect the environment from the effects of the drought. Most of the funding is for long-term projects such as recycling sewage water, improving water treatment facilities and supporting desalination plants.