California
Newsom rolls back California drought restrictions after remarkably wet winter
On the heels of one among California’s wettest winters on document, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday introduced that he’ll roll again a number of the state’s most extreme drought restrictions and dramatically enhance water provides for companies serving 27 million individuals.
Among the many rescinded objects is Newsom’s name for a voluntary 15% discount in water use, issued amid drying situations in July 2021. He declared a statewide drought emergency that October.
The governor additionally rescinded a March 2022 order requiring city water suppliers to activate Stage 2 of their water scarcity contingency plans, which signifies a scarcity of 20% and prompts elevated conservation actions.
Newsom made the announcement at a ranch within the inexperienced Dunnigan Hills in Yolo County, north of Sacramento, the place rice and almond farmers had been celebrating the moist winter and have been capable of recharge some groundwater provides this season for crops.
However Newsom stopped wanting declaring that the drought is over, saying some elements of his drought emergency order stay vital as California adapts to risky climate patterns and the looming risk of one other lengthy dry spell.
“It’s incumbent upon us to proceed to take care of our vigilance and keep some provisions of the manager order to permit for quick monitoring of groundwater replenishment tasks, stormwater seize and recycling packages right here within the state of California,” he stated.
Provisions round wasteful use will stay in place, together with prohibitions on watering lawns inside 48 hours of rainfall and utilizing hoses with out shut-off nozzles. A ban on watering nonfunctional turf at industrial and industrial properties can be unchanged.
The outstanding turnaround comes after California’s driest three years on document left reservoirs drained and water provides drastically diminished.
A sequence of drenching storms in the beginning of this 12 months helped ease a number of the most excessive drought situations within the state, refilling rivers and reservoirs and delivering near-record snowpack within the Sierra Nevada.
State water companies — which had been girding to obtain solely 35% of requested provides from the State Water Mission this 12 months — will now get 75%, officers from the Division of Water Sources stated. The State Water Mission is an enormous community of reservoirs, canals and dams that acts as a serious element of California’s water system.
“We’ve been in a position to do that due to the sequence of winter storms which have actually offered sturdy flows all through the system,” stated John Yarbrough, assistant deputy director at DWR.
At a 35% allocation, the company would have delivered about 1.4 million acre-feet of water to its 29 member companies, Yarbrough stated. The rise will “greater than double that quantity” to about 3.1 million acre-feet. An acre-foot is roughly 326,000 gallons.
The allocation may enhance much more in April, Yarbrough stated. Nonetheless, he and different officers harassed that the governor’s emergency proclamation was being modified — not eliminated.
“We’re modifying it versus eliminating it as a result of first, there are parts of the state that proceed to expertise acute water shortages,” stated California Pure Sources Secretary Wade Crowfoot. That features the Klamath Basin in far Northern California and parts of Southern California that rely on the Colorado River, he stated.
“We’re additionally sustaining but modifying the proclamation as a result of there are continued emergency impacts and drought situations throughout the state, together with … communities and households that lack ingesting water popping out of their faucets,” Crowfoot stated.
Nonetheless, the change was welcome information after a grueling, bone-dry three years wrought devastation on the lives and companies of thousands and thousands of Californians.
In 2022, vital cuts in water deliveries noticed irrigated farmland shrink by 752,000 acres — chopping crop revenues by $1.7 billion and costing an estimated 12,000 agricultural jobs.
The variety of dry wells soared, significantly within the Central Valley, as farmers continued to suck provides from the bottom to make up for diminished allocations, typically leaving the state’s most susceptible residents with little water and even much less recourse.
City areas additionally noticed unprecedented water restrictions that led to one- and two-day-a-week out of doors watering limits for 7 million individuals in Southern California, amongst different guidelines.
The area’s huge water wholesaler, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, lifted a few of its restrictions final week, nevertheless native water suppliers should have laws in place.
Newsom administration officers stated provisions centered on groundwater provides may even stay in place, together with people who allow the state to help communities with dry wells and reply to emergencies as wanted.
The provisions mirror that “we proceed to have a groundwater drought, a groundwater deficit,” stated Joaquin Esquivel, chair of the State Water Sources Management Board.
Regardless of the floor water surplus, deficits in groundwater gained’t be remedied by a single moist 12 months, he stated.
Crowfoot stated eradicating the 15% voluntary discount is a component of a bigger aim to maneuver away from numeric targets and deal with a “extra sturdy strategy” to creating conservation a lifestyle.
“It’s not about going again to regular anymore — it’s actually adjusting to a brand new regular, and that’s intensifying extremes,” Crowfoot stated. He stated he wouldn’t declare the drought over.
“If we declared the drought over and eliminated any emergency provisions, we’d be unable to shortly and successfully present help the place these situations nonetheless exist,” he stated, comparable to offering bottled water provides to communities whose wells have run dry.
Such “local weather whiplash” conduct — or swings between excessive wetness and dryness — was exemplified by the latest storms, together with lethal blizzards within the San Bernardino Mountains and devastating flooding in Monterey County and the Central Valley.
Water managers stated they’re working to spice up the state’s means to seize and retailer water and to modernize infrastructure underneath the governor’s Technique for a Hotter, Drier California, unveiled final August. These efforts embody latest strikes to divert greater than 600,000 acre-feet of water from the swollen San Joaquin River to assist replenish groundwater basins within the Central Valley.
However state officers additionally acknowledged that Southern California’s different main supply — the Colorado River — stays in dire situation.
The river is a water lifeline that provides about 40 million individuals, however drought and overuse have left its reservoirs dangerously low, with water managers warning that Lake Mead may quickly drop under its lowest consumption valve and successfully reduce off provides for the American West.
Federal officers have ordered California and 6 different states to drastically cut back their use of that river, however to this point no settlement has been reached.
California, in the meantime, has acquired a bounty in contrast to any in latest reminiscence.
Almost 65% of the state is not in drought, the U.S. Drought Monitor exhibits. Simply three months in the past, virtually 100% of the state was mired in some type of dryness.
By Friday, statewide snowpack was 227% of regular for the date. Snowpack within the southern Sierra was 283% of regular — an all-time document.
California’s two largest reservoirs, Lake Shasta and Lake Oroville, had been at 78% and 82% of capability, respectively.
One more storm system may drop extra rain and snow on the state early subsequent week, forecasters stated.
Instances workers author Ian James contributed to this report.
California
'Tis the Season for Science at California Academy of Sciences
SAN FRANCISCO – Two young reindeer lounging in their pen the Saturday before Thanksgiving — the day of their big holiday season premiere at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco — were taking a break after eating lunch.
They were lying around, but children outside the pen were fascinated, pointing, calling out to the deer and doubtlessly wondering why they weren’t training. After all, the reindeer’s biggest day of the year was only about a month away.
The academy employee supervising the scene said they were saving their energy, being from Northern Europe, which is very cold.
Uh-huh. That’s why they save their energy.
Everyone knows why a reindeer needs a lot of extra juice. They’re really saving it for the long trip on Dec. 24.
The academy just opened its annual “‘Tis the Season for Science” program. Besides the young reindeer jolly old Saint Nick lent the academy, there’s festive decor, public programs about visiting animals, music, dance and magic performances, cookie decorating and seasonal photo ops.
There’s also snow periodically falling inside the big presentation space in the center of the museum. The snowflakes were a big hit Saturday, if running, screaming, dancing children trying to catch snow on their tongues were a good indicator.
There are also lots of spots for photo ops and more practical winter wonderland information, like how animals adapt to climate change.
Of course, the best thing about going to the Academy of Sciences during the holidays is having an excuse to do something really cool and tell oneself it’s educational for the kids. It is, but it’s also a lot of fun.
The four-legged holiday visitors are just outside the academy’s eastern end. Baby camels are scheduled to make an appearance Dec. 6, followed by baby yaks on Dec. 20.
They all have a place in holiday lore, but the academy makes sure visitors get some scientific facts as well.
Signs outside the pen explain these two reindeer are only seven months old and recently weaned from mom. They’re tiny but tough, one sign says, and are built for the cold. From birth, reindeer, camels and yaks are adapted to withstand the elements.
Reindeer quickly develop insulation for arctic (North Pole?) life, camels grow thick fur to protect them from chilly desert nights, and yak calves’ sport shaggy coats for high Himalayan mountains.
“As climate change alters and reduces habitats, these species — and many others — face new challenges. Humans can help these resilient young animals thrive by protecting and regenerating ecosystems,” a sign said.
Then there’s of course, the year-round penguin exhibit, which is a favorite, judging by the crowds gathered around the viewing window. Unlike the other animals brought in to celebrate the holidays, penguins are typically from the planet’s (very) deep south, where it’s very cold.
“Every year the academy catches the holiday bug with ‘Tis the Season for Science,’ more than a month of wintry festivities with a special academy science twist,” academy executive director Scott Sampson said in an email. “This year we are stepping up the action with visits by pairs of live baby reindeer, camels, and yaks for two weeks each to explore winter survival adaptations and other unique features of these adorable creatures.
“The museum also is buzzing with other fun and educational activities, including falling snow inside our piazza; seasonal science experiments (think dry ice); and music, dance, and magic performances from over a dozen diverse troupes,” Sampson said.
And, of course, there’s the old favorites, including the world-class Steinhart Aquarium starring Claude the albino alligator, who was very active this day.
The lush, four-story Osher Rainforest dome was full of more than 1,600 butterflies, birds, fish, plants (and tropical humidity – wear layers) and the Morrison Planetarium was mind-boggling, as usual. (Tom Hanks narrating a trip through the universe in “Passport to the Universe” is worth waiting in line for 20-30 minutes).
The California Academy of Sciences is at 55 Music Concourse Drive in San Francisco.
Public hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays. Thursday NightLife is from 6 to 10 p.m. The museum is closed Dec. 4 for a private event.
For more information, go to www.calacademy.org.
California
What California city has the best weather for you? Take our quiz
California has plenty of options when it comes to finding a place with your preferred weather. If you like cool weather, some cities spend nearly the entire year below 70 degrees. If you hate the rain, there are locations that average just a few inches per year.
The Chronicle gathered data about temperature, precipitation, air quality and extreme weather for 61 places across California, including the 20 most populous cities with data available. In total, 53 of the state’s 58 counties are represented in the analysis.
While there may not be a perfect match with everything you’re looking for, this quiz will help pinpoint a place that gets close.
California
California woman dies from Fresno County's first human case of rabies in more than 30 years
A California woman died of rabies after allegedly being bitten by a bat in her classroom, according to Fresno County health officials.
The woman, later identified as Leah Seneng, 60, marks the first human case of rabies in Fresno County since 1992.
“In general, rabies is a disease that affects the brain, and it is very rare. But when it develops, it can cause very serious consequences,” said Dr. Trnidad Solis, Fresno County Health Department’s deputy health officer. “It’s transmitted through saliva; it is not airborne.”
RABIES PATIENT BECOMES FIRST FATAL CASE IN US AFTER POST-EXPOSURE TREATMENT, REPORT SAYS
Seneng, who was an art teacher at Bryant Middle School in Dos Palos, was bitten by the bat when she was attempting to rescue it in her classroom, local outlet ABC30 reported.
She first came into contact with the bat in October, but did not display symptoms until approximately a month later, according to Fresno County health officials. She was admitted to the hospital and died four days later.
PEANUT THE SQUIRREL EARMARKED FOR EUTHANASIA BEFORE BEING CONFISCATED AND WAS RABIES-FREE: REPORT
“The most frequent route of transmission is through the bite of an animal that has rabies. With rabies, unfortunately, there is no cure. So, when symptoms develop, there is no treatment, and often when it develops, it is often fatal. So we want the public to know that prevention is key to preventing rabies infection,” Solis said.
Fresno County officials do not believe there is a threat to public health at this time, but are working with the Merced County Health Department to identify any other possible exposures and administer vaccines.
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Seneng’s coworkers have set up a GoFundMe account to assist her family during this time.
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