A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
October 22, 2008
2. Supply –
State, Tuolomne Utilities District battle over Pinecrest Lake
McClatchy News
When will it rain?
Summer ended a month ago, but warm weather has lingered, raising concerns about fire danger and the region's water supply
Santa Rosa Press Democrat
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State, Tuolomne Utilities District battle over Pinecrest Lake
McClatchy News – 10/22/08
By Michael Doyle, staff
State officials have one idea about managing the lake; the Tuolumne Utilities District has another. Now, with potential lawsuits looming and federal regulators waiting, lawmakers are starting to weigh in.
"It's very important to have a utility district that can operate and provide services to its customers," Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa, said Tuesday
But the Tuolumne Utilities District, now joined by Radanovich, complains conditions imposed by the State Water Resources Control Board could threaten future water supplies. The water board wants to even out the flow of water from Pinecrest, while maintaining levels high enough for recreation use. Potentially, these goals conflict with the utility district's supply needs.
"The (plan will) impose an unjustified and arbitrary reservoir elevation that disrupts and curtails the longstanding domestic water supply that has been the principal source of (the Tuolomne Utilities District's) water," utility district attorney Jesse Barton declared in writing.
The state water board, though, insists more control is needed over Pinecrest releases. For the first time, the water board would set a target elevation of 5,610 feet for the
"The current license ... has few restrictions on the timing and shaping of water supply," federal regulators noted in a key environmental study, whereas consistently "maintaining lake levels ... would extend the recreational season and therefore increase recreational opportunities."
So now, Radanovich and the utility district are flexing their muscles on both coasts.
In a phone call Monday, and subsequent letter, Radanovich urged the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to delay relicensing until the Tuolumne Utility District's concerns are mollified. In Sacramento, tellingly citing a desire to "avoid the burden and expense of duplicative litigation," the utility district and state water board have agreed to stay out of court at least until the water board reconsiders its earlier plan.
A FERC official told Radanovich on Monday that the agency would take seriously the request to postpone licensing while the dispute is resolved. In theory, the agency might have issued another license at any time.
PG&E filed its Spring Gap-Stanislaus renewal application in December 2002. Federal licensing for hydropower projects take a long time, cost a lot of money and involve many tradeoffs. For instance, the state is requiring PG&E to construct a fish screen at the entrance to the Stanislaus Power Tunnel. The utility also will have to pay $20,000 for state officials to stock
The five-member water board signed off on the proposal last month, including a plan for regulating water flows and lake levels. The highly detailed, 23-page plan specifying how much water flows, and when, was then sent to
The Spring Gap-Stanislaus Project is on the middle and south forks of the
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/54544.html
When will it rain?
Summer ended a month ago, but warm weather has lingered, raising concerns about fire danger and the region's water supply
Santa Rosa Press Democrat – 10/22/08
By Clark Mason
Rain, which averages just less than 2 inches in Santa Rosa during October, hasn't been in the forecast all month and isn't on the horizon any time soon. And weather prognosticators are predicting a drier than usual November.
That's not a formula for replenishing reservoirs or ending the threat of fire season.
With two successive years of below-normal rainfall, including the driest spring on record,
But now, the call for water conservation is expected to extend beyond the end of October.
"Using less, less is more -- that's the continued message throughout the winter," said Brad Sherwood, spokesman for the Sonoma County Water Agency, which serves 600,000 households in
He said there is plenty of water in
State water officials say that statewide as of Oct. 1, storage was about 73 percent of average, much better than in the drought year of 1977, when it was a dismal 35 percent of average.
But fire officials are urging continued caution.
"We're in the peak of the fire season still. If we had rain on the horizon -- a couple of inches -- we would start downsizing," said Cal Fire Capt. Mike Wilson of the Sonoma-Lake-Napa office. "People still need to be as vigilant as they have been during the hottest part of the summer."
From there, he said fire officials will take a good hard look at weather conditions to determine staffing levels.
"Fall can be the most volatile time for most large destructive fires. They happen normally in September, October, early November,"
He said low humidity combined with offshore, hot, dry winds that can blow through the night make for a perilous autumn for firefighters.
Don't expect much rain to ease the threat, at least according to the National Weather Service's
Forecaster Ed O'Lenic, who made the prediction, said Tuesday the cause is "weak, cold event conditions in the
He said there are some remaining symptoms of La Niña, associated with cooler-than-normal surface waters in the mid-Pacific, near the equator.
La Niña tends to means a dry winter for Southern California and a soaking for the
But there is no La Niña, or El Niño expected this winter, said Mike Halpert, deputy director of the
That's why his agency is basically neutral on forecasting the upcoming winter rains in
"We don't see a climate-forcing pattern coming out of the tropical Pacific, at least a predictable one we understand," he said.
He noted "seasonal forecasts are very difficult to do."
Halpert said the forecast for a dry November is certainly not absolute.
Sherwood, the spokesman for the Water Agency, said the water supply in
"In terms of levels, we would have to see probably many consecutive years of dry weather before we have to worry," he said.
But declining levels of Lake Mendocino, which is about 50 miles north of where Lake Sonoma releases enter the Russian River, are a big concern because that water is released into the river to help the chinook salmon migration.
"With a dry winter or dry November we have to monitor that (
In the past two years the Water Agency has successfully requested its client cities, including
That has allowed less water to be pumped out of the
He said that as of Oct. 19, 328 chinook have migrated up the Russian River past the rubber dam near Forestville, "a good indicator migration is taking place and every drop counts for the fish, especially on the upper Russian River."
But with a dry winter, he said continued conservation efforts take on even greater importance.
"Even if there's a torrential downpour in November people should use less water," he said. "We have to save for the bad years because we don't know what's going to happen. The climate is fluctuating so much."#
http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20081022/NEWS/810220329/1349?Title=When_will_it_rain_
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