Department of Water Resources
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March 27, 2009
Top Items–
More water likely
Conditions improve, but state reservoirs still below average
Capital Press – 3/27/09
By Tim Hearden
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation issued its updated allocation forecast March 20, predicting that as much as 15 percent of average agricultural deliveries may be available for Central Valley Project contractors.
Pete Lucero, the bureau's spokesman in
"This one just takes into account the March 1 snow surveys and runoff data. It doesn't take into account this month so far," Lucero said. "We had pretty significant rainfall early in the month and that data wasn't used."
But as they've been warning all winter, state water officials insist there's still a long way to go before water levels are anything like normal.
If the state Department of Water Resources' prediction of 65 percent of normal runoff for the year comes true, the three-year period ending this year would still be among the driest 8 percent on record, said Steve Nemeth, a civil engineer and water supply forecaster for the agency.
Unfortunately, help in the form of abundant rainstorms doesn't appear to be on the horizon.
Long-term forecasts suggest both above-average temperatures and a pattern of periodic atmospheric troughs that produce rainfall, Palmer said.
"I'm not ready to say the rainy season's over," she said. "It's still only April, but we are looking at a dry forecast for the next week."
In its latest update of allocations for CVP contractors, the Bureau of Reclamation predicted March 20 that 5 percent to 15 percent of normal water deliveries would be available for agriculture north of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
In the
North of the Delta, urban areas would get 55 percent of their water under the dry forecast or 65 percent if the median runoff amount is reached - an achievement that the Bureau predicts has a 50 percent chance of coming true. South of the delta, residential areas would received 50 percent to 65 percent of their water.
Wildlife reserves and water rights holders everywhere would receive between 75 percent and 100 percent of their normal allocations, depending on the amount of runoff that accumulates this spring.
The bureau will continue to issue monthly updates through May or later, depending on how much new information on runoff it receives from the state, Lucero said.
The March 20 update followed the state Department of Water Resources' announcement that it will increase water from state reservoirs from 15 percent of what was requested to 20 percent. Despite recent rains, state officials have been warning that the state remains in a dangerous drought.
Much of
But state reservoirs are still well below average and precipitation totals in March have fallen below normal in many areas.
As of Tuesday, March 24,
Meanwhile,
Court-ordered cutbacks in diversions of water from the delta already had farmers in the
The Bureau of Reclamation made farmers' prospects even bleaker on Feb. 20, when it announced there would likely be no agricultural water available for Central Valley Project contractors. The best the bureau could hope for at the time was to deliver 10 percent of average allocations to farmers.
The state's latest forecast comes after the State Department of Water Resources on March 10 predicted that
That's 10 percent more water than the state had foreseen when looking at Feb. 1 runoff totals, which Reclamation used as the basis for its zero-water scenario.
State officials said they still expected the
Though February precipitation was well above average statewide, runoff was only 65 percent of average for the month, according to the Department of Water Resources' report.
Even a little water is better than none, said Ivar Amen, a
"It will (make a difference) for some guys," Amen said. "Any water can make a difference. ... I just hope the rest of the state can get more than 10 percent."#
http://www.capitalpress.info/main.asp?SectionID=67&SubSectionID=616&ArticleID=49953&TM=62431.99
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