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California

Governor Newsom’s Drought Declaration Intensifies Water Conservation Measures

October 29, 2021 by Molly Troup

2021 is on track to be the driest year recorded in California since 1924. In October, Governor Gavin Newsom declared a drought emergency for the entire state of California, extending the declaration already active in 50 counties to the eight remaining counties—Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Imperial, San Francisco, and Ventura. Under the proclamation, water suppliers are asked to prepare for the possibility of another dry year ahead.  

“As the western U.S. faces a potential third year of drought, it’s critical that Californians across the state redouble our efforts to save water in every way possible,” Newsom said. 

What Does a State-Wide Declaration Mean?

The drought declaration authorizes California’s water regulators to ban wasteful water use such as spraying down public sidewalks or using potable water in decorative fountains and authorizes the Office of Emergency Services to provide assistance and funding under the California Disaster Assistance Act to support the emergency response and delivery of drinking water and water for public health and safety.

The declaration also requires municipalities to implement their water shortage contingency plans at “a level appropriate to local conditions that take into account the possibility of a third consecutive dry year.”

Currently, all water providers within Santa Barbara County are maintaining their water supply stages at either Stage I or Stage II. Water shortage contingency plans typically include a scale ranging from a normal supply stage with no water supply reductions to Stage 1 through IV or more, with corresponding water restrictions. Each stage defines actions that a municipality will take to address a supply shortage.

Local water agencies encourage community members to use water resources as efficiently as possible.

The City of Santa Barbara’s Enhanced Urban Water Management Plan outlines strategies for managing the City’s water supplies under drought conditions. City staff is currently using the plan to manage local water resources and guide decision-making. They will update the Water Commission and City Council on potential next steps in drought response during the spring of 2022.

Conservation is Key

Although the drought declaration does not include firm water conservation mandates for Californians, it sets the stage for water restrictions in the future. For now, citizens are asked to voluntarily reduce their water usage by 15% as compared to 2020. As the state enters a potential third year of drought, the need to intensify local water conservation efforts is clear.

The State Water Resources Control Board recently reported that on the Central Coast (which includes Santa Barbara), water consumption appears to be moving in the right direction, but more is needed—with urban water use 5.2% less than in August 2020. Ventura County (included in the South Coast region) used 3.1% less water than in August 2020. Because of the severity of the drought conditions and projections for a warmer and dryer La Niña winter, our community needs to do more to reach the conservation goal that the Governor has called for and to ensure that we make water conservation a way of life.  

What can you do?

Take your water conservation to the next level. Explore ways to use water more efficiently and further reduce your water consumption. Here are a few ways to intensify your water conservation efforts:

  1. Learn about easy ways to save water throughout your daily routines with better habits like turning the water off while brushing teeth, washing hands, or shaving and washing only full loads in the dishwasher or laundry machine. Set a timer to limit your shower to 5 minutes or less and recycle indoor water use on plants.
  2. Review your household water use with a water audit to see where you can effectively implement conservation measures.  
  3. Get a free water checkup for additional help with assessing water usage on your property and ways to save water and money on water bills. 
  4. Take a tour of your yard to determine how much water your landscaping really needs, where you can capture rain, disconnect downspouts, and reduce paved or compacted areas that prevent water from penetrating the soil. Check your sprinkler system for leaks and make other irrigation adjustments to stay on track with your water savings. Contact Channelkeeper to purchase a kit that converts a wine or beer barrel into a rain barrel.  
  5. Plant a water-wise organic garden and replace water-thirsty plants with drought-tolerant ones. Check for landscaping rebates to help make your yard or garden more water wise. 
  6. Check your local city for rebates that are offered for water conservation tools like the Flume Smart Home Water System, high efficiency washing machines, rain shut-off sensors, and much delivery.  
  7. Install a greywater harvesting system that diverts water from your washing machine (which would otherwise go to the sewage treatment plant) and reuses it to irrigate outdoor plants and trees. 

Filed Under: News, Outreach, Uncategorized Tagged With: California, drought, drought declaration, governor Newsom, water supply

California Can Lead the Fight for Clean Water

April 29, 2021 by Santa Barbara Channelkeeper

It’s been 50 years since an ember from a passing rail car ignited contamination on the surface of the Cuyahoga River. In the 1960’s, the waterway flowed through Cleveland past steel mills, manufacturing plants, and a paint factory, taking in their waste streams. Over the years, the oily debris caught fire a total of 13 times, but on June 22, 1969, it burned for the last time—and the image of a burning river became iconic of a movement.  

When the Clean Water Act became law in 1972, it established the basic structure for regulating discharges of pollutants into the waters of the US and regulating quality standards for surface waters. The Clean Water Act set a goal to restore and maintain clean water across the nation by 1985. 

But in the nearly 50 years since, we have failed to fulfill the promise of clean water. Across the US, lakes and streams languish under toxic levels of pollutants, while groundwater and drinking water supplies are threatened.  

In California, a state that takes pride in upholding some of the strongest water laws in the country, 95% of all waters remain too polluted to swim, fish, or drink. Underserved communities​, including many along our own Central Coast, are hit the hardest, where local water is disproportionately likely to be contaminated and undrinkable. 

In Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties, polluted runoff and agricultural discharges continue to pollute our coastal waters. In some areas, stormwater, carrying pollutants, pathogens, pesticides, fertilizers, trash, sediment, and heavy metals continues to flow directly to our creeks and ocean, affecting water quality, endangering wildlife, and making recreation unsafe.    

After half a century with the Clean Water Act in place, why does toxic contamination continue to threaten our water resources? Loopholes in permits that allow polluted discharges to continue unabated, a lack of strong enforcement of clean water laws that prevent them from meeting their goals, and insufficient resources dedicated toward cleaning up our waterways.   

This must change, and California has the means to do it. This year, California Coastkeeper Alliance and Assemblymember Robert Rivas introduced the California Clean Water Act (Assembly Bill 377), which restores the original intent of the national Clean Water Act from 1972. The bill will put our state on track to eliminate polluted waterways and make all California waters drinkable, swimmable, and fishable by 2050. It achieves this by closing permit loopholes, ensuring proper enforcement of clean water laws, and dedicating more resources toward restoring impaired waters. 

Santa Barbara Channelkeeper is proud to support this bill. We stand with fellow members of the California Coastkeeper Alliance in advocating for stronger, more enforceable policies to protect our water resources.  

We believe that it’s time to make good on our nation’s promise of clean water, and that 36 years past the original deadline, California can lead the way. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: California, clean water, pollution

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NAVIGATION
  • About
    • Our Mission & Vision
    • Our Team
    • Our Boat
    • Our History
    • Our Impact
    • About the Santa Barbara Channel
    • About Local Watersheds
    • Strategic Framework
    • Financial Information
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
  • Our Work
    • Education
      • Student Art Show
    • Community Engagement
      • Cruise Ship Advocacy
      • Report Pollution
      • Volunteer
      • Water Conservation
      • Oil Spill Resource Guide
      • Film Plastic Recyling
      • Action Alerts
    • Field Work
      • Beach Water Quality
      • Stream Team
        • Water Quality Indicators
        • Stream Team Data Portal
        • Leydecker Archives
      • MPA Watch
      • Cruise Ship Monitoring
      • Ocean Acidification
    • Advocacy
      • Aquaculture Advocacy
      • Polluted Runoff
      • Agriculture
      • Oil & Gas
        • Protecting the Coast from Sable Offshore’s Pipeline Restart
        • Refugio Oil Spill
        • Oil Spill Resource Guide
        • Platform Decommissioning
        • Legacy Oil Wells
        • Offshore Fracking
      • Ventura River
      • Plastic
        • Film Plastic Recyling
      • Marine Protected Areas
        • MPA Watch
      • Water Supply
        • Desalination
        • Conservation
    • Enforcement
      • Ventura River
      • Offshore Fracking
      • Agriculture
      • Sewage
      • Ojai Quarry
      • Halaco
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