California Water Digest — 2026-07-08
20 item(s) from 10 source(s); 14 flagged (🔔) for your blog keywords.
📰 News & Policy
🔔 DAILY DIGEST, 7/7: Could dredging invasive clams boost fish food in Suisun Marsh?; Can restoration save the Delta smelt?; Why are berries everywhere, in every season? Driscoll’s.; Scientists propose draining Lake Powell to preserve water in Lake Mead; and more …
Maven’s Notebook — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 16:00:30 +0000
[cmtoctableofcontents] Several news sources featured in the Daily Digest may limit the number of articles you can access without a subscription. However, gift articles and open-access links are provided when available. For more open access California water news articles, explore the main page at MavensNotebook.com. On the calendar today … MEETING: State Water Resources Control Board beginning at 9…
🔔 North Bay’s PFAS problem: 5 things to know about a ‘forever chemicals’ hotspot in Ontario
Circle of Blue — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 20:20:14 +0000
Reading Summary: North Bay’s PFAS Problem (The Narwhal / Circle of Blue, June 2026)
Key Facts
- PFAS contamination in North Bay stems from firefighting foam used by the Department of National Defence at 22 Wing CFB and Jack Garland Airport from the early 1970s to mid-1990s; the department knew of elevated levels as early as 2012 but didn’t notify the city until 2016 or the public until 2017.
- Trout Lake — the city’s drinking water source — measured approximately 58 nanograms per litre of PFAS as of February 2026, nearly double Health Canada’s guideline of 30 ng/L (published August 2024).
- Remediation costs have grown five-fold: from an original federal commitment of $19.4 million (2021) to a total project cost now exceeding $122 million, with the city’s share rising from $600,000 to $3.6 million+.
- A proposed class-action lawsuit filed in late 2025 seeks $105 million in damages for residents within a 3-kilometer radius of the base, focused on property value loss — notably excluding health impacts.
- Industrial Plastics Canada opened a factory in North Bay in 2023 and is among Canada’s 10 major importers of PTFE, a Teflon-like PFAS subgroup.
Who Is Affected
- Residents near 22 Wing CFB — some receiving government bottled water for years, with no well access
- City of North Bay — bearing 3% of remediation costs; declined to answer press questions about drinking water status
- Nipissing First Nation — particularly vulnerable as Curtis Avery notes the land serves as a “grocery store” for hunting, fishing, and harvesting
- Ecosystems: Lees, Dorlan, Chippewa, and La Vase Creeks; Trout Lake; Lake Nipissing — all confirmed contaminated
- Canadian public broadly — Statistics Canada reports nearly all Canadians carry PFAS in their bodies, including Arctic and subarctic populations
Policy/Legal Angle
- Health Canada’s guideline: 30 ng/L for 25 PFAS chemicals (August 2024) — advisory only, not binding regulation
- Ontario’s standard: 70 ng/L covering only 11 PFAS chemicals — also non-binding (“just a suggestion”)
- Proposed class-action: filed against the City of North Bay and the Attorney General of Canada (on behalf of DND); seeks punitive damages citing DND’s concealment of known contamination; not yet certified
- 2021 shared responsibility agreement between DND and the city established the cost-sharing framework now being renegotiated upward
- No binding federal PFAS regulation is cited — a notable regulatory gap given the severity of contamination
Blog Angles
- The regulatory gap as a California parallel: Ontario’s non-binding 70 ng/L standard vs. Health Canada’s stricter 30 ng/L guideline mirrors U.S. debates between state and federal PFAS thresholds. How does California’s enforceable MCL for PFAS compare, and does this case argue for binding federal standards over advisory ones?
- The “new factory” problem: Industrial Plastics Canada opened a PTFE-importing facility in North Bay in 2023 — after contamination was publicly known. What does it mean for a community already living with PFAS legacy contamination to simultaneously become a hub for PFAS-related manufacturing? Who approved it, and under what environmental review?
- Cost escalation as a cautionary tale: The 5x jump from $19.4M to $122M in remediation costs — and the five-year delay in disclosure — raises the question: what is the true long-term fiscal liability of PFAS contamination for water utilities and municipalities, and are California agencies budgeting realistically for cleanup?
🔔 Kern River charm offensive hits a bar at agency meeting
SJV Water — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 23:13:05 +0000
Reading Summary: Kern River Charm Offensive
Key Facts
- Bring Back the Kern is conducting a tour of Kern River rights holders’ board meetings, asking them to support a more consistently flowing river through Bakersfield.
- Kern County Water Agency Board President Marty Milobar pushed back sharply, defending agricultural water rights dating to the 1880s and dismissing environmental benefits (“so you can see a toad or something”).
- Milobar previously served as General Manager of Buena Vista Water Storage District (1984–2008), one of the ag districts currently in litigation with Bring Back the Kern — a notable conflict-of-interest angle.
- The City of Bakersfield holds a river right that expires at the end of July 2025, after which the river through town will likely go dry again.
- The California Supreme Court granted a petition to review the 5th District Court of Appeal ruling in July 2025; arguments may be heard in September 2026, with the underlying case scheduled for trial in February 2027.
Who Is Affected
- Agricultural districts with Kern River rights: Buena Vista Water Storage District, Kern Delta Water District, North Kern Water Storage District, Rosedale-Rio Bravo Water Storage District
- City of Bakersfield — rights holder, river operator, and legal defendant
- Bakersfield residents and families using the river corridor (Yokuts Park events)
- Aquatic ecosystems and fish dependent on minimum flows through the city
Policy/Legal Angle
- Public Trust Doctrine — central legal theory in the 2022 lawsuit filed by Bring Back the Kern and Water Audit California, arguing Bakersfield failed to account for environmental and recreational values in river operations
- 2023 preliminary injunction (Judge Gregory Pulskamp) required minimum flows for fish; overturned April 2025 by the 5th District Court of Appeal for lack of a specific finding on adequate flow volume
- California Supreme Court accepted review in July 2025 — this case could produce significant statewide precedent on how the Public Trust Doctrine applies to long-established river water rights
Blog Angles
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Conflict of interest at the dais? Milobar spent 24 years running Buena Vista Water Storage District — a party to the litigation — before becoming board president of the agency he now represents. How does that history shape the agency’s posture, and does it raise governance concerns worth scrutinizing?
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The Public Trust Doctrine on trial: If the California Supreme Court hears arguments in September 2026, this could be a landmark ruling. What would a pro-Public Trust outcome mean for other over-appropriated rivers in the San Joaquin Valley where ag rights also date to the 1800s?
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The charm offensive as organizing strategy: Bring Back the Kern got a warm reception from the Bakersfield Water Committee but a cold one from KCWA. Which rights holders are genuinely persuadable, and could any defections from the ag coalition shift the legal or political dynamics before the 2027 trial?
🔔 Partnership Delivers One-Million-Gallon Reservoir to Banning Heights
ACWA — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:29:41 +0000
Reading Summary: Partnership Delivers One-Million-Gallon Reservoir to Banning Heights
Key Facts
- Banning Heights Mutual Water Company (BHMWC) celebrated the ribbon-cutting of a new one-million-gallon reservoir on June 11, 2026, in the hills above Banning.
- The project was funded primarily by a $3.756 million Department of Water Resources grant, with gap funding provided by San Gorgonio Pass Water Agency (SGPWA) to bridge delays between construction costs and grant reimbursements.
- The reservoir serves 552 people who rely on BHMWC for drinking water.
- The site will anchor a planned Heli-Hydrant location supporting aerial firefighting for Banning, Banning Heights, Banning Canyon, and the Morongo region.
- Site selection was directly informed by the 2020 Apple Fire, which burned more than 33,000 acres nearby and triggered widespread evacuations.
Who Is Affected
- Communities: Banning Heights, Banning, Banning Canyon, and the Morongo region
- Agencies: BHMWC, SGPWA, California Department of Water Resources, City of Banning, Riverside County Flood Control and Water Conservation District
- Organizations: CalMutuals, California Rural Water Association’s Small Systems Water Assistance Program
Policy/Legal Angle
- The article references no specific legislation or court decisions, but the DWR grant signals state investment under California’s water resilience and wildfire preparedness priorities.
- The Heli-Hydrant network concept reflects emerging mutual aid and fire-water infrastructure policy at the regional level.
- SGPWA’s role as a State Water Project contractor is the legal/institutional basis for its gap-funding authority and regional coordination capacity.
Blog Angles
- Small systems, big gaps: How are California’s smallest mutual water companies — like BHMWC serving just 552 people — navigating grant reimbursement timing lags, and is gap funding from larger agencies a scalable model worth examining statewide?
- Heli-Hydrant networks as policy: SGPWA’s regional Heli-Hydrant network is a relatively novel wildfire-water infrastructure concept — how widely is it being adopted across Southern California, and should it be codified in state fire-water planning requirements?
- Apple Fire as a policy catalyst: The 2020 Apple Fire directly shaped this project’s location — what other infrastructure decisions across the region have been reshaped by that fire, and are those lessons being institutionalized?
Belvedere environmental leader tapped for California water board - The Ark newspaper
Google News — CA water — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 23:30:57 GMT
Belvedere environmental leader tapped for California water board The Ark newspaper
Can Winter Grains Prevent Fallowing Fields? - UC Davis
Google News — groundwater/SGMA — Mon, 06 Jul 2026 19:31:24 GMT
Can Winter Grains Prevent Fallowing Fields? UC Davis
Livermore: Earthy Taste, Smell In Tri-Valley Tap Water Caused By Harmless Seasonal Compound, Agency Says - SFGATE
Google News — Bay-Delta — Sat, 04 Jul 2026 07:00:00 GMT
Livermore: Earthy Taste, Smell In Tri-Valley Tap Water Caused By Harmless Seasonal Compound, Agency Says SFGATE
🔔 Lake Powell, a vital reservoir, plunges toward unprecedented low levels as water crisis deepens in US west - The Guardian
Google News — Colorado River — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 14:00:00 GMT
Lake Powell, a vital reservoir, plunges toward unprecedented low levels as water crisis deepens in US west The Guardian
🔔 NOTEBOOK FEATURE: Could dredging invasive clams boost fish food in Suisun Marsh?
Maven’s Notebook — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:55:34 +0000
by Robin Meadows The San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary has been a food desert for fish for two decades and the introduced overbite clam is a major culprit. The fish eat tiny creatures called zooplankton, which in turn eat tiny plant-like organisms called phytoplankton. But overbite clams eat so much phytoplankton that there’s hardly any zooplankton for fish. “It’s a huge problem,” says Madison Dunla…
🔔 Hanford-area groundwater agency extends well reporting deadline, adds workshops
SJV Water — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 18:29:43 +0000
Reading Summary: Mid-Kings GSA Well Registration Extension
Key Facts
- Mid-Kings River Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) extended its well registration deadline to Aug. 17
- Mailing verification codes to landowners with 5 acres or fewer, those who haven’t registered, and those with incomplete registrations
- Two workshops scheduled at Kings County Ag Commissioner’s office, 680 Campus Dr.: July 20 and July 27, 1–3 p.m.
- This GSA registration is separate from the state Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) registration required after the Tulare Lake subbasin was placed on probation in 2024
- State fees — $300 per well and $20 per acre-foot pumped — are currently on hold due to ongoing litigation
Who Is Affected
- Landowners and growers in the Hanford/Kings County area within the Mid-Kings River GSA boundary
- The Tulare Lake subbasin broadly, which is under state probation
Policy/Legal Angle
- Tulare Lake subbasin placed on SWRCB probation in 2024 for lacking an adequate Groundwater Sustainability Plan (under SGMA)
- State-mandated well registration and extraction reporting deadline was May 1
- State fees are suspended pending unspecified legal action
Blog Angles
- What is the legal challenge holding up the $300/well and $20/acre-foot fees — who filed, and what are the grounds?
- Why are two separate well registration systems (GSA and SWRCB) running simultaneously, and does this create compliance confusion for small landowners?
- How does probation status actually change grower obligations on the ground, and are other subbasins watching this as a precedent?
CVWD Welcomes More Than 100 Guests to Annual Water Treatment Plant Tour
ACWA — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:20:07 +0000
Reading Summary: CVWD Annual Water Treatment Plant Tour
Key Facts
- More than 100 community members attended CVWD’s annual Public Water Treatment Plant Tour on June 25th in Rancho Cucamonga
- The tour featured the Lloyd W. Michael Water Treatment Plant, which serves more than 200,000 customers
- CVWD Vice President James Curatalo welcomed attendees and opened the event at the Environmental Learning Center
- Educational booths were hosted by CVWD’s Production, Engineering, and Water Resources departments
- CVWD offers no-cost K-12 field trips and a Water Ranger Summer Camp focused on water science and conservation
Who Is Affected
- Residents of Rancho Cucamonga, and portions of Fontana, Ontario, Upland, and unincorporated San Bernardino County
- Local K-12 students served by CVWD’s educational programs
Policy/Legal Angle
- No specific laws, regulations, or court decisions are cited; the article is primarily a community outreach/public relations piece
Blog Angles
- Public trust through transparency: How effective are utility-hosted tours at building ratepayer confidence — and which other Southern California districts offer similar access?
- Environmental education equity: CVWD offers free K-12 field trips, but who is being reached? Are underserved schools in Fontana or Ontario participating proportionally?
- Infrastructure storytelling: The Lloyd W. Michael Plant serves 200,000+ customers — what are its current capacity challenges or upgrade needs amid regional growth pressures?
🔔 DAILY DIGEST, 7/6: Scientists are now eyeing a possible ‘Mega El Niño’; State Water Project shifts into summer operations; Water: The overlooked issue in California’s 2026 governor race; Colorado River governors say they’re not at a ‘stalemate’ as clock tick - Maven’s Notebook
Google News — CA water — Mon, 06 Jul 2026 16:00:17 GMT
DAILY DIGEST, 7/6: Scientists are now eyeing a possible ‘Mega El Niño’; State Water Project shifts into summer operations; Water: The overlooked issue in California’s 2026 governor race; Colorado River governors say they’re not at a ‘stalemate’ as clock tick Maven’s Notebook
🔔 DWR: Completion of the Disadvantaged Community and Tribal Involvement Grant Program and Release of Summary Report - Maven’s Notebook
Google News — groundwater/SGMA — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:52:49 GMT
DWR: Completion of the Disadvantaged Community and Tribal Involvement Grant Program and Release of Summary Report Maven’s Notebook
What’s that smell?: Zone 7 says tap water is safe despite funky odor - Pleasanton Weekly
Google News — Bay-Delta — Thu, 02 Jul 2026 00:57:13 GMT
What’s that smell?: Zone 7 says tap water is safe despite funky odor Pleasanton Weekly
Forget Western Water War: Local Managers Choose Partnership - Circle of Blue
Google News — Colorado River — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 10:00:00 GMT
Forget Western Water War: Local Managers Choose Partnership Circle of Blue
🔔 HIGH COUNTRY NEWS: Can restoration save the Delta smelt?
Maven’s Notebook — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:55:17 +0000
In the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, new wetlands await the threatened fish. by Mark Schapiro, High Country News This story was produced in collaboration with Bay Nature, a nonprofit news organization that connects the people of the San Francisco Bay Area more deeply with the natural world. Visit Bay Nature to read “Price-Tagging Nature,” Mark Schapiro’s in-depth look at the compensatory mitigatio…
🔔 Water Management Plans Project Reliable Water Supplies Through 2050
ACWA — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 15:15:05 +0000
Reading Summary: Water Management Plans Project Reliable Water Supplies Through 2050
Key Facts
- Rowland Water District (RWD) Board unanimously adopted the 2025 Regional Urban Water Management Plan (RUWMP) and companion Water Shortage Contingency Plan (WSCP) following a May 19 public hearing
- The RUWMP formally found that the region has adequate and reliable water supplies to meet projected demands through 2050, even under extended drought conditions
- The WSCP defines six progressively stricter shortage levels, ranging from up to 10% shortage to greater than 50% shortage, each with specific conservation measures and restrictions
- RWD partnered with Three Valleys Municipal Water District and six other retail agencies to develop the plan regionally, splitting costs to reduce ratepayer impact
- State law requires urban water management plans every five years, projecting 25 years ahead
Who Is Affected
- Rowland Water District customers in Rowland Heights
- Three Valleys Municipal Water District and six unnamed retail partner agencies
- Residential and business customers relying on the regional water supply portfolio
Policy/Legal Angle
- Plan is mandated under California’s Urban Water Management Planning Act (requires updates every five years)
- The companion Water Shortage Contingency Plan is a separate state requirement
- Plans must account for climate change and regulatory requirements — signaling alignment with broader state climate adaptation mandates
Blog Angles
- Regional collaboration as a cost model: RWD split planning costs across eight agencies — is this becoming a best practice statewide, and which districts are still going it alone at higher ratepayer expense?
- What’s inside the six shortage tiers?: The WSCP’s graduated response levels (10% to 50%+) are rarely scrutinized publicly — what specific restrictions kick in at each stage, and how do they compare to neighboring districts’ plans?
- Testing the “reliable through 2050” claim: The finding of reliability “even under extended drought” deserves examination — what assumptions about imported water, groundwater, and recycled water underpin that projection given accelerating climate uncertainty?
⚖️ Courts & Legal
🔔 SITES RESERVOIR: Notice of supplemental hearing and procedural ruling - Maven’s Notebook
Google News — water litigation — Sat, 27 Jun 2026 18:52:48 GMT
SITES RESERVOIR: Notice of supplemental hearing and procedural ruling Maven’s Notebook
🔔 AAPI secure right to reliable water access in lawsuit settlement - AsAmNews
Google News — water litigation — Tue, 30 Jun 2026 19:27:49 GMT
AAPI secure right to reliable water access in lawsuit settlement AsAmNews
🪶 California Tribal Water
🔔 Largest tribal water rights settlement in U.S. history stalls due to four states - KUNM
Google News — tribal water rights — Tue, 07 Jul 2026 23:44:00 GMT
Largest tribal water rights settlement in U.S. history stalls due to four states KUNM
🏛️ Water Board Agendas
✍️ Blog Writing Prompts
Flagged items worth writing about today:
- DAILY DIGEST, 7/7: Could dredging invasive clams boost fish food in Suisun Marsh?; Can restoration save the Delta smelt?; Why are berries everywhere, in every season? Driscoll’s.; Scientists propose draining Lake Powell to preserve water in Lake Mead; and more …
- North Bay’s PFAS problem: 5 things to know about a ‘forever chemicals’ hotspot in Ontario
- Kern River charm offensive hits a bar at agency meeting
- Partnership Delivers One-Million-Gallon Reservoir to Banning Heights
- Lake Powell, a vital reservoir, plunges toward unprecedented low levels as water crisis deepens in US west - The Guardian
- SITES RESERVOIR: Notice of supplemental hearing and procedural ruling - Maven’s Notebook
- Largest tribal water rights settlement in U.S. history stalls due to four states - KUNM
- NOTEBOOK FEATURE: Could dredging invasive clams boost fish food in Suisun Marsh?