The drought is not yet over, but this year’s wet and snowy storms have delivered enough water for California to ease residential restrictions, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced March 24.
The governor also increased allocations to water districts, providing them with 75 percent of requested water supplies, instead of the 35 percent announced in February.
That was before the state was deluged by atmospheric river storms, bomb cyclones, and winter weather beginning in December. Storms are forecast to continue next week.
Recent ample rainfall has allowed the state to provide adequate water for the environment and endangered fish species and to pump the maximum amount of water allowed under state and federal permits into reservoir storage south of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, a region rich in farmland.
“California continues to experience weather whiplash, going from extreme drought to at least 19 atmospheric rivers since late December. It really demonstrates that in times of plenty, we need to move as much water into storage as is feasible,” said water department director Karla Nemeth in a release Friday.
The California State Water Project, a water storage and delivery system that extends more than 705 miles, will make more water available to any contractor who can store it in their own system, including using it to recharge groundwater.
The governor’s actions won’t end the need to save water, Newsom said, but it will send the issue back to local communities to decide when or how much water to conserve.
California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot, who oversees the state’s environmental protection policies, said Friday’s announcement was “positive news.”
“Mother Nature in many ways has given us a great gift,” he said.