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Water hopes
drying up
Zero-allocation foreseen , but some try to stay
optimistic
Tim Hearden
Capital Press
February 26, 2009
 |
| A
young girl calls to her mother from the dock of
a lagoon off the Sacramento River in Anderson.
Though recent rains have left many waterways
teeming with water, the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation has announced severe cutbacks to
Central Valley Project contractors. |
 |
 |
|
Glenn Ridlon of Redding, rides along the
Sacramento River in Anderson on Wednesday, Feb.
18. If rains continue, the Bureau of Reclamation
could implement allocations under what it calls
its median forecast. |
Zero may
not necessarily mean zero.
Central Valley farms in California might get some
federal water as a result of the recent rain and snow,
but it would take "an incredible storm" to get them a
significant amount.
So asserts Don Glaser, director of the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation's Mid-Pacific Region based in Sacramento.
"I don't see that as being reasonably likely," Glaser
told a gathering of reporters and local farmers in
Redding on Friday, Feb. 20.
The third straight year of drought in the state could
leave Central Valley Project contractors with no water
for agriculture, Glaser announced in one of three press
conferences held throughout the state.
Even if water runoff exceeds 55 percent of the
historical average in the state, the best that farmers
could likely hope for from their water districts is 10
percent of their normal allocations, Glaser said.
"It would just take an unprecedented event" to increase
that allocation, the director said.
The bureau's projections were based on Feb. 1 runoff
totals. Since then, many communities in California have
received better-than-average precipitation , as a steady
barrage of rain and snow has left some estuaries teeming
with water.
Last weekend, a storm covered virtually the entire state
and drenched some areas in the north. Marysville-Yuba
City and Napa each registered more than two inches of
rain in essentially a 48-hour period from Saturday night
to Monday night, and rainfall was so heavy at times on
Monday that Interstate 5 was flooded out at Lakehead,
about a half-hour north of Redding.
The deluge dumped 3 to 5 inches of rain over the Shasta
Lake inflow in a few hours on Monday, and the lake rose
7.43 feet from early Monday to early Tuesday, the
Redding Record Searchlight reported.
As of Tuesday, Feb. 24, Redding had received 8.54 inches
of rain in February, nearly double the norm of 4.54 for
the month so far, but its seasonal total of 16.93 inches
is still well below the average of 22.67 inches.
In Fresno, 2.43 inches of rain has fallen so far this
month, well above the 1.72 inches that would have
normally come. But the city's 6.15 inches since July 1
is below the average of 7.25 inches.
The weekend storm - and another one that was expected
for Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 26-27 - are part of a
wet pattern that promises to linger into March, said
Brooke Bingaman, a National Weather Service forecaster
in Sacramento.
Another "healthy wet system" could arrive by Saturday,
dropping an inch or so in Stockton and up to 3 inches in
Redding and Red Bluff, Bingaman said. The mountains
could see another 4 to 5 feet of snow, she said.
"It's definitely looking a lot more optimistic than it
was back in January," said Bingaman. Adding that
forecasters believe we're back into a typical winter
pattern.
"Hopefully it will bring us closer to normal for the
winter season, or maybe even above normal," she said.
"Of course, we're still trying to make up for the last
two winters that were dry, but ... at least we can stop
the bleeding if we continue this wet pattern into
March."
If the rain continues, the Bureau of Reclamation could
implement allocations under what it calls its median
forecast. Under that scenario, ag would get 10 percent
of its normal deliveries while urban areas would get 60
percent and wildlife reserves and water rights holders
would get full allocations.
The bureau estimates there's a 50 percent chance that
enough runoff will occur to trigger its median forecast.
The zero-allocation for ag is foreseen under the
bureau's dry-year forecast, which it predicts has a 90
percent chance of being exceeded.
It not only depends on how much rain falls, but where it
falls, Glaser said. In some situations, a heavy rain
could cause "localized flooding but no improvement to
the water supply," he said.
As it is, Shasta Lake has 800,000 fewer acre feet than
it did a year ago, when it was then 1 million acre feet
below what it typically contains at this time of year,
he said.
In a normal year, Reclamation delivers between 6 million
and 7 million acre feet to its Central Valley Project
contractors above and below the Sacramento-San Joaquin
River Delta.
This year, it expects to deliver only about 3 million
acre feet to users.
"We estimate that there will be about 1 million acres of
land north and south of the delta that will not receive
water," Glaser said.
The state's Department of Water Resources is set to
update its runoff forecast on March 10, taking into
account the recent storms. It'll take the bureau a
couple of weeks to analyze the forecast before it
updates its own forecasts, Glaser said.
Glaser said he believes final allocations will fall
somewhere in between the bureau's dry-forecast and
median-forecast scenarios.
"It's going to take a lot to make up for two years of
critically dry conditions," he said.
Staff writer Tim Hearden is based in Shasta Lake.
E-mail: thearden@capitalpress.com.
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