California's Water Bureaucrats Are Making a Bad Drought Worse
Fifty percent of the state's water flows to the Pacific Ocean. Another 40 percent is used for agriculture. But it's average residents who are being forced to cut back.

Are California's reservoirs half-full or half-empty? The state's largest reservoirs—Lake Oroville and Lake Shasta—are exceedingly low for this time of year, with the former at 55 percent of capacity and the latter at 40 percent of capacity. However, my snarky question isn't about water levels, but about policy makers' attitudes toward our water crisis.
Do California officials see the current, dire drought situation as an opportunity or an unfixable crisis?
Most of the reporting has focused on the latter, for obvious reasons. Despite recent rainstorms, 60 percent of California is experiencing extreme drought and 95 percent experiencing severe drought. As a result, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the nation's largest water provider, is mandating 35-percent reductions in household consumption.
If there's too little stored water, there's little that water agencies can do other than ration it. While the 19-million residents served by MWD will face a summer of annoyances, the Central Valley's residents are facing threats to their farm-based economy. Reports suggest that new groundwater pumping restrictions will fallow millions of acres of prime California farmland.
The crisis talk is leading to the usual blather—and water shaming. As ABCNews7 reported, "Water usage jumped nearly 19 percent in March, which was one of the driest months on record" despite pleas from state officials to slash usage by 15 percent. On closer inspection, the big monthly jump was no big deal given that water usage still is down 3.7 percent since last July.
Consider this amazing statistic from our even-drier neighbor. Arizona uses less water overall than it did in the 1950s, when the population was one-seventh its current level. Californians usually meet the state's increasingly aggressive conservation targets, but our individual efforts inevitably run into the concept of "diminishing returns."
Nearly 50 percent of the state's available water flows to the Pacific, 40 percent goes to farms and 10 percent goes to urban users. Residences use 5.7 percent of the state's water, with half of that going to pools and landscaping. Conservation is a good idea during times of scarcity. But why are environmentalists and regulators fixated on squeezing more drops from those who use the least?
It's almost as if they are more intent on punishing Californians for our lifestyles than funneling more water into our system to assure that everyone has the water that they need. Go figure. Despite the grueling drought—and it comes only a few years after the previous grueling drought—our state hasn't noticeably shifted its priorities.
After the California Coastal Commission's notoriously anti-growth staff tried to derail a privately funded desalination plant that can meet 16 percent of Orange County's water needs, Gov. Gavin Newsom stepped up and said some encouraging things—which even earned him a favorable editorial from the Southern California News Group.
"We need more tools in the damn tool kit," Newsom told the Bay Area News Group during a recent interview, in which he touted the Poseidon de-salter. Newsom even used my favorite terminology as he pitched an "all of the above" approach to the water situation. Hence, that raised my hope that the reservoir is, so to speak, half-full. Yet, sadly, we got the answer to my earlier question late Thursday, as the commission itself unanimously rejected the Poseidon plant.
The commission's executive director said its rejection "does not mean that we're setting the stage for the denial of all desal facilities or other critical infrastructures across the state," but in reality it's the end of desalination in California. Who is going to spend 20 years developing a project only to meet this fate?
California needs to build appropriate water-storage facilities to capture more water during rainy years (and, yes, we'll have rainy years again), improve water trading and pricing, and build recycling and desalination plants. We're not going to do desalination now obviously, we're not fixing the pricing situation and we're not building water-storage facilities.
Again, the governor's rhetoric has been good lately when it comes to water, but his action is lacking. He appoints members to the Coastal Commission and we see how that went. He touts his $5.1-billion water infrastructure package as the centerpiece of his efforts to boost water availability, but one need only look at the administration's own press package to see it's a fairly empty package.
The largest portion ($1.3 billion) goes toward drinking and wastewater infrastructure for disadvantaged communities—an important and long-neglected upgrade that nevertheless has little to do with boosting water supplies. The other main expenditures relate to environmental improvements, including fish corridors and water-efficiency subsidies.
As U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock (R–Roseville), has said, "Droughts are nature's fault and they are beyond our control. Water shortages, on the other hand, are our fault." Based on the commission's decision, it's sadly clear that California has made its choice to enter a stage of permanent rationing and endless crisis.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Newsome lied? That's unpossible
I knew some one would question his veracity.
Good King Newsom would never lie.
On a planet composed mostly of water, a costal region is complaining about a water shortage.
Conspiracy....
Based on the commission's decision, it's sadly clear that California has made its choice to enter a stage of permanent rationing and endless crisis.
Some of us have realized since about 1970 that California's government hates Californians.
...but they love illegal aliens.
A few years ago, the state levied fines on Humboldt county water users because they did not meet reduction targets, in spite of the fact that their county was not in a drought like the rest of the state. They were advised to cut watering lawns. Almost no one in the county watered their lawns anyway, so reduction from zero was a hard goal to meet.
The Humboldt Bay Water District gets its water from Ruth Lake, which is full, and has enough capacity to meet the needs of the district for about three years.
One size fits all is the hallmark of California government.
One size fits all is the hallmark of California government.
^
It hasn't rained in Santa Ana in six months! Let's force the people in Yreka to stop watering their lawns!
Why not. San Francisco already steals water from Yosemite. Big cities rule because big cities have more voters.
Brandyshit is really a stupid fuck, ain't he?;
"Why not. San Francisco already steals water from Yosemite."
"Steals" water from who? Is "Yosemite" a person who owns that water or are you just a fucking ignoramus?
Pretty sure the answer is clear.
best way to control citizens is to deny them resources. control the energy control the water, lots of communist and dictator controlled countries do this. unfortunately we voted for our own destruction.
the state supposedly has $95 billion surplus yet they keep raising taxes makes no sense they could be providing us with water storage and much more energy. but they won't. BTW i don't believe the state really has $95 billion surplus its all in magic accounting
There is no magic in the accounting. The executive refuses to recognize the pension liability because the legislature directs the state accounting while the courts deny the people standing to challenge it. This is the inevitable result of a giant bureaucracy under a single party system.
It perfectly explains their desperate need for tax increases while allowing them to profess to be such good stewards that they provide surpluses.
"best way to control citizens is to deny them resources"
^EXACTLY.....................
Arizona uses less water overall than it did in the 1950s, when the population was one-seventh its current level.
*** rising intonation ***
What about bottled water?
Just crap lite beers.
Lite beer is already crap.
Setting water policy largely created during the wet period of the last century for California probably wasn't a grand idea. California has historically been a dry territory.
https://www.mercurynews.com/2014/01/25/california-drought-past-dry-periods-have-lasted-more-than-200-years-scientists-say/
Of course any drought today will be blamed on climate change instead of a regression to the mean.
And any fire will be blamed on climate change rather than the power lines that started it (because the electric companies have all been forced to prioritize "green energy" over safety. Or the fire will be blamed on climate change instead of on the homeless encampment that started it (because we all insist on "housing first" homelessness solutions which supposedly worked great in Finland but have failed miserably in Seattle, LA, SF, NYC, etc)
Or it will be blamed on climate change instead of the environmental activist who started it to highlight the dangers of climate change.
Or it will be similarly blamed since the watermelons ran the timber industry out of the state, which industry formerly managed the forests to prevent fires at no cost to the taxpayers.
Why does anyone choose to live in California?
What makes you think any California resident is there by choice?
Get rid of the idiot politicians, and it's a great state. Sort of like all the others in that regard.
But it's 65% of California residents who keep electing them....
You get the government you deserve.
We don't.
Ask that in Jan when half the country is freezing cold and it's 70 degrees where I live.
Ask that in July when half the country is blazing hot and it's 75 degrees where I live.
Would that be during or after the rolling blackout in your $900,000 ranch style fixer-upper?
That's just if you move here now.
If you're a boomer and bought your house 25-30 years ago your last few years of mortgage payments are the same as what newcomers' will pay just in property taxes.
Ah, you live on the coast I see. California east of I-5 is NOT 75 in July. Just saying. Heck, even here is Silicon Valley, spitting distance from the coast, was 90 degrees last week. In May.
If you don't live within 20 or so mi off the coast I really don't see any pros to living in CA which might offset all the cons. Barren desert + bad traffic + high cost of everything + high taxes + terrible commute to most decent jobs + long drives to get to major sports, theater, etc. If you live in, say, inland empire or central valley I'm not really sure I see why people wouldn't move to, say, Texas where the weather isn't any worse but everything else is better.
It's been a lot cooler this year than last year in Silicon Valley. We've barely had any hot days this year.
And even when it gets 90+ here, it cools off at night, unlike Texas.
I don't know where you live, but for the past three years running in the Bay Area we've had the highs be not so high, but the humidity has been off the charts (for CA), so for this past week, for example, we've been topping out in the low 80s, but the temperature doesn't drop at night like normal, which makes it pretty miserable at night when you don't have AC.
I guess I do know where you live, since you said so. I'll go back to bed now.
So leave, TDS-addled asshole.
Humm, what's the state again? Gas tax? Crime?
I know there are some beautiful areas but the risks outweigh the benefits now
That was state tax.
Yes, why would anyone choose to live in a nice climate that just happens to also house the world's 5th biggest economy?
Truly perplexing.
And has one of the highest tax rates along with gaping wealth inequality. A democrats dream.
And affordable housing! And cheap water, or so I hear.
The water is free. Literally. Homeowners do get a water bill, but it's so low as to be negligible. And it's one low price regardless of how much water you use. As an apartment renter then a condo owner for my entire adult life, I've never actually see a water bill.
That there is the core of the water problem.
Sounds insane. I live in SC, with literally no water problem, and water bills are not miniscule here.
It's 9th now and still falling.
and it's full of marxist leftists. no it's not perplexing at all. ca is a total shithole. i wouldn't live there if i was paid to do so. there is no redeeming quality and zero reason to live there. you can find good climate in many places and it's subjective.
They will eventually kill the 5th largest economy but it will take a long time, maybe decades. Silicon Valley is still the tech leader of the world by far and Hollywood is still the entertainment leader of the world by far.
That won't last forever given how hard state leaders are going out of their way to screw business and anyone who is productive. But if will take a long time for those 2 key industries to relocate.
The film industry in Georgia is the largest among the states of the United States for production of feature films by number of films produced, as of 2016. {Films shot there include] a number of Marvel Studios productions, including Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, as well as Ant Man and the Wasp and Black Panther.[1] Atlanta has since been called the "Hollywood of the South".
The Walking Dead is shot nearly entirely in Georgia. The first season used many locations in and around Atlanta, and subsequent seasons have moved to a 120 acres (0.49 km2) lot outside of Senoia and additional locations nearby.[20][21]
Stranger Things was principally filmed in Jackson as a stand-in for the fictional Hawkins, Indiana, with other nearby areas serving as other sets
A lot of TV shows and movies are filmed (or taped) in Vancouver BC now too. It's funny when they say the show is set in Kansas or Texas and it looks like the Pacific Northwest.
Ah, the forested mountains of Kansas!
Vancouver was Hollywood, Canada as of 20 years ago. I don't know if it's still going as strong as it was. Inevitably once the money gets into town, people want to exploit it, and that slowly drives them away
Yes - entertainment is moving out of LA.
Tech is moving out of Silicon Valley to Texas, NC, etc.
And 1/3 of all homeless people in the US
High paying jobs and nice weather. Leaving town as soon as I retire.
"Why does anyone choose to live in California?"
There's a lot of ruin in CA, and regardless of the efforts of the city and state proggy assholes, they've yet to get anywhere close to the bottom.
Admittedly, professional fees are high if you wish to stay under the radar and avoid the highest tax rates, but there is a LOT of money to be made here, and the views and the weather are wonderful!
To paraphrase a famous queen: "let the drink piss".
The California State Motto: "If it's yellow, let it mellow; if it's brown, flush it down."
....and recycle wastewater 100% like Phoenix does.
At least in Phoenix people don't waste water washing their cars like Californians do.
In Phoenix you just wait for the next sandstorm to blast it clean.
"After the California Coastal Commission's notoriously anti-growth staff tried to derail a privately funded desalination plant..."
"Privately funded"
There's your problem, right there.
Yep they didn't grease enough palms. the state hates competition.
Decades ago back in college, a desal plant was shut down because the plant would have put salt water back into the ocean. Unacceptable to environmentalists.
For once reason has some reason.
Granted I'm still waiting for the inevitable exodus from some dry places like Arizona and the like. All these people moving there expecting lush green lawns in their suburbs just like they had back in the Midwest or wherever.
https://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2021/02/11/whats-driving-californias-exodus
Vs
https://azgovernor.gov/governor/news/2019/12/new-census-report-ranks-arizona-third-percentage-growth-rate
Youre just a really dumb person.
Talk about missing the point. According to the article residents consume 1 in 40 gallons. That's what half of five percent is. Squeezing that gallon is good politics, but it isn't going to make a difference in the grand scheme of things.
All these people moving there expecting lush green lawns in their suburbs
You've clearly never been to AZ.
No shit. Welcome to the Lush Green Lawn Capital, Tucson.
My ex-wife's family all live in Tucson... seriously... exactly zero of them had a "lush green lawn" and by "lawn" I mean "lawn". They didn't have them.
Seriously, do a random google street maps drop in any neighborhood in Tucson and you will struggle MIGHTILY to find any "lush green lawns".
My dad and his wife and in-laws live in the Phoenix area, and around there lush lawns are outright illegal.
Even in my part of the SF Bay Area lawns are unpopular simply because it takes a lot of work to maintain them. It was a revelation to me when I first visited the world east of the Rockies that there are other parts of the country where lawns grow all by themselves and you have to actually actively cut them back, rather than constantly nurturing, weeding, watering and praying to see if you can keep a green patch through the end of May.
There are about six people in my neighborhood who keep lawns because "supposed to," but everyone else is succulents and rocks, or learning to appreciate wide variety of local thistle.
Do people your way do raised gardens? You can pack quite a bit into a small footprint.
Raised gardens are pretty much the only way - and yes, they are very, very common. I have several myself.
I walk through Tucson all winter long. You're completely correct that nobody has a green lawn. People use cacti for color, and maybe grow some trees now and then for some shade, but an actual grass lawn is basically unheard of.
Red rock lawns are 100x more common than grass lawns.
Well, crap, I guess I found one. So much for that rule.
LOL - they must have a leak.
I think it's a roll of astroturf.
Half the water runs off into the Pacific Ocean without being put first to human use? Maybe they don't need a couple huge "Hoover Dams" but I'll bet lots of smaller dams and reservoirs could solve the problem.
This is what I wondered at first too. Couldn't dams not only solve the water issue, but also be used a a method to help fix the electric problems?
I have no idea if it could or not.
Regardless, then I remembered this is California. Even if technically feasible, between the environmentalist and animals rights folks, it would never happen. The risk it just too great that it might upset a beaver, irritate toad, or contribute 1000th of 1 millionth of a percent to global warm...er, I mean climate change.
Couldn't dams not only solve the water issue, but also be used a a method to help fix the electric problems?
Yes. Yes they could.
Dams are a real tricky business when it comes to private property rights. Especially when you factor in downstream water rights (which are legally real property rights in most states that operate under systems of Western Water Law.)
Water scarcity is a very complex issue with many tradeoffs to consider from a libertarian standpoint.
No doubt it is not easy. Not only downstream water rights, but underground/mineral rights and property seizure via eminent domain almost always have to get factored in when you want to build a damn or a reservoir.
Most of that; however, is political. There is a reason that TX doesn't have near the issues as CA when it comes to water, despite running into the same sort of droughts. TX is also very good at building hydro-electric dams, which make up a quarter of the states energy production.
Of course, nobody in Texas considers much from a libertarian standpoint either... (myself included, as I tend to learn more toward the Old Republican side of the Whigs)
For sure, I'm not defending the state of California by any stretch. I'm sure they've done more than enough to screw everything up. Any expertise in water rights that I've got pertains to the state of Kansas (KS far from perfect as well).
One of the big complaints from a lot of people (noted in the article) is that the state allows vast quantities of water to flow past the borders (or into the ocean in this case). However, if streamflows aren't maintained, then water (property) right holders downstream are going to be impaired. It's not like the demands of those users can be met with exact, undelayed releases.
Groundwater rights are an entirely different beast altogether... possibly even more complicated from a Lockean view.
I am with you. Water is tricky tricky business.
My only point is that it is mostly politics that keeps them stepping all over their own dicks.
Housing Crisis? Stepping on their own dicks.
Fires? Stepping on their own dicks.
Rolling Blackouts? Stepping on their own dicks.
Water shortages? Stepping on their own dicks.
Notice any sort of trend? Them Californian's do love stepping all over their own dicks. Hell, "self inflicted CBT" should be the state motto.
As to groundwater, it and surface water are not mutually exclusive; they feed each other. Whenever anyone tries to divert a river, not only will there be down water lawsuits, you will also see a slew of them if that water source feeds any springs or aquafers. And it isn't just downstream. We see fights around here all the time about cities wanting to pull water from lakes and aquafers which are not completely within a single legal municipality.
A recent example was Dallas got into a big fight with a bunch of cities/counties when they tried to build (bully) an aqueduct to a lake in NE Texas. While some cites/counties around the lake were for it (those who had no lake based industries), some of them were very much against it (those that did have lake based industries and those who just generally believe that Dallas is made up almost entirely of assholes). Of course, Dallas did not have a shortage, they just didn't want to lower their own lake and lose the tourism during the drought (pretty much confirming the "assholes" crowd as being right). Funny part is that the whole thing kind of went away as soon as the Corps of Engineers, who runs federal parks around the lake, took notice. Turns out, Dallas is big and politically powerful enough to tell a bunch of hick towns what's what, but not so much their dear Uncle Sam.
If only we had an ocean next to us and if only there was a way to remove salt from ocean water. Then it wouldn't be so tricky.
It's a reaction to the literal vanishing of most CA rivers as CA got populated.
There was a massive body of water in the Central Valley, Tulare Lake, that's gone now without a trace and has left a dustbowl in its wake as the Kern River was siphoned off 100% for agriculture. The Los Angeles, Santa Ana, and San Gabriel Rivers haven't reached the sea in about a century.
We were well on the way to drying up the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta when the Stockton Pumps went in to divert it into the CA Aqueduct and feed the farms that couldn't draw on now-vanished Tulare Lake and Kern River anymore.
This is why when the Stockton Pumps went into operation, part of the charter was that only 50% of the water could be pumped, and the rest had to be allowed to flow into the Delta. The pumps have operated in continual violation of that charter since they started.
Which is so much as to say that, yes, we've swung too far the other way, but there's a history there as to why there are restrictions on how much water you can pull from the few rivers we have remaining.
One might argue that simply allowing water to be priced by the market may well have discouraged some of this activity.
See series of articles by Edward Ring in the American Spectator for insight into this.
Plenty of money for high speed rail to nowhere but none for responsible water systems.
Plenty of money for high speed rail to nowhere but none for responsible water systems.
The opposition to building dams is not the funding - it's finding sites that are both pragmatically and politically feasible.
Not true. Plenty of sites have been identified and nothing has been done going even so far as to block a privately funded desalination plant.
They could probably find the money, there's just no political will to actually fix the issue. If they suddenly have enough water, the shaming makes much less sense.
Plenty of sites have been identified and nothing has been done
You're leaving off the "pragmatically and politically feasible" part.
To quote H. Farnham, from above:
Dams are a real tricky business when it comes to private property rights. Especially when you factor in downstream water rights (which are legally real property rights in most states that operate under systems of Western Water Law.)
Just reprint this article every year starting in 1978 until forever.
We used to play a drinking game on rainy years. When the local news would report record rainfall, they would then say "But remember, we're still in a drought."
Drink!
It was like clockwork. Literally every reservoir in the county overflowing its dam and you'd get the "But we're still in a drought" line. This has been the mantra for 50 years.
Also, the complaint about increased usage in march? There's a good reason for that.
Whenever they make restrictions, it's always on residential, and it's always a percentage reduction. So if you've been using low water amounts like I do you're going to be expected to cut below bare minimum. I'm a single man with no lawn and no garden on the lowest tier for sewer flow already. For me to reduce from what I use now I'd have to skip showering one day a week or something untenable like that.
As soon as they start threatening, the best thing for you to do is increase your water usage 20% so your baseline is high enough you can still flush your toilet when you take 15% off of it. Otherwise you'll have to really skimp. Everyone knows this.
The drought is no joke. It's real. The 2021/2022 snowpack has been dismal. Meaning that this summer is going to be absolutely dreadful.
But the water shortage, as McClintock says, is man made. Partly by the idiot politicians. On both sides (because damming the SF Bay is NOT an option, yet many on the right continue to suggest that). The history of water wars in California stretches back a century and a half.
I said "partly". Californians don't pay for their water, most places don't even meter the water usage. People (as in the ordinary people) still insist on lush green lawns even in the harshest of droughts.
It's the tragedy of the commons. The limited resource is free and everyone considers it their God Given Entitlement, so it's always a major political battle to change things.
But the solution is fairly simple: Charge for water. The era of "all the water you can waste for a low low price of $15 a month" needs to end. People who want those lush lawns need to pay for them. That goes for farmers too. Instead of perpetual water rights, pay the the usage. That would encourage a move to less water intensive crops and better water use practices. Holy shit, I STILL see flood irrigation going on the state!
So simple. Just charge for the water. We can argue whether that water needs to privatized or not later, but in the meantime the commons is dry.
"damming the SF Bay is not an option"
How about damNing the SF Bay? That would solve most of CA's problems IMO
The ancient water laws and contracts are completely obsolete and need to be ripped up.
As you say, water pricing should be the same for everyone and based on supply and demand.
And not having enough reservoirs and desal by now is just dumb.
"So simple. Just charge for the water. "
Who would you trust to collect the money? Remember, the end result of every drought, flood, forest fire or earthquake is increased bureaucracy and government involvement in management.
"People who want those lush lawns need to pay for them."
Moving away to a water rich place is a better solution. Same goes for golf courses, including the ones on military bases, which soak up a lot of water and pollutes it with toxic chemicals.
Truman here, offering nothing but misdirection and platitudes, hoping someone makes a mistake and clicks on his name, thereby doubling the hits on his web site this week.
"...On both sides (because damming the SF Bay is NOT an option, yet many on the right continue to suggest that)..."
Eat shit and die, you pathetic pile of TDS-addled lefty shit.
How hatefully divisive of Greenhut to mention the sevenfold increase in California's population! Democrats assure us this is undoubtedly the work of misanthropic global warming. Republicans deny absolutely that forcing women to increase the world's daily population increase to more than the current 200,000 additional people a day can cause a shortage of anything but prisons and ammo. How can BOTH parties be wrong? It's almost as if there ought to be a third party on the Nixon-subsidized ballots...
NY Time article "In California, a Wet Era May Be Ending" indicates that the last 150 years (i.e., since about California statehood) has been unusually wet, and that current conditions are essentially a reversion to the norm:
"Equally as important but much easier to forget is that we consider the last 150 years or so to be normal," he added. "But you don't have to go back very far at all to find much drier decades, and much drier centuries."
That raises the possibility that California has built its water infrastructure — indeed, its entire modern society — during a wet period.
But scientists say that in the more ancient past, California and the Southwest occasionally had even worse droughts — so-called megadroughts — that lasted decades. At least in parts of California, in two cases in the last 1,200 years, these dry spells lingered for up to TWO CENTURIES.
The new normal, scientists say, may in fact be an old one.
After 2+ years of government scolds telling us to stay inside, don't go to school or work, wear masks everywhere, get vaccinated whether we want to or not - there's (thankfully) a growing attitude in some people in CA to tell the finger-wagging scolds to go fuck themselves.
I'm going to use as much water as I want - I sure as hell pay for it but if want to water my lawn or rinse my driveway or wash my car I really don't care if people don't like it.
Californians have been talking about the drought for 50 years.
In all that time, with an entire ocean just off the beach, they have built a total of zero desalination plants.
I guess a bullet train to Bakersfield was a higher priority.
Maybe they can outfit it with tanker cars to ferry water.
You're making Ricky Raindrop cry.
There's one in Carlsbad (northern San Diego County)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_%22Bud%22_Lewis_Carlsbad_Desalination_Plant
But we should have about 20 by now.
California gets what it deserves. It elects and re-elects the same failed, short sighted politicians and then expects different results. They have taken the majority of the Colorado River water for decades and squandered it. Now their greed is impacting Arizona - a state that actually manages its water resources well. I say cut them off and let them shrivel up. Maybe then they will get their heads out of… the clouds.
Oh, those poor, poor, oppressed "average residents" watering their lush lawns and enjoying their mai tais out on the patio in a fucking desert. And depending on government to keep water, electricity, and everything else going for them. The universe laughs at them.
Only insane politicians can create a drought after a winter consisting of more snow than one has seen in years.
"Hey, Ho! Tear down all the dams and reservoirs in the name of fish-rights.", screams the political world....
Power-Mad literally Psychopaths shouldn't be granted such power over the people's lives/resources.
Choose where you live carefully. Places with chronic water shortages and droughts are easily avoided. Life without water is short and miserable, standard of living nowithstanding. And sacrificing our finny friends is not going to change that.
"...And sacrificing our finny friends is not going to change that."
Eat shit and die, watermelon.
Crying because lawn waterers might need to use less to allow farmers to grow food. Yes, the farmers need the water they're using. What kind of entitlement paradigm did you grow up with? Would you like to eat, or have a useless green lawn? Or maybe you want to get down and graze.
Farmers should have to pay the same for water as residential users. If it's not cost effective to grow crops in CA then we shouldn't grow there. Plenty of other places in the world that have decent soil and adequate rainfall.
" If it's not cost effective to grow crops in CA then we shouldn't grow there. "
Farmers are weird people. They get attached to their land in a way that mystifies the typical lawn sprinkling urban resident. They know the soil intimately and it's a constant concern. They know the lay of their land, where the water drains and where the wind blows, what doesn't grow, what grows best and when to plant and harvest it. All local knowledge that will be lost if the farmer is forced to upstakes and move to another state, and start from zero.
Did you have a point in that whine, asshole?
"Farmers should have to pay the same for water as residential users. If it's not cost effective to grow crops in CA then we shouldn't grow there. Plenty of other places in the world that have decent soil and adequate rainfall."
Disagreed.
We sell at retail prices to those who buy and use (1)..
To those who buy and 'resell' as a farmer does (via the product), we offer discounted rates, depending on quantity and regularity of purchases.
Those who buy in quantity (1) cost far more to supply than do those who buy in (100).
Regardless, privatization, with competition, (with the resultant cost analysis) would do wonders in providing water.
Moonbeam signed the Dills Act in the '70s (during the last long-term drought) thereby diverting taxpayer money from infrastructure to buying votes from the SEIU.
The asshole should have been hung and should be now.
Dills act has absolutely put CA in a very precarious situation economically. God only knows what the total pension obligation is now but a lotta digits in that number.
I'm certainly not an expert in argiculture economics - but I do think that the private free market is almost always a better way to allocate goods and services than shaming people for "wasting resources"