The San Diego Unified School District argues that any amount of lead in school drinking water is damaging to children. At the same time, it has found lead in water at some schools, does not remove all of it and is allowing kids to drink it. The argument that lead is in the water and is hurting kids has become the main selling point for Measure YY, the district’s school bond campaign. Though the bond is expected to generate $3.5 billion, only $45 million – less than 2 percent – would go to remove lead from school district water, district documents show.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Mike Leehttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngMike Lee2018-10-31 09:23:452018-11-01 09:25:21San Diego Unified Taps Into National Lead Fears In Bond Campaign
San Diego Water managers will meet with the Metropolitan Water District next week in a bid to end a long-running feud over water transfer costs. The San Diego County Water Authority made a surprise settlement offer a week ago. SDCWA Board Chair Jim Madaffer delivered a letter to MWD suggesting the two water agencies stop fighting over water fees. MWD’s initial reaction was cool, with the Los Angeles-based water wholesaler canceling a closed-door meeting on the issue that was originally scheduled for this week.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Mike Leehttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngMike Lee2018-10-31 09:17:252018-12-05 10:00:30Water Talks Are On After Settlement Offer By San Diego
A public agency and a powerful farmer are gearing up for a high-stakes court battle to determine who owns the largest share of Colorado River water in the West, complicating the river’s future as seven western states scramble to avoid severe water shortages. There’s a long history of fighting over water in California’s Imperial Valley, which has a legal right to more than 1 trillion gallons of Colorado River water each year — twice as much as the rest of California, and as much as Arizona and Nevada combined.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-31 09:13:382018-10-31 09:13:38The Biggest Share of Colorado River Water in the West is up for Grabs
Locally gusty winds, warm weather and no signs of needed rain returning will keep the fire danger elevated across Southern California through the start of November. November is expected to pick up where October ended with winds blowing over parts of Southern California. “While the peak of the Santa Ana wind event occurred on Wednesday morning, locally gusty winds can persist in the wind-prone areas of Southern California late this week,” according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Maggie Samuhel.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Mike Leehttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngMike Lee2018-10-31 07:23:412018-11-05 10:05:26Southern California To Face Enhanced Fire Danger Through Start Of November
Nearly a decade ago, Gabriel Lozada, a man with a wiry frame and waves of steel-gray hair who looks exactly like the mathematician he is, set out to answer what he thought was a relatively simple question: Could Utah’s proposed Lake Powell Pipeline — a plan to ferry Colorado River water to southern Utah — live up to the state’s rosy forecasts of growth and prosperity? Or was it more likely to tank the economy of a small but lively retirement community in the southwestern Utah desert?
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-30 10:23:042018-10-31 09:48:18The Precarious Plan for the Lake Powell Pipeline
For months, San Francisco, a hotbed of anti-Donald Trump sentiment, has found itself in the awkward position of being aligned with his administration over California water policy. On Tuesday, the city’s leaders said the alliance was unbearable. In an 11-0 vote, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors agreed in a resolution to support the State Water Resources Control Board’s proposal to leave more water in the San Joaquin River and its tributaries to benefit struggling fish populations. The supervisors’ vote is subject to veto by Mayor London Breed, although the board could override the veto.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-30 10:19:522018-10-31 09:30:44San Francisco Leaders Hate Trump Enough They Voted to Limit the City’s Water Rather Than do This
An offer last week by the San Diego County Water Authority board chairman to settle a host of litigation with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California was not well received by water officials to the north. MWD leaders accused their San Diego counterparts of violating an agreement to negotiate in private and abruptly canceled a meeting previously scheduled for Tuesday. “We were surprised by the unilateral decision by the San Diego County Water Authority to make the proposal letter public as our ongoing discussions … were confidential and our agencies have an executed confidentiality agreement governing those discussions,” the MWD chairman wrote Monday.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-30 09:13:472018-12-05 10:03:45Los Angeles Water Officials Cancel Settlement Meeting with San Diego County Water Authority
The spring and summer of 2018 saw frenzied activity around California WaterFix, the latest iteration of a decades-long, on-again-off-again effort to convey fresh water from the Sacramento River to the South Delta export pumps while bypassing the Delta itself. Governor Jerry Brown has made WaterFix a top priority, but as his administration heads into its final months, the project – one of the largest infrastructure projects in state history – still faces a raft of uncertainties.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-30 07:43:562018-10-31 09:31:25Massive California Water Tunnel Project Forges Ahead on Several Fronts
Alvin Thoma’s youngest son was born the year his employer, Pacific Gas & Electric Co., began the process of renewing the license for its Upper North Fork Feather River hydropower facility in northern California. His son is 19 years old now. The facility, however, is still undergoing relicensing. “For me, that’s a mental image of just how long it takes to go through this process,” Thoma, a director of power generation at PG&E, which runs one of the largest hydro systems in the country, told Bloomberg Environment.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.png00Andrea Morahttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngAndrea Mora2018-10-30 07:40:432018-10-31 09:31:15Permit Delays Dam Up Hydro Projects, Relicensing Costs Millions
A $25.3 million Pipeline 5 relining project is under way in North County to improve the reliability of the San Diego region’s water delivery system. The project involves rehabilitating approximately 2.3 miles of one of the San Diego County Water Authority’s regional wholesale water pipelines in eight segments along a 9.5-mile stretch through the community of Fallbrook.
Construction work will be done in phases and completed in summer 2019. When finished, the Pipeline 5 Relining Project will help extend the service life of this vital piece of infrastructure for more than 75 years. Generally, relining construction rehabilitates segments of pipelines based on their age and the need for improvements.
Relining process advances in well-planned stages
Construction activities in Fallbrook began September 19 with the installation of protecting fencing, establishing an entrance to the construction area, and clearing the site of all vegetation and debris for safety. The relining itself will begin in November.
In broad terms, the relining process begins with dirt being excavated to create an access portal or work area. The construction crews will conduct most of the work underground, inside the pipe. They will access the pipe by excavating, establishing, and entering the pipeline through nine access sites, or portals. The portals will be 25-foot by 60-foot excavated pits, spaced approximately 525 to 2,500 feet apart. At each portal site, 40 feet of existing pipe is removed to permit access inside the pipe to install relining materials.
The work involves removing 20-foot sections of old concrete pipe at each portals. Then, new steel liners are inserted into the existing pipe using a specialized pipe cart. Liners are installed into the entire pipe section. Once installed, the joints of the liner pipe are welded together. Each new steel liner is coated with a cement mortar lining. Finally, portals are backfilled and — after pipeline disinfection — the pipe is ready to be put back into service.
Community kept informed about project’s progress
Much of the construction work associated with the project is in Water Authority rights-of-way. Some portals within the unincorporated San Diego County portion of the alignment will be in undeveloped areas.
As people living and working in the area begin to see the activity, project team members will be available to address questions or concerns. Contact information including 24-hour phone numbers, email contacts, and website links are posted on nine informational signs along the construction route. Construction workers on site will also have contact information to pass out on request.
For more information, residents can call the 24-hour project information line at (877) 682-9283, ext. 7009 or email . A representative from the project team will respond within one business day.
Pipeline upgrades ensure safe, reliable water supplies
The Water Authority’s large-diameter pipelines extend approximately 310 miles to convey water throughout western San Diego County. Approximately 82 miles of these pipelines were installed between the early 1960s and late 1980s with pre-stressed concrete cylinder pipes, or PCCP, made from a combination of steel and concrete. First used during World War II to help minimize the use of precious steel, this pipeline type is used extensively around the world.
Numerous failures of similar pipes nationwide prompted the Water Authority to take proactive measures to reinforce its PCCP type pipelines with steel liners in an strategic, multi-decade program starting in 1991.
In addition, in 2003 the Water Authority started using an innovative carbon fiber technology to conduct urgent pipeline repairs, helping ensure a safe and reliable water supply to the region.
When the Fallbrook project is finished, the Water Authority will have rehabilitated approximately 47 miles of PCCP — more than half of the total in the Water Authority system.
https://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Fallbrook-Pipeline-Relining-845X450.jpg450845Gayle Falkenthalhttps://www.waternewsnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/WNN-Horizontal-White-Blue2.pngGayle Falkenthal2018-10-29 16:21:182018-10-29 16:21:18Pipeline 5 Upgrades Begin in Fallbrook