The
driest March and early April in 70 years has turned what was looking like a wet year into a
near-drought for California.
The water supplies in Pardee and in the Camanche flood
control reservoir in Amador
County are decreasing.
The East Bay's largest water supplier is likely to
impose mandatory rationing next month that could include
higher water rates, limits on outdoor sprinklers or possibly a ban on car
washing. In the San Joaquin
Valley, hundreds of
thousands of acres of farmland are being fallowed. The problem is a wicked combination of dry weather,
low reservoir levels and a court ruling last year that limits Delta pumping to protect
endangered fish. Following powerful January storms and a decent February, the
recent dry stretch and its potential to affect statewide water supplies may
come as a surprise. But
it was the sixth-driest March in 89 years,
according to state water managers. And the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said the period from March 1 to
mid-April was the driest such span in
70 years. The East Bay Municipal Utility District, which serves 1.3 million people in
Contra Costa and Alameda counties, is dependent
on snow in the Mokelumne
River basin. That basin
had its second-driest March since East
Bay MUD began in 1923, and it is shaping up as possibly the driest April over
that time, district spokesman Charles Hardy said. The North Fork of the Mokelumne River, located in
the California Sierra Nevada Mountains,
is also the
primary source for the Central Amador Water Project system, although there have
been no reports of a
planned rationing by the Amador Water Agency.