Agents have long had a leadership role in their communities, from Prop. 13 to Megan’s law to food banks; many more are too numerous to list!

Currently most of Califiornia’s reseviors are full, there will be more cyclical drought. 

Here’s Another a Leadership Community Opportunity!

Want to become a leader in your community, in your tract, on your street, at your child’s school? Want to raise your professional profile and boost business with (practically) ZERO marketing costs“Rain Barrel” provide with promo materials  

Become a neighborhood water activist.
Let’s all become part of a solution.

The Rainy Season is Coming – Free Water!!!!

With state and local rebates-collecting rainwater is (virtually) “Free Water”.

Note: “Rainwater harvesting coming from your roof is fine in California. No permit from the state board is necessary. However, the large scale collecting rainwater for commercial landscaping purposes would require a license.

Get the Lowest Interest Rate, Fees, and Fastest Service
YouTube – Straight Talk Lending – Daniel Dobbs

Free Water: “Rain Barrell” provides inexpensive water collection barrels and kits. Our Online Store will connect you with one of our participating barrel suppliers serving Los Angeles, Orange County, the Inland Empire, and the San Diego Area.

 

Then you can apply for one of these great rain barrel rebates and get most or all of your money back!

WHAT TO EXPECT:

* Individual barrels (unmodified): $40 each* Same barrels purchased with RainKit™: $35 ea

* RainKit™: $22 – $68 per barrel unit. (The more barrels in your system, the less you pay per unit.)

Rain Barrel Rebates by State / Region (from West to East):

Calif. Expect a ‘4th Dry Year’-Prep for New Drought Challenges
By Hayley Smith

California’s reservoirs will enter fall in a slightly better position than last year, but are far below average and Californians should prepare for more dryness, extreme weather events, and water quality hazards in 2023,

The latest climate forecasting update from the California Dept of Water Resources came Wednesday, just days before the end of the water year, which runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 in California.

Water managers are now preparing for a “fourth dry year,” as well as more unpredictable weather and wildfires associated with climate change, DWR Assistant Deputy Director John Yarbrough said during a meeting of the California Water Commission.

“We have more storage in the reservoirs, but we’re still well below average, well below where we’d like to be,” Yarbrough said.

During the 2022 water year, officials observed significant swings between extreme wet and extremely dry conditions, including a notably rainy October through December followed by the driest January through March on record.

Lake Shasta, the state’s largest reservoir, is projected to end the water year with 1.48 million acre-feet in storage — up from 1.07 million acre-feet last year; and sits at about 34% of its capacity, according to The Times’ drought tracker.

Though California has experienced periods of drought in the past, Sept. 14’s report came against a backdrop of significant water cuts and worsening aridity in what researchers have described as the driest 22-year period in at least 1,200 years.

What’s more, the state’s other primary water supply — the Colorado River — is also running perilously low, with federal officials warning that another 150-foot drop in Lake Mead could lead to “dead pool” conditions, or the point at which water falls below the lowest intake valve on the Hoover Dam.

The looming crisis has put pressure on California and nearby states to figure out how to reduce their reliance on the river significantly, and officials have said painful cuts are likely in the coming months.

But climate change isn’t only affecting water availability in California — it is also affecting water quality, especially in watersheds near wildfires, according to Andrew Schwarz, climate action coordinator with the State Water Project.

More than half of the Feather River Watershed — the largest in the Sierra Nevada — burned in wildfires between 2019 and 2021, Schwarz said. About a quarter of it burned at high-intensity levels associated with significant tree mortality.

Such fire activity can have myriad effects on the watershed, including altered soil and vegetation. Schwarz said black carbon deposits from ash and burned trees can change the reflectivity of snow to make it melt faster, while high heat can make soil waxy, more water repellent and more prone to runoff.

What’s more, erosion and debris flow can send sediment into rivers and other sources of water.

That confluence of hazards means the state’s water managers are increasingly accounting for wildfires in their climate resilience efforts, Schwarz said, including improving water safety plans for local residents and implementing new sensor data to help experts monitor changing hydrology.

“We’ll probably have more fire in the watershed, and so we’ll be able to continue to adapt to this and get better info as we go along,” he said.

Commissioner Alexandre Makler said the reports underscored the need for continued maintenance and asset management on the State Water Project.

“It needs to be in tip-top shape — that’s absolutely critical,” he said, adding that “it’s clear that there is a significant capital component in addressing the risk, and combining that with the planning process.”

California has been investing in such work, with the 2022-23 state budget carving out $1.2 billion in new funds to lessen wildfire risk through better forest management and $2.8 billion to support drought resilience and response, among other items.

Other water priorities for the coming year include maintaining the quality of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, which is the source of municipal drinking water for many communities while continuing to meet minimum health and safety needs and protecting species and the environment.

It’s also crucial to conserve as much reservoir water as possible, he said, “so we have water again in case we’re faced with a fifth dry year.”