- San Francisco Chronicle: Coastal homes may be flooded out by 2045
- Maven’s Notebook: Reclamation increases 2018 Central Valley Project water allocation for South-of-Delta ag contractors to 50%
- Red Green and Blue: Delta Tunnels: Congress wants to ban lawsuits on the tunnels. Should Orange County support that?
- E&E News: Senators insist on judicial review of water tunnels project
- Capital Press: Reclamation chief revitalizes agency’s infrastructure mission
- Merced Sun: Legislation advances in support of Lake McClure storage increase
- Chico Enterprise-Record: J Levee replacement gets $8 million more from feds
- The Union: Pension costs, aging infrastructure negatively impacting Nevada City budget
- Oroville Mercury-Register: Oroville almost triples state water saving rate
- Western Farm Press: From dendrometers to drones, devices drive ag-tech boom
- My News LA: First Move Made to Dissolve Agency Tied to Brown Water in Compton
- East Bay Times: Work to begin on Hayward recycled water system
- Bay Area News Group: Antioch looks to use project stabilizing agreement for $60 million desalination project
- Advocate-News: Local desal plant deemed possible
- USA Today: It’s back: El Niño expected later this year, forecasters say
- Axios: Beef: America’s dinner and a juicy climate controversy
- ED Science: Climate-Related Disasters Make It Harder to Buy Home Insurance in California
- San Francisco Chronicle: State on slightly safer footing with wildfire season at hand
- Pasadena Now: Pasadena’s Fire Stations Lead the Way in Replacing Thirsty Water Turf with Drought-Tolerant Landscapes
- Napa Valley Register: Napa Land Trust protects more Lake Berryessa land from development
- KQED Science: South Bay Salt Ponds: It’s Not Pretty, Yet
- SF Gate: EPA fines NorCal gravel miner for dumping on endangered salmon
- Maven’s Notebook: WATER STORAGE INVESTMENT PROGRAM: Water Commission meeting, WSIP determinations, and webinars
- San Diego Union-Tribune: Plan for 14-state power grid faces key Senate hearing on Tuesday
- KPBS: San Diego Storm Water Spending Not Nearly Enough, Says City Auditor