FAIRMEAD, Calif. (AP) ā As California's drought deepens, Elaine Mooreās family is running out of an increasingly precious resource: water.
The Central Valley almond growers had two wells go dry this summer. Two of her adult children are now getting water from a new well the family drilled after the old one went dry last year. Sheās even supplying water to a neighbor whose well dried up.
āItās been so dry this last year. We didnāt get much rain. We didnāt get much snowpack,ā Moore said, standing next to a dry well on her property in Chowchilla, California. "Everybodyās very careful with what water theyāre using. In fact, my granddaughter is emptying the kids' little pool to flush the toilets.ā
Amid a , more as heavy pumping depletes underground aquifers that arenāt being replenished by rain and snow.
, a nearly 50% increase over the same period last year, according to the California Department of Water Resources. By contrast, fewer than 100 dry wells were reported annually in 2018, 2019 and 2020.
The groundwater crisis is most severe in the San Joaquin Valley, Californiaās agricultural heartland, which exports fruits, vegetables and nuts around the world.
Shrinking groundwater supplies reflect the severity of Californiaās drought, which is now entering its fourth year. According to the U.S. Drought Monitor,
California just experienced its three driest years on record, and state water officials said Monday theyāre preparing for another dry year because the weather phenomenon known as La Nina is expected to occur for the third consecutive year.
, so theyāre pumping more groundwater to irrigate their crops. Thatās causing water tables to drop across California. .
Water shortages are already reducing the regionās agricultural production as farmers are forced to fallow fields and let orchards wither. An estimated 531,00 acres (215,000 hectares) of farmland went unplanted this year because of a lack of irrigation water, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
As climate change brings hotter temperatures and more severe droughts, . Many communities are pumping more groundwater and depleting aquifers at an alarming pace.
āThis is a key challenge not just for California, but for communities across the West moving forward in adapting to climate change,ā said Andrew Ayres, a water researcher at the Public Policy Institute of California.
In Sonoma County, north of San Francisco, supervisors on Tuesday approved a six-month moratorium on drilling of new groundwater wells. It follows a lawsuit alleging the county wasnāt appropriately managing groundwater.
Madera County, north of Fresno, has been hit particularly hard because it relies heavily on groundwater. The county has reported about 430 dry wells so far this year.
In recent years, the county has seen the rapid expansion of thirsty almond and pistachio orchards that are typically irrigated by agricultural wells that run deeper than domestic wells.
āThe bigger straw is going to suck the water from right beneath the little straw,ā said Madeline Harris, a policy manager with the advocacy group Leadership Council for Justice and Accountability. She stood next to a municipal well thatās run dry in Fairmead, a town of 1,200 surrounded by nut orchards.
āMunicipal wells like this one are being put at risk and are going dry because of the groundwater overdraft problems from agriculture,ā Harris said. āThere are families who donāt have access to running water right now because they have dry domestic wells.ā
Residents with dry wells can get help from a state program that provides bottled water as well as storage tanks regularly filled by water delivery trucks. The state also provides money to replace dry wells, but thereās a long wait to get a new one.
Not everyone is getting assistance.
Thomas Chairez said his Fairmead property, which he rents to a family of eight, used to get water from his neighborās well. But when it went dry two years ago, his tenants lost access to running water.
Chairez is trying to get the county to provide a storage tank and water delivery service. For now, his tenants have to fill up 5-gallon (19-liter) buckets at a friendās home and transport water by car each day. They use the water to cook and take showers. They have portable toilets in the backyard.
āTheyāre surviving,ā Chairez said. āIn Mexico, I used to do that. I used to carry two buckets myself from far away. So we got to survive somehow. This is an emergency.ā
Well drillers are in high demand as water pumps stop working across the San Joaquin Valley.
Ethan Bowles and his colleagues were recently drilling a new well at a ranch house in the Madera Ranchos neighborhood, where many wells have gone dry this year.
āItās been almost nonstop phone calls just due to the water table dropping constantly,ā said Bowles, who works for Chowchilla-based Drew and Hefner Well Drilling. āMost residents have had their wells for many years and all of a sudden the water stops flowing.ā
His company must now drill down 500 and 600 feet (152 to 183 meters) to get clients a steady supply of groundwater. Thatās a couple hundred feet deeper than older wells.
āThe wells just have to go deeper," Bowles said. āYou have to hit a different aquifer and get them a different part of that water table so they can actually have fresh water for their house."
In March, to slow a frenzy of well-drilling over the past few years. The temporary measure prohibits local agencies from issuing permits for new wells that could harm nearby wells or structures.
Californiaās groundwater troubles come as local agencies seek to comply with the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, which Gov. Jerry Brown signed in 2014 to prevent groundwater overpumping during the last drought. The law requires regional agencies to manage their aquifers sustainably by 2042.
Water experts believe the law will lead to more sustainable groundwater supplies over the next two decades, but the road will be bumpy. The Public Policy Institute of California estimates that about 500,000 acres (202,000 hectares) of agricultural land, about 10% of the current total, will have to come out of production over the next two decades.
āThese communities are going to be impacted from drinking water supplies and loss of jobs," said Isaya Kisekka, a groundwater expert at the University of California, Davis. āThereās a lot of migration of farmworkers as this land gets fallowed."
Farmers and residents in the Valley are hoping for help from above. āHopefully we get a lot of rain,ā Chairez said. āThereās a big need: water. We need water, water, water.ā
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Terry Chea, The Associated Press