Trump targets California water policy as he prepares to tour LA fire
damage
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[January 24, 2025]
By AMY TAXIN
As President Donald Trump prepares to tour wildfire damage in
California, he's zeroing in on one of his frequent targets for
criticism: State water policy.
Since the fires broke out Jan. 7, Trump has used social media and
interviews to accuse the state of sending too much water to the Pacific
Ocean instead of south toward Los Angeles and highlighted how some
hydrants ran dry in the early hours of the firefight in Pacific
Palisades.
In the first hours of his second term, Trump called on federal officials
to draft plans to route more water to the crop-rich Central Valley and
densely populated cities in the southern part of the state. Two days
later he threatened to withhold federal disaster aid unless California
leaders change the state’s approach on water.
Here's a look at the facts behind Trump's comments and what power the
president has to influence California water:
Where does Southern California's water come from?
In general, most of the state's water is in the north, while most of its
people are in the drier south.
Los Angeles, the nation’s second largest city, depends on drawing water
from elsewhere. Meanwhile the relatively dry Central Valley is home to
fertile land where much of the nation's fruits and vegetables are grown.
Two complex systems of dams and canals channel rain and snowmelt from
the mountains in the north and route it south. One is managed by the
federal government and known as the Central Valley Project, while the
other is operated by the state of California and known as the State
Water Project.
Both transport water through the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, an
estuarythat provides critical habitat to fish and wildlife including
salmon and the delta smelt, one of Trump's fascinations.
Southern California gets about half its water from local supplies such
as groundwater, according to the Metropolitan Water District of Southern
California, a regional water wholesaler. Metropolitan provides the rest
of the water from state supplies and the federally managed Colorado
River system.
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power also manages its own
aqueducts that draw water from the eastern Sierra Nevada.
What does Washington have the power to do?
Federal officials guide how much is routed to the delta to protect
threatened species and how much goes to Central Valley Project users,
mostly farms. That project does not supply water to Los Angeles.
State officials are expected to follow the same environmental
guidelines, said Caitlin Peterson, a research fellow at the Public
Policy Institute of California's Water Policy Center.
Federal and state officials typically coordinate how they operate those
systems.
The delta connects inland waterways to the Pacific, and keeping a
certain amount of water flowing through helps support fish populations
and the waterway itself.
But Trump and others say the state lets too much water go to the ocean
rather than cities and farms.
What measures did Trump take on California water policies in the past?
His prior administration allowed more water to be directed to the
Central Valley and out of the delta. Environmental groups opposed that,
saying it would harm endangered species.
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A firefighter battles the Palisades Fire as it burns a structure in
the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP
Photo/Ethan Swope,File)
Gov. Gavin Newsom filed a lawsuit saying the rules would drive
endangered fish populations to extinction. There were concerns about
the tiny delta smelt, which is seen as an indicator of the
waterway's health, as well as and chinook salmon and steelhead
trout, which return annually from the Pacific to spawn in freshwater
rivers.
Then-President Joe Biden's administration issued its own rules in
December that environmental groups said provided modest improvements
over those of the first Trump administration.
What is Trump's position now?
He has continued to question how California's water managed. Last
year on his Truth Social platform, he criticized the “rerouting of
MILLIONS OF GALLONS OF WATER A DAY FROM THE NORTH OUT INTO THE
PACIFIC OCEAN, rather than using it, free of charge, for the towns,
cities, & farms dotted all throughout California.”
Such comments buoyed the spirits of many farmers and water managers
in the Central Valley who say federal water allocations have been
too limited in the past two years since ample rain boosted reservoir
levels. A series of major storms in 2023 helped California emerge
from a multi-year drought, but dry conditions have started to return
in the central and southern parts of the state.
Trump has now directed the federal government again to route more
water in the system it controls to farmers and cities.
What does all this have to do with the Los Angeles fires?
Not much. The farms-versus-fish debate is one of the most well-worn
in California water politics and doesn't always fall along party
lines. Some environmentalists think Newsom is too friendly to
farming interests. But that debate is not connected to fire-related
water troubles in Los Angeles.
Trump has suggested that state officials “ turn the valve ” to send
more water to the city. But state water supplies are not to blame
for hydrants running dry and a key reservoir near Pacific Palisades
that was not filled.
The problem with the hydrants was that they were overstressed, and
the Santa Ynez Reservoir was empty because it was undergoing
maintenance.
Newsom has called for an investigation into how the Los Angeles
Department of Water and Power managed both issues.
The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California has enough
water in storage to meet roughly three years of water demand, said
Deven Upadhyay, the agency's interim general manager.
“We can deliver what our agencies need,” he said.
If the Trump administration chooses to route more water to system
users, that won't necessarily benefit Los Angeles, Upadhyay said.
Unless there is coordination between the federal and state systems,
greater draws from the delta on the federal side could lead
California officials to cut allocations to cities and farms to
protect waterway, he added.
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