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State Water Board hears hydrology update: north–south precipitation split, diminished snowpack and risk of mid‑summer low flows in Scott and Shasta rivers

3209938 · May 7, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

At its May 6 meeting the State Water Resources Control Board received a detailed hydrologic update: a pronounced north–south precipitation dipole, snowpack statewide at ~67% of normal, major reservoirs at or above average, but local declines in snowpack for the Scott River raise a mid‑July low‑flow risk for fish and possible curtailments.

A State Water Resources Control Board presentation on May 6 described a statewide hydrology pattern with more precipitation in the north than the south, a statewide snow water equivalent at about 67% of normal, and major reservoir storage generally at or above average — but with localized risks for summer low flows in northern tributaries.

Board staff reported that as of May 3 the statewide precipitation index was slightly above average in the Northern Sierra (about 111% of average) but below average in the San Joaquin (about 71%) and mixed in the Tulare region (about 87%).…

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