LA's Water Week: Safe Taps, Empty Skies, and Dramatic Surf
Los Angeles has been living in a strange water double-feature this week: plenty of moisture in the air and ocean drama at the coast, but not much falling from the sky where it counts.
Let’s start in the city taps. As of the past two days, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power reports that drinking water continues to meet all state and federal safety standards, with no new boil notices or contamination alerts in the city system. LADWP’s most recent water quality updates emphasize that routine testing is ongoing at hundreds of sampling points across the city, and no violations have been posted in the last 48 hours. Agencies continue to stress that LA’s tap water is safe to drink, even as it travels from sources as far away as the Eastern Sierra and the Colorado River.
On the supply side, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California says regional storage remains in relatively good shape for early summer, thanks to back‑to‑back wet years in the Sierra Nevada and improved levels at key reservoirs like Diamond Valley Lake. Over the past 48 hours there have been no new emergency conservation calls, but water managers are reminding customers that long‑term conservation is still essential because imported supplies from the Colorado River remain stressed by long‑term drought across the basin.
Rain lovers, you are out of luck this week. According to the National Weather Service office in Los Angeles, the past 48 hours have brought virtually no measurable rain to downtown LA, the San Fernando Valley, or the coastal plain. Instead, the city has been under classic early‑summer “June gloom”: a thick marine layer in the morning, giving way to partial afternoon clearing, high humidity, and just enough drizzle in a few foothill and coastal neighborhoods to barely wet the pavement. Precipitation totals have been near zero at official gauges since Monday, and forecasters are not expecting any significant rainfall through the end of the workweek.
But if the sky is quiet, the ocean is loud.
The National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard office issued a high surf advisory Tuesday afternoon for Los Angeles County beaches, including Malibu and Catalina Island, warning of large breaking waves of 4 to 7 feet, and up to 7 to 10 feet along parts of the Malibu coast, along with dangerous rip currents. The advisory runs through Thursday evening, and lifeguards are urging swimmers and surfers to stay near manned towers and avoid rock jetties altogether. NBC4 and CBS Los Angeles have been showing dramatic footage of big sets pounding the shoreline, while ABC7 has been tracking some of the largest waves of the year arriving from a powerful south swell.
Alongside the surf, the National Weather Service and Los Angeles County Department of Public Health have a Beach Hazards Statement in effect tied to both high surf and water quality. The National Weather Service and LA County Public Health both remind residents to avoid going into the ocean within 48 hours after any rain event because runoff can wash bacteria and pollutants into the surf zone, especially near storm drains and river mouths. Even though the last 48 hours have been mostly dry, those warnings are still fresh from the most recent drizzly system and are a good reminder that clean beach water lags behind clearing skies.
In short: your tap water in Los Angeles is testing safe, your reservoirs are holding their own, the sky is stingy with rain, and the real water action is at the coast, where big surf, rip currents, and post‑storm pollution concerns are keeping lifeguards and health officials busy.
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