Water News for Los Angeles
Los Angeles is riding a wave of watery good fortune! Just this week, on April 27, Los Angeles County officials announced a massive stormwater capture haul of over 120.3 billion gallons during the 2025-26 storm season through April 15. That's a whopping jump from last year's 11.9 billion gallons, hitting 185% of average levels for reservoirs and spreading grounds. According to county reports, this bounty will recharge aquifers enough to supply about 3 million people for a full year—imagine filling the Rose Bowl 160 times over! The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power chimed in with their own splashy update: they've nabbed nearly 5.5 billion gallons since October 1, thanks to recent storms. Mayor Karen Bass's office confirmed Tuesday it's enough to serve almost 68,000 homes for an entire year. Downtown LA's November rains alone dumped over 5.5 inches, the fifth wettest on record since 1877, per the National Weather Service. No major water quality alerts or outages reported—LADWP's outage map shows smooth sailing, and the aqueducts are flowing strong at around 430 million gallons daily from Owens River sources. Drinking water remains safe and plentiful, bolstered by these captures amid a below-average 2026-27 snowpack forecast at just 24% of normal. LADWP hydrographers are already ramping up proactive management to stretch every drop. This windfall means less worry about droughts, more resilient supplies, and even plans for recycling into "forever water" to combat climate shifts cutting Northern California and Colorado River flows. LA's turning storm surges into a sustainable splash—cheers to wetter, worry-free days ahead! Thanks for tuning in, and don't forget to subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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