Water News for Los Angeles
Los Angeles has had a surprisingly water-focused weekend, and your taps, skies, and reservoirs all have a story to tell. According to the National Weather Service Los Angeles, the past 48 hours have featured a classic early June pattern: a deep marine layer, cool mornings, and patchy drizzle along the coast and into parts of the basin. Forecasters report that coastal and downtown areas picked up light measurable precipitation, generally a few hundredths of an inch, with some localized pockets approaching a tenth of an inch thanks to thicker low clouds Friday night into Saturday. It’s not a storm by any means, but in a region where every drop counts, that misty gray start did add just a little bit to the water ledger. Inland valleys and foothills saw less actual rainfall and more of that stubborn cloud cover, with gradual clearing into the afternoons. CBS Los Angeles meteorologists have been noting that daytime highs have been running a bit below seasonal normals, which helps reduce overall water demand as residents turn sprinklers and air conditioners down just a notch. Offshore, the National Data Buoy Center’s Los Angeles Pier J tide and current station has recorded steady, relatively calm conditions over the past two days, with modest wave action and stable sea levels. That calm coastal setup pairs with the marine layer to keep coastal surface waters cooler and helps sustain that nightly push of moist air into the city, feeding the drizzle machine that Angelenos love to complain about but water managers quietly appreciate. On the drinking water front, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power has issued no new contamination advisories or emergency alerts over the last 48 hours, and routine water quality reporting shows the city’s treated drinking water continuing to meet state and federal standards. LADWP consistently emphasizes that its multi-source supply – a blend of local groundwater, State Water Project and Colorado River imports, and conservation-driven demand management – remains stable heading into the hotter weeks of June. While there have been no major supply shocks this weekend, officials continue to urge efficient use, especially in outdoor watering, as wildfire season begins to ramp up across California, with outlets like the San Luis Obispo Tribune flagging new fire activity in Los Angeles County. For now, the short-term picture is reassuring: modest drizzle, cooler-than-average afternoons, calm coastal waters, and drinking water that remains safe and reliably available. The bigger, long-term challenge of securing Los Angeles’ water future is still very real, but if you’re filling a glass from the tap this weekend, the news is quietly, solidly good. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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