-

State, Local Water Leaders to Call for Increased Conservation as Drought Intensifies

Water-saving actions, particularly outdoors, needed to ensure water reliability for parts of Southern California

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Metropolitan Water District of Southern California:

WHAT:

State and local water leaders will usher in the start of spring and honor World Water Day by calling on the public to significantly and urgently increase their efforts to save water, highlighting the biggest opportunity to conserve is outside – reduce watering, use water-efficient devices, and replace grass with beautiful native plants that require much less irrigation and restore biodiversity.

 

WHEN:

Monday, March 21, 10:30 a.m.

 

WHERE:

Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants, headquarters and nursery, 10459 Tuxford St., Sun Valley. It will also be live-streamed on YouTube.

 

PARTICIPANTS:

California Secretary for Natural Resources Wade Crowfoot; Metropolitan Water District General Manager Adel Hagekhalil; Metropolitan board Chairwoman Gloria D. Gray; Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Assistant Director of Water Resources Delon Kwan; Theodore Payne Executive Director Evan Meyer

 

 

 

Note: interviews also will be available with Brandy Williams, owner of landscape design business Garden Butterfly and South L.A. resident whose own home is part of the Theodore Payne Foundation’s 2022 Native Plant Garden Tour.

 

VISUALS:

Theodore Payne’s nursery is filled with California native plants that are available for sale to the public, officials planting California natives in a demonstration garden.

 

B-roll of reservoirs, conservation gardens, interview with Brandy Williams, available here

 

BACKGROUND:

After the driest January and February in recorded history, this winter failed to provide much-needed relief to California’s drought, now in its third year. State reservoir levels remain far below average and continue dropping, compelling the California Department of Water Resources today to reduce the allocation of water Southern California will receive from the State Water Project to a mere 5 percent.

 

 

SWP deliveries from Northern California typically provide about 30 percent of the water used in the Southland. Some Southern California communities have few other sources of water besides the SWP. The residents and businesses in these communities, including parts of Ventura, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties, especially need to immediately reduce their water use to ensure water reliability into the summer and fall. Californians can visit SaveOurWater.com and bewaterwise.com for easy and actionable water saving ideas and tips.

 

Contacts

Rebecca Kimitch, (213) 217-6450; (202) 821-5253, mobile; rkimitch@mwdh2o.com
Maritza Fairfield, (213) 217-6853; (909) 816-7722, mobile; mfairfield@mwdh2o.com
Hayley Carbullido, (916) 833-6076, mobile; hayley@lucaspublicaffairs.com
Lisa Lien-Mager, (916) 407-6279, mobile; lisa.lien-mager@resources.ca.gov

Metropolitan Water District of Southern California


Release Versions

Contacts

Rebecca Kimitch, (213) 217-6450; (202) 821-5253, mobile; rkimitch@mwdh2o.com
Maritza Fairfield, (213) 217-6853; (909) 816-7722, mobile; mfairfield@mwdh2o.com
Hayley Carbullido, (916) 833-6076, mobile; hayley@lucaspublicaffairs.com
Lisa Lien-Mager, (916) 407-6279, mobile; lisa.lien-mager@resources.ca.gov

More News From Metropolitan Water District of Southern California

New Director Representing the Municipal Water District of Orange County Joins Metropolitan board

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Policy professor and water consultant Randall Crane was seated Tuesday as the Municipal Water District of Orange County’s newest representative on the board of directors of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. Crane is a professor emeritus at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, where he studied water governance, infrastructure planning, transportation, and the economic development challenges of cities. Through his career, he has advised the...

Metropolitan Issues Statement on State’s Initial State Water Project Allocation

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Metropolitan Water District General Manager Deven Upadhyay issues the following statement on the California Department of Water Resources’ announced initial State Water Project allocation of 10%: “As in past years, this initial allocation is conservative, reflecting current weather conditions and reservoir levels, while prudently assuming drier conditions for the remainder of the year. Recent storms are encouraging, and we remain hopeful that a productive wet seaso...

Metropolitan Boosts Wildfire Readiness With New Helicopter Dip Tank on the Palos Verdes Peninsula

PALOS VERDES, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In the wake of wildfires that ravaged Southern California communities, Metropolitan Water District unveiled today a new helicopter dip tank on the Palos Verdes Peninsula that will provide firefighters a quick filling, strategically located water source for aerial fire suppression. The new facility was developed in collaboration with the County of Los Angeles Fire Department and installed at Metropolitan’s Palos Verdes Reservoir to protect homes, businesses...
Back to Newsroom