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blog post

Drought Watch: What’s in Proposition 1?

By Ellen Hanak, Caitrin Chappelle

What kind of water projects will be funded if Proposition 1 passes? The bond focuses mainly on water supply, with the majority designated as matching funds for storage projects.

blog post

Drought Watch: Regional Solutions

By Ellen Hanak, Jay Lund, Caitrin Chappelle

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

Both the legislature and local water agencies have pushed the idea that state bonds should continue to provide dollars for integrated regional water management. But there might be a better way.

blog post

Building a Better Water Safety Net

By Lori Pottinger

California’s poor rural communities have been hard hit by the drought. We interviewed Laurel Firestone about our water inequities, and ways to solve them.

blog post

Drought Watch: Lessons from Kansas

By Ellen Hanak, David Mitchell

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

Bonds alone can’t do the job of meeting our critical water needs. Now’s the time—during, not after the drought—to consider a broader package of solutions.

blog post

Drought Watch: Getting More Pop per Drop

By David Lesher

PPIC senior fellow Ellen Hanak testified to the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee about the recent history of the state’s water finance.

Report

California’s Water: Paying for Water

By Ellen Hanak, Dean Misczynski, Jay Lund, Brian Gray ...

Sustainable solutions by state and local leaders are needed to close serious funding gaps in a number of critical areas of water management—including floods, water quality, and aquatic ecosystems. This brief describes the state’s major water funding gaps and proposes ways to fill them.

Report

Policy Priorities for Managing Drought

By Ellen Hanak, Jay Lund, Jeffrey Mount, Peter Moyle ...

State, federal, and local water managers have worked diligently to reduce the economic, social, and environmental harm from the current drought. But as the drought continues, the challenges will grow more acute. California can learn from experiences to date—and from Australia’s response to its Millennium Drought—to better prepare both for the year ahead and for future droughts. State leaders should address weaknesses in four areas of drought preparation and response, by: 1) improving water use information, 2) setting clear goals and priorities for public health and the environment, 3) promoting water conservation and more resilient water supplies, and 4) strengthening environmental management.

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