05/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/07/2026 17:51
What you need to know: Governor Newsom today delivered closing remarks at the Association of California Water Agencies, highlighting the state's accomplishments since 2019 to help protect California's sustainable water future and outline what the state must do to maintain this progress.
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SACRAMENTO - Today, Governor Gavin Newsom spoke before members of the Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA), presenting a clear path forward to protect California's water supplies and ensure the state can continue to deliver water for its nearly 40 million residents. The annual event brings together water agencies from across the state that manage local water systems for communities.
California has embraced a more balanced and forward-looking approach to water policy - rejecting the false choice between protecting our water future and building the infrastructure we need. We're taking an all-of-the-above approach by expanding water projects, restoring habitats, and improving water quality, because real progress comes from partnership, not polarization.
Governor Gavin Newsom
The Governor's remarks outlined actions by the administration to help ensure the state can continue delivering for Californians and laid out necessary steps for the state to maintain its course. Together since 2019, California has worked with stakeholders to modernize and strengthen water systems, rebuild ecosystems and habitats, and prepare the state for a future with more intense drought, storms, floods, and wildfires as a result of climate change.
Climate change has created dramatic shifts in how the state must manage water. In the last 15 years alone, California has experienced two worst-in-a-millennium droughts, one of which brought the driest three-year period in the state's history, followed by the wettest three-week period ever. In California and states throughout the nation, the wets are getting wetter, the hots are getting hotter, and the droughts are getting drier.
Recognizing the impacts of this extreme climate volatility, Governor Newsom has pushed forward to prepare the state's water systems for more climate whiplash by creating a comprehensive bottom-up strategy to maintain and diversify water supplies, protect and enhance natural ecosystems, and build stronger connections.
Soon after taking office, Governor Newsom laid the groundwork for a stronger water future by releasing the 2020 Water Resilience Portfolio, recognizing that water policy must be developed collectively with state and local agencies, climate leaders, and industry - working together to advance their shared interests and sustain California's water for generations to come.
Governor Newsom issued an executive order with broad and ambitious strategies, leading to 142 actions that will help sustain California's water, create infrastructure, and protect California communities, including:
California has long suffered from an inequity in its water systems, and in 2019, despite being the richest state in the nation, more than a million Californians were living in homes with contaminated drinking water. It was a medical and a moral crisis. Governor Newsom has helped improve water quality for California residents who have a right to clean water free of pollution by:
Governor Newsom signed legislation to facilitate the consolidation of failing drinking water and sewer systems. The legislation was signed in East Orosi in Tulare County. Last month, the community broke ground on the East Orosi water system consolidation.
As the most recent drought intensified in 2022, it became clear that the state needed a focused action plan to replace water supply lost by hotter dryer conditions in coming decades. Record-low runoff that year from dry soils and high spring temperatures underscored what the Department of Water Resources had concluded from scientific data and modeling: California could lose upwards of 10% of its water supply, or six to nine million acre-feet of water on average each year by 2040 - if it didn't properly adapt by better storing, managing, and transporting water supplies. In 2022, the administration created the "Water Supply Strategy" plan to help free up 500,000 acre-feet of water through more efficient water use and conservation, as well as;
Groundwater provides 41% of the state's total water supply - 60% in dry years. But when it is used, it must be provided with time and strategies for its supplies to replenish or recharge. Excessively pulling from this resource, especially in times of drought, creates land subsidence, or sinkage, and depletes natural resources.
Governor Newsom bolstered compliance with the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, investing $1 billion and working with local communities to create 250 new groundwater sustainability agencies and 1,500 new groundwater projects. Governor Newsom also advanced restoration of floodplains, habitat restoration, and buffer zones to protect watersheds through the Multibenefit Land Repurposing Program.
The Newsom administration, along with state, federal, and local leaders, developed the Healthy Rivers and Landscapes (HRL) Program as an innovative alternative approach to traditional regulatory requirements to improve environmental conditions while providing more water supply certainty to communities, farms, and businesses throughout California. The program, embraced by the State Water Resources Control Board, establishes an eight-year framework to improve the ecological health of the Bay-Delta - focusing on restoring habitats and targeted flows. This means more water in rivers from January to June and has already resulted in 45,000 acres of native fish habitat restored.
Klamath Dam removed, Photo credit Swift Films
Completing water infrastructure projects quickly is more important than ever. Through Governor Newsom's streamlining efforts, the administration is working to mitigate future cost increases and prepare California for the new climate reality. The Governor's Build More, Faster infrastructure agenda has cleared the way for $180 billion in infrastructure investments and accelerated projects by cutting red tape while preserving critical environmental protections.
During his administration, the Governor has advanced generational water infrastructure, including projects that:
San Luis Reservoir
Salmon are profoundly important to California's precious ecosystems and economy. They provide important commercial, recreational, economic, intrinsic and cultural benefits to fishing communities, California Native American tribes, and the entire state. California's salmon populations are struggling to recover from years of drought, climate disruption, and other environmental and human-made challenges. California has taken significant and meaningful steps to rebuild salmon stocks across the state, including:
The science is clear: California faces intensifying weather whiplash and warming temperatures in the coming years and decades. The Governor outlined the road ahead: