As of Tuesday, California had received slightly more rain than usual this winter — 104 percent of the average, according to state data. The state’s snowpack, which accumulates in the Sierra Nevada and typically provides 30 percent of the state’s water supply for the year, is at 101 percent of normal for this time of year. The state’s reservoirs are at an even higher 116 percent of their normal levels, in part because they are still benefiting from the back-to-back “atmospheric rivers” that slammed California last winter. “We’ve got a year, a second year in fact, when most of California was much wetter than average,
@nettermike What I find interesting is the more water we are getting again,the surcharges on every water bill seem to keep going up as they keep screaming to conserve.Shame we have not been able to held Sac responsible for the props that were suppose to go to the expansion of water storage.