California Drought: Massive Reservoir Goes Bone Dry Overnight
The Mountain Meadows reservoir in Northern California dried up completely in the blink of an eye, leaving thousands of dead fish -- and residents baffled.
25
September, 2015
Residents
say people were fishing in the reservoir, also known as Walker
Lake, just this past weekend. Then the entire lake drained,
as if someone had unplugged a bathtub, in one night.
California
is stuck in a drought of epic proportions, further
compounded by years of sparse snowfall in the Sierra
Nevadas that have left reservoirs across the state at record
lows.
For
resident Eddie Bauer, who has lived next to Walker Lake his
whole life, the drained reservoir was a sight he had never seen
before, the local CBS station reported.
Bauer
was shocked because he, along with regional officials, thought
the reservoir had had two weeks worth of water left. This would
have given time for the Pacific Gas & Electric Company, who
owns the rights to the water for a hydroelectric dam run
on the reservoir, enough time to relocate the fish.
Instead,
Bauer and other residents now see thousands of rotting dead fish
baking in the sun where the reservoir used to be.
“This
makes me feel like they didn’t want to do a fish rescue
and that it was easier to open that sucker up Saturday
Night,” Bauer said.
PG&E
official Paul Moreno said that the water was not intentionally
drained. He told CBS that in March, PG&E realized there
would not be enough water to sustain the lake for the whole
year, so they stopped using the water to generate power.
Outflows from the lake were cut, but not shut
off completely due to concern for fish further
downstream
“The
reservoirs are all continuing to be far below normal,”
said Doug Carlson with the California Department of Water
Resources. “We are reliant upon rainfall to fill those
lakes of course and until we get more rain we’re not
likely to see any appreciable increase in the reservoir
levels.”
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