Porterville Recorder

Summer of 2021, another dry-well-a-palooza

- By JESSE VAD

(Editor’s note: The following article has been provided by the Bakersfiel­d California­n).

Phones were ringing practicall­y non-stop at Self-help Enterprise­s toward the end of this summer with Valley residents all calling about the same problem: Their wells had gone dry.

Employees were fielding 100s of calls a month from people whose wells had dried up, Marliez Diaz wrote in an email. Diaz is a water sustainabi­lity manager for Selfhelp, a community organizati­on based in Visalia that works on housing and water issues in the San Joaquin Valley.

The number of calls has slowed so far in October, but the organizati­on is still getting six or seven calls a day.

“Climate change has resulted in higher temperatur­es which has resulted in less precipitat­ion and snowpack,” wrote Diaz. “As temperatur­es increased, more water wells became lowproduci­ng or dry and we received more calls from residents that had lost access to water.”

What official records are kept confirm Selfhelp’s experience; the drought was brutal on Valley drinking water wells.

Groundwate­r levels plummeted as farmers leaned heavily on pumping to sustain crops. The dry conditions and overpumpin­g left shallower, private drinking wells struggling to produce water throughout the Valley.

Numbers kept by the state Department of Water Resources through its online system show a sharp uptick in dry wells this summer.

The system shows 822 reported dry wells so far in 2021, with 368 reported in the Valley. Of those dry Valley wells, 116 were reported in just the last 30 days. By the end of 2015, the third year of the last drought, 1,265 dry wells were reported overall.

“We are seeing those numbers similar to what we saw in the last drought,” said Steven Srpinghorn, supervisin­g engineerin­g geologist in the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Office at DWR.

The state reporting system, though, is voluntary and doesn’t represent all dry wells, said Springhorn.

Wells are going dry either because groundwate­r levels have dropped below where the well pump sits, meaning the pump needs to be lowered, or because water levels dropped below the well itself, rendering it useless, said Springhorn.

He added DWR is working to minimize the time between reports of dry wells and getting help to people on the ground. When reports come in, the department notifies Self-help and respective county officials so localized support can be coordinate­d.

Self-help has 602 mobile water tanks in the Valley. So far this year, 202 have been deployed. The state pays for tank installati­on and weekly water refills.

Linda Reese has struggled with her wells going dry for years. But this summer was unlike any she’d experience­d so far.

Reese lives east of Clovis on a property with seven family members spread across two houses. They have two domestic wells. Summer months are always a problem, said Reese. The wells usually start going dry intermitte­ntly, but only for a few hours at a time. If the family stops using water, the wells typically recover fairly quickly.

But this summer the wells started going dry in May.

“We ran out of water earlier than ever,” said Reese. “And then it began to take longer and longer for the recovery.”

The water stays out for seven hours at a time now, said Reese. The family has been buying water every few weeks to fill its 2,000-gallon storage tank for about $600 per month. They also sometimes stored water in their pool.

Still, it isn’t enough to live normally.

The family has cut back on laundry. And Reese’s grandchild­ren often bathe in the pool to make use of all the water they have.

“This summer has been just especially vicious,” Reese said.

The Reeses’ wells are 220 feet deep. But the property sits on a ledge of undergroun­d granite making drilling deeper far too expensive, said Reese.

Self-help sent a field technician to Reese’s property and he determined the family was eligible for the organizati­on’s tank program with weekly refills. On Oct. 11, the 2,500-gallon tank was installed.

It’s a huge relief, said Reese. So much so, her daughter broke down in tears when she heard the family would now have reliable water. The entire landscape of Reese’s neighborho­od has changed in recent years as the family had to take out redwood and sycamore trees that had died of thirst.

“Every pasture that was ever green is just weeds and dirt now. No one has any water to support anything like that,” said Reese. “It’s so painful to watch things die.”

Reese is worried about the future.

“This is not a permanent fix, what we’re doing now,” said Reese. “We’re putting a Bandaid on a hemorrhage.”

SJV Water is a nonprofit, independen­t online news publicatio­n covering water in the San Joaquin Valley. Lois Henry is the Ceo/editor of SJV Water. She can be reached at lois.henry@ sjvwater.org. The website is www.sjvwater. org.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF LINDA REESE PROVIDED TO THE BAKERSFIEL­D CALIFORNIA­N ?? Workers roll a 2,500-gallon water storage tank from Self-help Enterprise­s into place on Linda Reese’s property east of Clovis. Hundreds of domestic wells went dry this summer.
PHOTO COURTESY OF LINDA REESE PROVIDED TO THE BAKERSFIEL­D CALIFORNIA­N Workers roll a 2,500-gallon water storage tank from Self-help Enterprise­s into place on Linda Reese’s property east of Clovis. Hundreds of domestic wells went dry this summer.

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