π¨ JUST IN: Trump has ordered more water be routed to southern California, which has been grappling with fires and lack of water.
The order is titled "Putting People over Fish: Stopping Radical Environmentalism to Provide Water to Southern California."
It will... "route more water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to other parts of the state for use by the people there who desperately need a reliable water supply."
back when i was growing up and going to school in california: when you were taking too long to drink water at the water fountain, people would slap your back and say, "save some for the whales"
Grok 2.0
Los Angeles (LA) primarily sources its water from several key places:
The Los Angeles Aqueduct: This system brings water from the Owens River in the Eastern Sierra Nevada mountains. It includes both the original aqueduct completed in 1913 and the second aqueduct finished in 1970.
The Colorado River: Through the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, LA receives water from the Colorado River Aqueduct. This water comes from Lake Havasu, which is fed by the Colorado River.
Local Groundwater: The city also relies on groundwater from the San Fernando Valley and other local aquifers. This source is managed through a series of wells and is part of the city's efforts to use more sustainable water resources.
State Water Project: This involves water from Northern California, specifically from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, which is transported via the California Aqueduct. The Metropolitan Water District also plays a role in distributing this water to LA.
Recycled Water: Increasingly, LA uses recycled water for non-potable uses like irrigation, industrial cooling, and in some cases, after further treatment, for indirect potable reuse by replenishing groundwater.
Stormwater Capture: Efforts are being made to capture more local rainwater through various infrastructure projects to increase the city's water self-sufficiency.
These sources are managed by several agencies, with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) being one of the primary agencies responsible for water supply in the city. The balance between these sources can shift based on factors like drought, environmental regulations, and infrastructure development.
I'm getting sent there. I fully intend to photograph any anomalies I see.
Please keep us posted and stay safe.
Those dummies are so eat up with TDS,that they will turn the water down. Because it is racist.
π¨ JUST IN: Trump has ordered more water be routed to southern California, which has been grappling with fires and lack of water.
The order is titled "Putting People over Fish: Stopping Radical Environmentalism to Provide Water to Southern California."
It will... "route more water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to other parts of the state for use by the people there who desperately need a reliable water supply."
https://x.com/EricLDaugh/status/1881519474261549547
That order read more like a fact finding order with recommendations and evaluation rather than direct action.
Ok, but just don't waste the poor little fishies. Instead, harvest, and can them, and use them for cat food. Then drain the water.
The fish counters haven't seen any of those fish for years.
https://greatawakening.win/p/19A1LbkPLs/the-infamous-delta-smelt-fish-ha/c/
u/#byebye
Yes use them for cat food - catturd would love a snack!
back when i was growing up and going to school in california: when you were taking too long to drink water at the water fountain, people would slap your back and say, "save some for the whales"
There a 3x more people in California than when I grew up there in the 70βs and 80βs and they flush their water out to the ocean.
Did he include making it illegal for the state to dump the water into the sea?
Trump-proofing California = burning CA to the ground. I guess thatβs what Xi and Newscum discussed. Zip tie noose for newscum β°οΈ
Will Newsome enforce it?
Great documentary about San Joaquin River
https://youtu.be/gOvQe2KFCXc?si=qX2l_jWNubYSbgLJ
Grok 2.0 Los Angeles (LA) primarily sources its water from several key places:
The Los Angeles Aqueduct: This system brings water from the Owens River in the Eastern Sierra Nevada mountains. It includes both the original aqueduct completed in 1913 and the second aqueduct finished in 1970.
The Colorado River: Through the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, LA receives water from the Colorado River Aqueduct. This water comes from Lake Havasu, which is fed by the Colorado River.
Local Groundwater: The city also relies on groundwater from the San Fernando Valley and other local aquifers. This source is managed through a series of wells and is part of the city's efforts to use more sustainable water resources.
State Water Project: This involves water from Northern California, specifically from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, which is transported via the California Aqueduct. The Metropolitan Water District also plays a role in distributing this water to LA.
Recycled Water: Increasingly, LA uses recycled water for non-potable uses like irrigation, industrial cooling, and in some cases, after further treatment, for indirect potable reuse by replenishing groundwater.
Stormwater Capture: Efforts are being made to capture more local rainwater through various infrastructure projects to increase the city's water self-sufficiency.
These sources are managed by several agencies, with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) being one of the primary agencies responsible for water supply in the city. The balance between these sources can shift based on factors like drought, environmental regulations, and infrastructure development.
Way to slap that greasy clown newscum right in his beavis mouf. Can u imagine the libs cheering for Donald when he puts out this homes on fire