Greater than three many years after a landmark resolution referred to as for Los Angeles to restrict its taking of water to lift the extent of Mono Lake, California regulators are reexamining why the lake nonetheless hasn’t rebounded and what ought to be completed about it.
On the request of state water officers, UCLA local weather scientists developed a brand new mannequin to research why the lake stays far under its state-mandated goal stage. In a brand new report, they mentioned that with out L.A.’s use of water from creeks that feed the lake, its waters can be about 4 ft increased — nearer to that required threshold.
“The best way the exports are regulated, assembly lake stage goals is unlikely,” Alex Corridor, a UCLA local weather scientist, informed members of the California State Water Sources Management Board at a gathering Tuesday.
A canoe tour stops close to a tufa to find out about Mono Lake’s biodiversity and ecosystem on Aug. 2, 2025.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Occasions)
Whereas his UCLA workforce estimated that local weather change has additionally performed a job, preserving Mono Lake about 2.6 ft decrease than it will in any other case be, the researchers concluded that halting L.A.’s water exports would roughly double the probability of the lake reaching its goal stage throughout the subsequent 20 years.
In a 1994 resolution, state water regulators required the L.A. Division of Water and Energy to restrict diversions and take steps to lift the lake stage 17 ft. Mono Lake is now increased than it was then, however remains to be about 9 ft under the required stage.
DWP managers mentioned they’ve questions and need to vet the UCLA evaluation.
Eric Tillemans, DWP’s interim aqueduct supervisor, informed the state board that town’s research have discovered Mono Lake’s ranges are “extra depending on precipitation, evaporation and runoff than every other elements.”
“It’s extremely technical and a scientifically novel modeling effort, but it surely wasn’t developed via a facilitated course of or skilled peer-reviewed,” Tillemans mentioned, including that it “requires further time to finish an intensive evaluate.”
Anselmo Collins, DWP’s chief working officer and senior assistant normal supervisor, mentioned the evaluation by UCLA researchers ought to be completely vetted earlier than state officers take into account whether or not it ought to be used to information coverage selections.
In 1994, the State Water Sources Management Board set a goal stage of 6,392 ft above sea stage for Mono Lake. The extent remains to be about 9 ft under that.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Occasions)
In recent times, L.A. has gotten about 2% of its water from the Jap Sierra creeks within the Mono Basin. Environmental advocates have referred to as for town to take much less water to assist the lake attain a wholesome stage and help an ecosystem that’s very important for migratory birds.
Richard Katz, former president of the Los Angeles Board of Water and Energy Commissioners, proposed in a letter to the state board that DWP ought to pause its use of water from the Mono Basin. He wrote that doing this may be the “quickest and most cost-effective manner” to lift the lake stage.
Katz additionally mentioned a current metropolis resolution to double the dimensions of a water-recycling mission gives a “distinctive alternative” to extend native water whereas additionally letting Mono Lake get well.
Others who spoke at Tuesday’s assembly in Sacramento referred to as for the state water board to intervene and require L.A. to take much less water to allow the lake to rise, or to cease taking water altogether.
“It’s been far too lengthy that this has been allowed to occur,” mentioned Noah Williams, a member of the Bishop Paiute Tribe, including that the main focus ought to be on “actually addressing the difficulty of elevating the lake elevation.”
Former L.A. Metropolis Councilmember Ruth Galanter, who helped dealer an settlement that laid the groundwork for the 1994 resolution, urged the state board to insist that DWP fulfill its dedication.
“This type of delay is what provides regulation a nasty title, and it makes individuals lose religion within the notion that the federal government is right here to serve you,” Galanter mentioned. “So it’s not simply Mono Lake that’s at stake right here. It’s the credibility of our authorized system and our regulatory system.“
Geoffrey McQuilkin, govt director of the nonprofit Mono Lake Committee, urged the state water board to behave, saying in three many years DWP “has proven that it’ll not restore this nationwide treasure voluntarily.” He agreed with Katz that town ought to pause its use of water from the realm till Mono Lake can rise.
Geoffrey McQuilkin, govt director of the Mono Lake Committee, friends via binoculars at Mono Lake’s South Tufa on Aug. 1, 2025.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Occasions)
Janisse Quiñones, DWP’s departing prime govt, disagreed. She informed the state water board in a March 13 letter that Los Angeles has diminished its use of water from the Mono Basin since 1994, however that additional decreasing the quantity will not be prone to considerably hasten the lake’s rise.
Quiñones additionally mentioned the protections the state water board put in place, in addition to further steps by DWP, “have been a hit.”
“Mono Lake stands in stark distinction to all different saline lakes within the West — together with the Salton Sea and the Nice Salt Lake — which might be declining in elevation and dealing with important environmental points,” she wrote.
Quiñones informed the board that decreasing or halting town’s use of water from the Mono Basin can be “unwarranted, imprudent, and place undue monetary burden on LADWP’s ratepayers.”
It’s not clear when the state water board would possibly convene one other assembly on the matter.

