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Shasta River Dangerously Low On Water: Conservation Group

The Shasta River in Siskiyou County, CA.
Brandon Overstreet/National Science Foundation
The Shasta River in Siskiyou County, CA.

The drought in Northern California, combined with agricultural water use, is shrinking the Shasta River, according to a conservation group in Siskiyou County.

During normal summers an unobstructed, spring-fed Shasta River flows at 150-200 cubic feet per second, according to Bruce Shoemaker with Friends of the Shasta River. But in recent weeks, he says, it鈥檚 been reduced to just three cubic feet per second.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just been virtually, completely captured,鈥 says Shoemaker who is a local property owner and member of the conservation group鈥檚 board.

Friends of the Shasta River, a grassroots group of citizens in the Shasta River Basin, is worried that diversions for agriculture could cause the river to go dry this summer. The Shasta provides critical rearing habitat for Chinook salmon in the Klamath River system, as well as habitat for steelhead and threatened coho salmon.

Now, the group is calling on government water managers to set a minimum water level needed for fish to survive.

鈥淔riends of the Shasta River is calling on the State Water Resources Control Board, National Marine Fisheries Service and California鈥檚 Department of Fish and Wildlife to use their regulatory authority to reduce water use to protect these fish,鈥 the group wrote in a press release about the Shasta River鈥檚 current water levels.

California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Map of the Shasta River in Siskiyou County

鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to destroy agriculture,鈥 Shoemaker says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a long, really important tradition of agriculture in Siskiyou County, and we鈥檙e very supportive of that continuing. But what we鈥檝e been saying is it鈥檚 time to share.鈥

In early June, diversions from the nearby Scott River were with junior water rights in light of extremely low flows that were threatening endangered species in that river.

A spokesperson with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife did not respond to a request for comment.

Erik Neumann is JPR's news director. He earned a master's degree from the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and joined JPR as a reporter in 2019 after working at NPR member station KUER in Salt Lake City.