Statewide water use was just 2.8 percent lower in February than in 2013, and far from the 25 percent cut that cities will soon be required to achieve, according to data from 390 urban water suppliers that was presented Tuesday morning to the State Water Resources Control Board.
The new figures, surprising to some residents, indicate that achieving the stiffer regulations announced by Governor Brown last week will require significant changes in behavior.
The statewide average was dragged down by metropolitan Southern California, home to roughly half the state’s 38 million people. Water use in the region was actually 2.3 percent higher in February than a year ago, which negated the roughly 14 percent savings achieved in the Sacramento River Basin, the San Joaquin River Basin, and the northern Sierra Nevada.
Sizzling heat in Southern California helped drive up water use in February. The average temperature in downtown Los Angeles was 5 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than normal. The city recorded almost no rain, according to the National Weather Service. Because more than half of residential water is used on grass, the combination of hot, dry and cultural allegiance to green turf has a dramatic influence on water consumption.
Conservation Soon Required
Asking Californians to voluntarily conserve has not worked, at least not at the desired level. In January 2014, Gov. Brown called for a voluntary 20 percent reduction in urban water use. That goal was met only once, last December. In most months since water use accounting began in June 2014 residents have conserved between 7 percent and 12 percent.
Seeing insufficient response, the governor increased the pressure for urban areas by requiring a 25 percent statewide cut as part of a wide-ranging executive order announced on April 1. Not every city will be treated equally. The Water Resources Control Board, which is in charge of writing the new regulations, will ask those that conserved the most to date to do less.
The disparity between regions is striking. Santa Cruz, for example, is a state leader in efficient use of water. Residents of the central coast city use an average of just 44 gallons per person each day. Palm Springs, on the other hand, drinks deeply to cultivate its lush image. The desert oasis and neighboring cities that are supplied by the Coachella Valley Water District use 282 gallons per person each day.
The Water Resources Control Board will release a set of draft conservation regulations on April 17 before finalizing the mandatory restrictions at its May 5 meeting.

