Commission Urges Water Efficiency and Compliance With State-Issued Drought Watches and Warnings
The Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) today announced the termination of its drought management special permit in effect since Nov. 23, 2016, when the basin was placed in a drought watch.
“Due to recent precipitation and snow melt,
combined storage in three large upper basin reservoirs has achieved and
sustained a sufficient level for five consecutive days to result in
automatic termination of the basinwide drought watch,”
said DRBC Executive Director Steve Tambini.
“Although upper basin reservoir storage has
rebounded in recent weeks automatically ending the drought watch
operations, other indicators such as groundwater levels, stream flows,
precipitation, soil moisture, and local reservoir storage
have not all recovered,” said Tambini. “As a result, various
state-issued drought watches and warnings based on those indicators
remain in effect across most of the basin.”
“DRBC continues to urge all water users to maximize
water efficiency wherever possible and to fully cooperate with requests
by the basin states to curb water use where drought watches and
warnings have been issued based on local conditions,”
added Tambini. “The importance of a coordinated response by all water
users cannot be overstated.”
The DRBC’s primary drought management objective,
which complements the basin states’ drought response efforts, is to
provide for conservation of regional reservoir storage for purposes of
water supply and flow augmentation in the Delaware
River and salinity control in the Delaware Estuary (i.e., the tidal
river and bay).
The upper basin reservoirs which determine DRBC
drought stages are located in the Catskill Mountains at the headwaters
of the Delaware River in New York State. These three New York City
reservoirs provide about half of the city’s water
supply and support a minimum flow target in the Delaware River at
Montague, N.J. established by the U.S. Supreme Court Decree of 1954.
Storage, releases, diversions, and flow targets in the DRBC drought
management plan are determined in advance and must have
the unanimous concurrence of the parties to the decree, which include
the four basin states and New York City.
Combined storage in the three upper basin
reservoirs had been as low as 39.3% of capacity in late November 2016.
The reservoirs are currently at about 58% of capacity, which is
approximately 70 billion gallons below normal for this time
of the year.
By transitioning out of the drought watch stage,
out-of-basin diversions to New York City and portions of New Jersey
established by the decree will return to normal levels. In addition,
the Delaware River flow objective at Montague and
a second flow objective at Trenton, N.J. will also return to the normal
targets of 1,750 cubic feet per second (cfs) and 3,000 cfs,
respectively.
The purpose of the Trenton flow objective is to
control the movement of the “salt line” or “salt front” in the tidal
Delaware River. Adequate freshwater flowing downstream is needed to
repel the upstream migration of “salty” or “brackish”
water from the Delaware Bay to keep it away from drinking water intakes
serving residents in Philadelphia and New Jersey, as well as industrial
intakes along the river.
As of Jan. 16, thanks to increased downstream
flows, the salt front was located at river mile 73, which is four miles
upstream of the normal January location. The salt front reached river
mile 90 in late November-early December, which
was well above the normal location but still 20 miles downstream of
water supply intakes in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
“Cooperation from the states, from New York City,
and from water users and managers has been effective during the
basinwide drought watch period,” said Tambini. “Although recent trends
in storage volume and the location of the salt front
have been positive and DRBC is required to move from ‘drought watch’
status back to ‘normal’ status, the volume of water in the reservoirs
and other indicators suggest additional cooperation and water efficiency
are still needed.”
The DRBC is a federal/interstate government agency
responsible for managing the water resources within the 13,539
square-mile Delaware River Basin without regard to political
boundaries. The five commission members are the governors of
the basin states (Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania) and
the commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' North Atlantic
Division, who represents the federal government.