California expands drought emergency to large swath of state
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday expanded a drought emergency declaration to a large swath of the nation’s most populated state amid “acute water supply shortages” in northern and central parts of California.
The declaration now covers 41 of 58 counties, covering 30% of California’s nearly 40 million people. The U.S. Drought Monitor shows most of the state and the American West is in extensive drought just a few years after California emerged from a punishing multiyear dry spell.
Officials fear an extraordinary dry spring presages a wildfire season like last year, when flames burned a record 6,562 square miles (16,996 square kilometres).
It comes as Newsom prepares to propose more spending on both short- and long-term responses to dry conditions. The Democratic governor last month had declared an emergency in just two counties north of San Francisco — Mendocino and Sonoma.