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Most California water districts can ease conservation

The drought is not over, but state officials will not force most California water districts to reduce water use this year.

Credit: Justin Sullivan Getty Images
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JULY 15: A woman uses a hose to wash the sidewalk in front of an apartment building on July 15, 2014 in San Francisco, California. As the California drought continues to worsen and voluntary conservation is falling well below the suggested 20 percent, the California Water Resources Control Board is considering a $500 per day fine for residents who waste water on landscaping, hosing down sidewalks and car washing. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

The drought is not over, but state officials will not force most California water districts to reduce water use this year.

The Sacramento Bee reports (http://bit.ly/2bDYp2l ) that about 85 percent of the state's water districts told the water board Tuesday that they believe they have adequate supplies to handle continued drought and should not be subject to state-mandated conservation targets. The remaining districts must set conservation goals proportional to their anticipated shortfall.

The new approach to conservation is a sharp reversal from last year when the state imposed mandatory water-use cuts of 25 percent on average across the state compared with 2013.

A relatively normal amount of rain and snowfall in Northern California last winter helped ease drought conditions. However, the National Drought Mitigation Center says about 60 percent of the state remains in severe, extreme or exceptional drought.

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