Drought outlook improves but subsidence issues persist in places like Corcoran
Drought outlook improves but subsidence issues persist in places like Corcoran.
CORCORAN, Calif. (KFSN) — Between the year-to-year drought monitor maps showing significant improvements to California’s drought situation to the announcement that California’s snowpack is now 185-percent of average– there is relief and optimism among many in the state, including farmers.
Using radar technology, members of the jet propulsion lab revealed a subsidence bowl around Corcoran has grown wider and deeper.
That’s about the same amount officials at Tulare Lake Drainage District in Corcoran say their levee has dropped over the past year and a half, due to subsidence.
"And so the effort right now is to raise that levee up several feet in anticipation of the water that will come in the summer," said Kindon Meik, Corcoran City Manager.
Corcoran’s City Manager says crews are continually moving dirt to widen the base and increase the height of the levee, in case of a catastrophic flood event.
Subsidence has also put one of the city’s nine domestic wells out of commission for a few months.
But the hope is that subsidence will stop, or slow, if farmers choose not to turn on the pumps in the coming months.
And so with that water storage, there will be a lot more surface water that will be used over the course of the next few months for farming," said Both the drainage district and Corcoran city officials are urging residents to purchase flood insurance, in case of a severe flood event.
To see the subsidence report, click here.