American Rivers
            yesterday announced its annual list of America’s Most Endangered Rivers®, naming California’s San
            Joaquin River the Most Endangered River in the country. Outdated water
            management and excessive diversions, compounded by the current drought, have
            put the San Joaquin River at a breaking point. 
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American Rivers
            is calling on the California State Water Resources Control Board to increase river
            flows to protect water quality, fish, and recreation, and support sustainable
            agriculture as well as urge Congress to preserve agreements and laws designed
            to protect the San Joaquin River and communities it supports. 
“On the San
            Joaquin and across the nation, communities can increase their ability to deal
            with drought now and in the future by protecting and restoring rivers and using
            water more efficiently,” said Bob Irvin, President of American Rivers. “By
            prioritizing healthy rivers and sustainable water management, we can enjoy
            reliable clean water supplies, healthy fish and wildlife, recreation, and
            quality of life for generations to come.” 
For the second consecutive
            year, the report underscores the problems that arise for communities and the
            environment when we drain too much water out of rivers. Last year the Colorado
            River was #1 on the list because of outdated water management. This basin
            remains in the spotlight this year, with water diversion threats placing the
            Gila River and the rivers of the Upper Colorado Basin on the Most Endangered
            list. 
The annual report
            is a list of rivers at a crossroads, where key decisions in the coming months
            will determine the rivers’ fates. Over the years, the report has helped spur
            many successes including the removal of outdated dams, protection of rivers
            with Wild and Scenic designations, and prevention of harmful development and
            pollution. 
This year’s list includes:
#1 San Joaquin River
Threat: Outdated water management and excessive diversions impacting river health
#2 Upper Colorado River System
Threat: New trans-mountain water diversions impacting river health and recreation
#3 Middle Mississippi River
Threat: Outdated flood management impacting wildlife habitat and public safety
#4 Gila River
Threat: New water diversions impacting overall river health
#5 San Francisquito Creek
Threat: Dam impacting aquatic habitat and public safety
#6 South Fork Edisto River
Threat: Excessive water withdrawals impacting aquatic habitat, recreation, and water quality
#7 White River (CO)
Threat: Oil and gas drilling impacting drinking water supplies and aquatic habitat
#8 White River (WA)
Threat: Outdated dam and fish passage facilities impacting salmon, steelhead, and bull trout populations
#9 Haw River
Threat: Polluted runoff impacting clean water
#10 Clearwater/Lochsa Rivers
Threat: Industrialization of a Wild and Scenic River corridor impacting scenery, solitude, world-class recreational values
Read more at American Rivers.
San Joaquin River Near Rainbow Falls in Devil’s Postpile National Monument, California image via Shutterstock.



