How worried are Californians about access to water? A new study breaks that down

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How worried are Californians about access to water? A new study breaks that down
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Researchers say public perception of the risks climate change poses to our water supply are key to how governments will act to secure water for the future.

Researchers said impacts to water supplies were “relatively evenly distributed across Californians with respect to education, income level, and water provider.” But they point to “significant differences across gender and racial divides.”

A larger share of women reported water supply impacts compared with men. “Genderqueer/non-binary respondents reported an even higher rate of these impacts,” researchers noted.“Both Latino and Asian American Pacific Islander residents are more likely than others to report impacts to their household water supplies.

The researchers found that Californians who experienced water supply issues related to drought, extreme heat and landslides were more likely to agree that water security was an ongoing concern. Residents who reported water impacts due to fires or flooding were less likely to express those concerns., said the findings are particularly important for “local, regional, and state governments, water managers and decisionmakers.

The central issue: how the ascension of streaming brought more content and depressed pay. Five writers shared their stories with The Times.not as, the agency said. Riders and transit advocates criticized Metro’s tactic to dissuade unhoused people from taking shelter in the station.after many of the 29 properties fell into extreme disrepair. The Times

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