California will consider lifting drought cuts

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Monday, May 9, 2016
In this Friday, Feb. 7, 2014 file photo, the cracked-dry bed of the Almaden Reservoir is seen in San Jose, Calif.
In this Friday, Feb. 7, 2014 file photo, the cracked-dry bed of the Almaden Reservoir is seen in San Jose, Calif.
kgo-AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

SACRAMENTO -- California will consider lifting a mandatory statewide water conservation order for cities and towns as the state's drought eases.

The state Water Resources Control Board will decide May 18 whether to lift a conservation target, most recently for at least 20 percent water cutbacks by urban users statewide. It has been in place since last year.

"We got a reprieve" from El Nino storms that brought snow and rain to Northern California this winter, water board chairwoman Felicia Marcus said. She says the state needs to use the reprieve to prepare for the years ahead as California moves into a drier future from climate change.

RELATED: Bay Area water conservation resources

California Gov. Jerry Brown ordered the mandatory statewide conservation last year, at the height of the driest four-year spell in history in California. Nearly 90 percent of California remains in some stage of drought.

Water officials are proposing lifting the mandatory conservation target for cities and towns that can prove they have enough water to get by should the drought persist another three years.

Click here for the latest stories on the drought.