WA’s mountain snow recharges our drinking water, powers our lives. Now it’s turning to rain.

Precipitation that once fell as snow is instead falling as rain, and the snow that does reach the ground is melting earlier in the year as our dry season trends longer and hotter. All told, Washington will see more water when it doesn’t need it and less water when it does. Guillaume Mauger and Matt Rogers, scientists at the Climate Impacts Group, are quoted, and the Shifting Snowlines and Shorelines report is referenced. 

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