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Water Wars

McCloud River Could be “Annexed” By Westlands Irrigation District??

April 3, 2009, by Tom Chandler 4 comments

Longtime Undergrounders will know of my love for the Westlands Irrigation District – that wacky, never-should-have-been-formed water entity that pretty much bled the Trinity dry, and now – in the face of the collapse of the California Delta – is looking for new water sources.

Their purchase of the exclusive, private Bollibokka Club on the lower McCloud was first cast in terms of removing barriers to raising Shasta Dam (another bad idea).

Now another possibility has surfaced (courtesy of Westlands itself): They’d attempt to annex the 3000 acres of the Bollibokka Club into their irrigation district, then claim water rights for their hundreds-of-miles south irrigation district. This from the Redding Record Searchlight:

Some Shasta County officials are worried that a Fresno-area water district may ask to annex almost 3,000 acres it owns along the McCloud River — a possible move to shift the water rights hundreds of miles south.

The issue will be discussed this morning at the Shasta Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCO) meeting.

So far, no annexation proposal has been filed by the Westlands Water District, Shasta LAFCO Executive Officer Amy Mickelson said. Westlands, the largest water district in the nation, includes farmland in western Fresno County and Kings County.

While it appears nothing is imminent, Westlands did make a pair of phone calls – one to the Shasta LAFCO cited above, and one to the Fresno LAFCO, which feels suspiciously like they’re shopping for the most agreeable entity.

Shasta LAFCO’s Mickelson said she took a brief call in January from a Westlands representative about possible annexation of the land, but like hundreds of calls the district takes each year, nothing has come of it since, nor does she think anything ever will develop.

“I truly think this was just a stab in the dark, (to ask) how easy would it be?” she said of Westland’s inquiry. “I think we’re quite a ways from seeing anything formally filed, if and when they opt to do that.”

Mickelson mentioned the call in a staff report to Shasta’s commissioners to keep them informed, and she’s watching Westland’s agendas to see if the water district takes further action, she said.

After its call to Shasta LAFCO, the water district called Fresno LAFCO to see if it could decide an annexation request of the Shasta County land, Mickelson said. Shasta’s commission opposes that move and Mickelson has sent an e-mail to the Fresno agency saying so, she said.

When asked directly by the Record-Searchlight reporter, the Westlands spokesperson delivered what we’d call a weasly non-denial:

Woolf sidestepped a question about why Westlands might also be interested in annexing that land into its water district, hundreds of miles to the south, however. She stressed that no decision had been made.

“I honestly don’t know if we would be pursuing that or not. It hasn’t been done at this point in time,” she said of annexation.

None of this means anything’s going to happen. None of means something won’t happen. It does, however, offer up visions of Owens Valley North.

What it does mean is that the Westlands Irrigation District is pretty much running at normal speed, which is to say looking for any angle that profits them – regardless of the economic and envionmental harm done to others.

It’s hard not to feel sympathy for some members of the district, who are facing severe cutbacks in water deliveries. Westlands is an irrigation project that should never have been built in the first place (the salt-and-selenium tainted soil creates huge problems), but at this point, I’d suggest the best route isn’t to let them environmentally (and economically) devastate yet another river.

In our third year of drought (I saw a statewide survey figure suggesting about 81% of normal snowpack), the California Water Wars are in full bloom, and if you don’t believe me, spend a few minutes on the unbelievably complete (and neutral) Aquafornia.com blog.

Everyone’s going at everyone else hammer and tongs, with seemingly the only winners being attorneys.

mccloud river, westlands irrigation district, california water wars

Scientists Decide Water Exports a Key Factor in Sacramento Salmon Collapse

February 16, 2009, by Tom Chandler 1 comment

After the collapse of the Sacramento River’s salmon fishery, many pointed a finger at “ocean conditions” to explain the decline, while many fishermen and activists focused instead on a California Delta they say was crippled by five years of record water diversions.

Now, the National Marine Fisheries Service has issued a new biological opinion (to replace the opinion a judge found wanting), and the information is staggering.

Only 20% of the salmon smolts survive the trip from Red Bluff to the Delta, and once there, the water project’s pumps decimate the remaining smolts – only only 16.5% of the juveniles survive at the state facility and only 35% survive at the federal pumps.

Ouch.

The rest of the report makes for equally grim reading; it’s clear that many of the populations are headed for extinction, and that water is dearly overpromised. You can read more at Dan Bacher’s eye-opening article for Indymedia and at this post on Dan Blanton’s excellent message board.

Here are a few facts excerpted from Blanton’s article: Read more →

California In “Worst California Drought in Modern History”?

January 30, 2009, by Tom Chandler No comments yet

I try to post fun stuff on Fridays, but this is a little too important to overlook: Recent snowpack surveys in California suggest we’re looking at a third year of drought – with this year being potentially the worst. From the Aquafornia blog:

“We may be at the start of the worst California drought in modern history. It’s imperative for Californians to conserve water immediately at home and in their businesses,” says Lester Snow

The no-place-else-you-need-to-go Aquafornia blog published a roundup of reactions from around the state, many of which are remarkable only for their deft denials of reality – including the often-repeated hope for a “March Miracle” series of storms to replenish reservoirs.

The problem remains LaNina currents in the ocean, which tend to push rain farther north to Oregon and Washington (take that, Moldy).

The condition is expected to remain for another couple months – past the end of California’s traditional rainy season.

The Watery Details

All those who fish the Sierra’s small streams might do a little better; the Southern Sierras and the Tahoe area are sheltering a little more water than the northern Sierras (or the Mt. Shasta area).

The farther north you go, the lower the snowpack, and while I’m not sure of our current numbers, I know we were looking at below-50% snowpack a while ago, and we’ve had almost no precipitation since.

With new water extraction restrictions in place to protect Salmon, smelt and other species, whatever flexibility that exists in the California Water Project seems to have evaporated along with our weather.

The Fly Fisherman’s Take

Like any fly fisherman, I’m running down a mental list of my favorite waters, wondering which will suffer most.

The Upper Sacramento and McCloud rivers may not feel the effects just yet; both are fed by reservoirs, which will buffer the worst of the low water problems in late summer and fall.

The little streams are another matter entirely, and while the trout have survived millenia of this kind of stuff, drought isn’t exactly good for our finny friends.

I expect I’ll be avoiding some small streams entirely starting late summer, including a couple of my nearby “run out and fly fishing for a few minutes” spots, which will be tiny, warm trickles by fall.

See you at the Weather Channel, Tom Chandler

The Rain Falls Mainly On The… Well, Somewhere Else: California Faces Third Year of Drought

January 9, 2009, by Tom Chandler 5 comments

Outside the window directly to my left, the sparse layer of snow is thinning fast, and last night the puddles never even froze.

The snow that usually blankets the mountains surrounding the house – and feeds a thirsty California the rest of the year – is disappearing fast, and more (much more) is needed.

UPDATE: It’s Winter for Chrissakes, but look at what’s ahead:

winterweather

Though nobody wants to say it out loud – and hope springs eternal in the California Water Project’s breast – but with precipitation already below normal and La Nina weather patterns suggesting a dry January and February, California could be facing a third consecutive year of drought.

That’s bad news for almost everyone – fish, fishermen, farmers, the Delta, and the whole of Southern California – and the only real winners might be newspaper editorial writers, who are guaranteed a steady supply of controversy.

What do fly fishermen have to look forward to?

One year of drought actually makes the Upper Sacramento more fishable, and without a lot of runoff, spring fishing can be unbelievably good. But after two years, it gets a little dicey. The Upper Sacramento and McCloud rivers stay in pretty good shape (they’re essentially tailwaters), but some of my favorite small streams get hammered by low flows and high water temperatures.

While trout have survived droughts in tiny streams for centuries before we arrived to “manage” their habitat and populations, even tiny trout struggle to reach late fall’s cooling temperatures and intermittent rain.

More importantly – with California’s water wars already raging – a third year of drought is the equivalent of driving a gas tanker into a flaming house; any hope of avoiding a full blown political conflagration simply goes up in flames.

Salmon populations may be recovering some due to better ocean conditions, but over-pumping of the Delta, water diversions and crashing native species populations will likely force more concessions from water users, who view a third year of drought with the same joy you’d view a meteor heading for your house.

Of course, the drought isn’t causing all these problems – it just is what it is. Water in the West is almost uniformly overpromised, and as a nation, we’re discovering that unbridled greed is perhaps not the best basis for operating your financial system, energy policy – or a state-wide water project.

And while a wet winter would stem the bleeding for a while, maybe it’s best if we just confront this mess now like adults instead of letting a few shadowy figures hammer something out when nobody’s looking.

See you looking skyward for snow, Tom Chandler.

California Plan Wants Peripheral Canal, but Removes Guarantees/Protections for Delta

January 3, 2009, by Tom Chandler 2 comments

It’s not a great day for fans of the California Delta – at least those who’d like to see it become something other than a salt marsh (from the SF Chronicle).

An influential Cabinet-level group Friday released its prescription for the sickly Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, including a 2011 goal to break ground on a new canal system – without the approval of the California Legislature.

The panel backed away from creating a new governing body to oversee the delta or altering the California Constitution to say that the delta’s health is as important as supplying water to 25 million Californians. That differed from another governor-appointed task force that contended that new leadership and a constitutional amendment were needed to fix a fragile ecosystem that also serves as the hub of the state’s water supply.

In other words, the executive group adopted pretty much every recommendation of the Delta Vision group save those that offered any real protection for beleaguered waterway.

The walking-on-water Aquafornia blog posted excerpted reactions from multiple newspapers, including this from Phil Isenberg in the Sacramento Bee:

Isenberg had not seen the committee’s final report. But it adopted every proposal from his task force except one.

The task force recommended a new policymaking council to bring
cohesion to the more than 200 agencies that manage the 740,000-acre
estuary in a haphazard fashion. It viewed this as a key initial step
before starting major waterworks and habitat projects.

But the committee opted to delay the governance question while starting work in other areas, including canal planning.

“I think it’s too bad they didn’t make a recommendation on that,”
Isenberg said. “I’m not shocked, but it’s too bad because everyone in
the puzzle knows you can’t fit the pieces together without a governance
solution.”

I’m on my way out the door right now, but it’s hard to support any water solution that doesn’t involve specific guarantees for the California Delta, which the state’s water users have treated roughly the same way a baby treats a diaper.

Update: Dan Bacher (Fish Sniffer editor) weighs in on the plan, and it’s not pretty. Here’s only one passage from his editorial:

The plan includes a timeline of proposed actions and associated events for the destruction of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, the largest and most significant estuary on the West Coast of the Americas. One of the amazing things about the plan is the sequence of events and actions it includes. While the plan’s goal is to “break ground” for “new conveyance in 2011, the timeline doesn’t require the Department of Fish and Game to “recommend in stream flows” for the Delta until 2012!

Wouldn’t it be more logical to only begin infrastructure construction after in stream flows for fish are recommended and secured? This prioritization of the canal over the needs of fish clearly demonstrates that the plans “eco language” of restoring the Delta is nothing other than green washing of the most environmentally destructive project in California history.

See you on the Delta, Tom Chandler.

ps – you can follow this issue on the Aquafornia blog, and via the Sac Bee’s Twitter Feed.

delta, delta vision, peripheral canal, california water wars

CA Water Wars: Lawsuit Contests Delta Pumping Until Impaired Farmland “Retired”

December 2, 2008, by Tom Chandler 3 comments

A California water group poured gasoline on the already-blazing California Water Wars with a lawsuit calling for an end to pumping on the California Delta until “certain” drainage-impaired farmland is retired.

Longtime Underground readers will realize most the “certain” lands referenced in the lawsuit belong to Westlands Irrigation District – the politically connected irrigation group (and Underground whipping boys) who bought some hugely expensive private property on the McCloud River so there’d be one less obstacle standing in the way of raising Shasta Dam (and flooding miles of the Upper Sac, McCloud, and Pit Rivers).

From the SF Chronicle: Group wants chemical-filled farmland retired:

The giant state and federal pumps in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta that funnel water to 25 million Californians should be shut down until certain Central Valley farmers retire hundreds of thousands of acres of chemical-laden farmland, according to a lawsuit filed today by a state water watchdog.

Irrigating agricultural land in the western San Joaquin Valley tainted with selenium, mercury, boron and other toxic substances constitutes an unreasonable use of a public resource protected by state laws and has contributed to the sharp decline of endangered fish species, said the California Water Impact Network.

“We think there is a simple solution to California’s water problems – to retire all of the drainage-impaired lands in the Central Valley. A second is water conservation – agriculture uses 80 percent of the developed surface water,” said Carolee Krieger, president and founder C-WIN.

The always-excellent Aquafornia blog offers multiple perspectives on the lawsuit, including this unique angle from the Stockton Record:

State and federal water managers have increased exports to farms and cities south of the Delta even as fish populations plummet, says the lawsuit, filed in Sacramento County Superior Court. Northern California reservoirs have been “cannibalized” for the sake of Southern California, and irrigation of drainage-impaired lands in the western San Joaquin Valley is a waste of water, the groups say.

I guarantee this lawsuit won’t find favor in Sacramento, where the Governator (recently picked for Environmental Villan of the Year by Field & Stream) is desperately trying to build a peripheral canal and add more storage to the state’s reservoirs.

A complete halt to pumping from the Delta is an unlikely result, but even the threat of it should, uh…. galvanize the discussion.

See you at the Delta, Tom Chandler.

water wars, california water wars, delta, westlands irrigation district

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PG&E Doesn’t Just Want Your Money – They Want Your Weather Too

November 15, 2008, by Tom Chandler 6 comments

PG&E Seeding Clouds in Pit/McCloud Watersheds?? Yep.

I’m on my way out the door, but it’s definitely the Underground’s week for breaking enviro news. First we had the Klamath River dam removal agreement (which is starting to smell a little, and may not pass the Underground’s sniff test).

Now we find that PG&E is running a controversial cloud-seeding program to generate more water (and hydro money), and apparently the residents of Siskiyou County were given late notification on the project (which begins today), and

I can’t say whether the program is good or bad, but you’ve gotta admit that mucking about with something as fundamental as the weather raises some interesting questions – none of which seem to have been answered by PG&E.

It’s important to note that Siskiyou County’s Crack Team of Knuckleheads Board of Supervisors apparently didn’t even give the project a cursory glance when it was brought to their attention in 2006.

From the Mount Shasta Herald:

The program, called the “Pit-McCloud Cloud Seeding – Ground Water Enhancement Project,” is one of several projects of its kind throughout California.

It is slated to begin on November 15 of this year and will involve “cloud seeding” over a target area “east of McCloud town, north of Burney town, south of Medicine Lake and bounded on the east by the White Horse and Big Valley mountains,” according to the NOI. The goal of the program, states PG&E, is to increase precipitation in the McCloud and Pit River watersheds in order to promote and protect the production of hydroelectric power.

Though the notice further states that “no adverse environment impacts will occur” and that “PG&E cloud seeding programs comply with all regulations,” many residents have expressed their concern over the program and want more information, including a group of citizens who held a rally in front of Mt. Shasta City Hall on October 28.

A later segment in the lengthy, well-researched story by local writer Charlie Unkefer seeming underscores the lack of real research on this subject:

PG&E representative Marler emphasized his regret that the public was not informed in a more timely manner. “We did not involve the public and that was probably an oversight on our behalf,” he said. However, he insisted that the program is safe and that the available science supports this fact.

A scant couple paragraphs below, the following information unfolds:

Though there is data to support the fact that the impacts of weather modification programs are safe and effective, there is also evidence to the contrary. The “California Water Plan Update Draft 2009” itself notes, “No complete and rigorous comprehensive study has been made of all California Precipitation Projects.”

Other research, such as a report filed by the Office of Environmental Heath and Safety at UC Berkley, rate silver iodide as a “class C non-soluble, inorganic, hazardous chemical that pollutes water and soil, and one of the key manufacturers of silver iodide, Deepwater Chemicals, warns of potential health effects of silver iodide in their Material Safety Data Sheet. The Federal Clean Water Act, regulated by the EPA, notes that “silver iodide is considered a hazardous substance, a priority pollutant, and as a toxic pollutant.”

My question is this – aren’t the folks to the east of here a little cranky that PG&E’s wringing extra water out the clouds before they head that way, presumably reducing the precipitation they receive?

Gotta run, but more on this later.

UPDATE: The Mount Shasta Herald has published a followup story, which I’ll look at after the weekend’s over.

See you in the clouds, Tom Chandler.

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Dan Bacher: California’s Drought “Manufactured” by Those Looking to Manipulate Public?

November 3, 2008, by Tom Chandler 3 comments

From the Aquafornia blog (now affiliated with the Water Education Foundation, and when did that happen?) comes comes commentary from Dan Bacher, who suggests the reason Northern California’s reservoirs are at historic lows (when the drought is only the 9th worst two-year period in the last 88) is because too much water was sent south.

From Bacher’s compelling narrative:

Unfortunately, Snow failed to mention that the reason for the low carryover storage was because Shasta, Oroville, Folsom and other northern California reservoirs have been drained to alarmingly low water levels by the state and federal governments to send subsidized water to drainage impaired land in the Westlands Water District and to fill the Kern Water Bank, the Semi-Tropic Water Bank and reservoirs in Southern California.

Today’s articles in the S.F. Chronicle, Sacramento Bee and other newspapers about Snow’s announcement failed to mention the real reasons behind the alleged “drought.” Fortunately, Tom Stienstra, S.F. Chronicle outdoor columnist and author, wrote a superb piece, “Drought, or water heist?,” in the Chronicle on October 26, exposing this fraud by the Schwarzenegger administration. “This isn’t a drought. This is a created shortage,” Stienstra emphasized.

Stienstra cites Department of Water Resources data stating that the past two years are only the ninth driest two-year period in the past 88 years, and that California routinely experiences such periods once every 10 years.

“What happened last year is that water managers were betting on a wet spring,” said Stienstra. “When it didn’t happen, many lakes were drained down to nothing in order to send water to L.A. and farmers.”

“True droughts are measured by soil moisture, and in some cases, water levels at wilderness lakes. In a true drought, soil moisture is so low that plants go into artificial hibernation to protect themselves, as in 1992, and that has not happened. Up in the high country, most wilderness lakes – outside the reach of water-grabbers – are full,” he said.

If you missed the reference, I’ll point out that the “drainage impaired land in the Westlands Water District” is the same Westlands District that bought McCloud’s Private Bolle Boka club – a clear attempt to pave the way for the raising of Shasta Dam to a much higher level than is publicly discussed.

Later in the article, Bacher cites record levels of water extraction from the Delta and an utter lack of conservation as main contributors to the “drought” – which he considers largely manmade.

“The DWR didn’t call for water conservation this year – so the dry year situation wasn’t taken seriously,” said McIntyre. “This year we’re going into a potentially dry year without a buffer in the reservoirs, so the state and federal governments have managed themselves into a manmade drought.”

The state and federal governments in recent years have pumped record amounts of water out of the California Delta. Some of the largest annual water export levels in history occurred in 2003 (6.3 million acre-feet), 2004 (6.1 MAF), 2005 (6.5 MAF) and 2006 (6.3 MAF). Exports averaged 4.6 MAF annually between 1990 and 1999 and increased to an average of 6 MAF between 2000 and 2007, a rise of almost 30 percent, according to the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance.

The problem with California water supply won’t be addressed by building a peripheral canal or more dams, but by practicing better water management and increased water conservation, McIntyre contends. “This is more a failure of water policy and management than it is of infrastructure,” she said. “We will have a water crisis every year unless we find a way to decrease demand.”

Read the rest of the piece here.

water wars, california water, drought, state water project, westlands irrigation district

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Irrigators, Timber Industries Try to Strip Protection for Steelhead in California, Lose Their Ass

October 28, 2008, by Tom Chandler 3 comments

Steelhead huggers (and that includes us) will be pleased to hear a federal judge has kicked a truly ludicrous lawsuit to the curb, refusing to strip protections from five California steelhead populations.

Those with a finely tuned sense of irony will find the irrigator’s argument especially amusing:

In the second case, a group of Central Valley irrigators argued that ocean-going Central Valley steelhead population should be removed from the endangered species list based on their opinion that freshwater resident rainbow trout might someday replace extinct steelhead populations.

That’s right, Undegrounders – steelhead and rainbow trout are essentialy the same, at least if you’re an irrigator bent on squeezing even more water from your own heavily subsidized government teat.

I haven’t yet found out if Favorite Underground Whipping Boys Westlands Irrigation District were part of the suit, though we’ll keep looking.

The judge also dealt a setback to the Pacific Legal Foundation, who doesn’t see any difference between hatchery steelhead and the real thing:

In the first case, anti-environment group Pacific Legal Foundation, which represents loggers and water users, argued that the National Marine Fisheries Service must make Endangered Species Act ( ESA ) listing decisions based simply on the numbers of hatchery steelhead produced each year. PLF asked the court to remove five separate populations of steelhead from the list of endangered species based on the presence of hatchery fish.

To the Pacific Legal Foundation, the Underground and the World’s Steelhead Huggers offer this Compelling Closing Argument: Bite Us Hard.

See you in court, Tom Chandler.

pacific legal foundation, esa, steelhead, california steelhead, central valley irrigators

California’s Water Wars: Can We Save Fisheries and Solve Water Problems?

July 19, 2008, by Tom Chandler 17 comments

The health of California’s Delta has become a hot topic, with plummeting populations of native species  (salmon, Delta smelt, etc) blamed on water diversions, habitat loss and water quality issues.

Last year, a federal judge dealt the final blow to “business as usual” by limiting the amount of water that could be pumped from the Delta, citing damage to the fast-shrinking Delta Smelt population.

Fueled by unchecked population growth (and a growing demand for water), a drought, and the specter of global warming, Judge Wanger’s decision ignited what had been brewing for years.

The moment Wanger issued his order, California’s modern water wars began.

California Water Wars
Will California’s water wither in the face of population growth?

Hyper Gridlock

The real result of California’s water wars has been a kind of hyper-gridlock, with advocates for irrigators and SoCal residential users desperately trying to stave off reductions in deliveries while fisheries and environmental groups demand water be used to protect endangered/commercially compromised fish populations.

With proposals predictably spanning the spectrum (“More storage” says the farm lobby, “Use less” say the fish folks), little, if anything, has been accomplished.

Now a widely anticipated report from an independent study group says that the peripheral canal – a project whose very name brings epithets to the lips of Northern Californians unwilling to see any more water shipped south – is the best, most cost-effective strategy for ensuring California’s water supply and for saving the California Delta.

What They’re Saying

The only real constant in all this has been the wide-ranging coverage provided by the Aquafornia blog, which quickly threw together a post summarizing reactions to the report’s announcement.

They followed that with two cautionary pieces, one suggesting the problem isn’t conveyance, it’s that water’s going where it shouldn’t, and yet another SF Chronicle opinion piece cautiously endorsing the idea of the Peripheral Canal provided more than lip service is paid to salmon recovery efforts:

Any proposals for new infrastructure, whether a Peripheral Canal or new water storage, must go beyond lip service about restoring salmon, and actually do it. There must be a complete package that ensures sustainable restoration of the delta’s valuable fisheries. We need to provide the water that fish need when and where they need it. There must be money available to ensure that key restoration projects are not merely planned, but executed. We need to create financial incentives that will encourage everyone to do a far better job of conserving water. Most critically, we need guarantees that our water  anagers will be held accountable to ensure that promises are kept.


For those not familiar with it, the Peripheral Canal would divert Sacramento River water before it even reaches the California Delta, reasoning that it’s far less environmentally damaging than using massive pumps to remove from the south end of the Delta.

Most experts agree in theory, but the environmental and fisheries communities – groups with little faith in those running the Central Water Project – can’t see past the potential for massive diversions of water around the Delta, which – combined with even limited pumping – would lead to the complete collapse of the ecosystem.

In essence, the Peripheral Canal issue could come down to trust – something the state’s water users haven’t exactly earned.

Can We Trust the Water Project?

Enviros – most of whom can’t forget the nightmare of the Trinity River, where a pair of dams – which were “guaranteed” to be operated so as not to damage the Trinity’s robust fishery – immediately began robbing the river of as much as 90% of its water.

(The majority of that water was shipped to Westlands Water District – the same politically-connected water district who now want to flood miles of trout streams by raising the Shasta Dam.)

After literally decades of litigation, groups like the Friends of the Trinity got a little water returned to the Trinity River, and the result has been steelhead fishing so good that fishermen can’t find places to park on weekends.

More recently, the water project’s massive pumping from the Delta and apparent disregard for the health of the Delta (and the state’s commercially viable fisheries) has pretty much soured the milk as far as enviros are concerned.

Yet Another Water Grab?

Where some see a Peripheral Canal as a solution to the state’s water woes, many environmentalists see yet another water grab, and sadly, history (see above) suggests they might be right.

Dan Bacher – well known writer and fisheries activist, said:

In spite of the hypocritical rhetoric that Feinstein and Schwarzenegger and the Public Policy Institute’s authors spin about “ecosystem restoration,” the only purpose of the peripheral canal is to create the capacity to export more water from the Delta. We need increased conservation of water so that we can restore Central Valley salmon, delta smelt, longfin smelt and other fish to historical levels, not increased water exports.

Even those who believe the Peripheral Canal could be helpful fear its potential for shunting massive amounts of Sacramento River water south (that trust thing again).

Others – as quoted in this largely negative Stockton Record story about the Peripheral Canal – are even less interested in seeing it built:

One of the canal’s most outspoken opponents, Stockton attorney Dante Nomellini, had this to say: “The basic thrust of their effort is to try and maintain exports from the Delta and turn the Delta into a saltwater bay.”

Given the history and the potential for overwhelming political pressure to move water south, there’s not much faith that – should water supplies tighten even more – water interests would resist the intense pressure to “keep it flowing.

Interestingly, a Sacramento Bee writer (Dan Walters) wrote an opinion piece stating it’s time for everyone to abandon their agenda and get the peripheral canal built, and actually accused environmental groups of sacrificing the delta for their own causes, a startling statement given that environmentalists have not been pumping record amounts of water from the Delta the last five years:

While shedding public tears over the Delta’s plight, they have been, in effect, willing to sacrifice its environmental health for their other agenda.

Even more interestingly, a majority of the normally conservative SacBee commenters (on the SacBee Web site) weren’t in favor of the canal, a signal to proponents that they’ve got an uphill battle in front of them.

That’s fine with some environmental groups, who feel that rather than look for better ways to move more water south, California needs to seek real solutions to its problems, including residential conservation programs, taking marginal farmland (and the accompanying water rights) out of production, offering farmers incentives to grow less water-intensive crops, etc.

They too face an uphill battle; a water-hungry southern half of the state wants water, not sanctimony, and in several Southern California communities, calls for voluntary reductions in water use actually resulted in net increases in water use (fearing mandatory conservation, people used more water so a compulsory 20% reduction would hurt less).

What’s Next?

Just yesterday (Friday, 7/19),Federal Judge Wanger ruled that pumping water from the Delta almost certainly imperils endnagered salmon populations, and though he hasn’t yet outlined a plan of action, he’s certainly set the stage for even more restrictions on water removal.

For the state’s water projects, this is yet another shove forward into the abyss.

Meanwhile, Governor Schwarzenegger and Senator Diane Feinstein have jointly floated legislation for a $9.3 Billion water bond, and opponents were quick to note the state has yet to spend all the money from a previous bond issue.

The plan includes some money for fisheries restoration efforts, but most will be directed at increased storage and infrastructure spending projects, so the bond carries the support of irrigators and the business community.

It’s tempting to look at the bond issues as long-overdue spending on badly needed infrastructure, but in truth, prospects for a solution that will make everyone happy are slim.

The Prognosis? Not that Good, Really.

To those looking to preserve and restore what’s left of California’s native fisheries, the problems are clear. Too many people are using too much water, and until now, nobody – save fish – has been asked to do without.

Yet the state’s political apparatus runs on money, and the money in CA lies in Southern California and with agri-businesses (often corporate farms) rather than in fisheries restoration.

That kind of pure political clout isn’t likely to result in limits to growth, radical conservation measures, or farmland retirement.

It’s easy to suggest that farming water-intensive crops in arid regions – and building cities in virtual deserts without their own water supply – is a bad idea.

Yet turning back that clock – and instituting draconian water use restrictions seems unlikely. The state hasn’t instituted much in the way of water usage restrictions for new construction, and even cities in dry regions are only now getting around to it.

Some cities still don’t even meter their water – not exactly a prod to conservation.

In other words, the political will to do the right thing – before we do the Peripheral Canal Thing – is apparently wholly lacking.

Some even point to desalinization of seawater as an answer to many of Southern California’s woes, but solutions like these are tightly linked to energy costs, which are not exactly falling.

It’s possible desalinization could make a dent in the water supply, but only if nuclear plants were built (nuclear power typically runs at a minimum of $.30/kwh) or large scale alternative energy sources were developed (like putting photovoltaic solar panels on the roofs of California’s typically sun-drenched houses).

Actually building the Peripheral Canal could solve some problems, but given the conclusions offered by the report’s authors, it seems clear that Delta recovery isn’t really part of the agenda.

In fact, much of the report was concerned with the danger posed to the state’s water supply by fragile levees in the Delta, and “restoring” the Delta was largely ruled out.

That larger reality can’t help but force us to ask some troubling questions about California’s problems with its hugely over-promised water supply.

Are we willing to compromise every last shred of what’s natural in the name of money and convenience – especially in light of looming challenges like global warming?

Stay tuned. The wars have really just begun.

See you in the water, Tom Chandler.

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