[env-trinity] Allocation of Developed water Resources
Daniel Bacher
danielbacher at hotmail.com
Fri Aug 19 17:33:24 PDT 2005
Byron
Thanks for posting that. It's a surprisingly favorable article. I was at the
press conference and got a copy of the report, "Thirsting for Water."
Everybody in the fish and watershed restoration movement should get a copy
of it. It's great. For more information, get on www.ejcw.org
Dan Bacher
From : Byron <bwl3 at comcast.net>
Sent : Friday, August 19, 2005 4:47 PM
To : "FOTR List" <fotr at velocipede.dcn.davis.ca.us>, "Trinity List Server"
<env-trinity at velocipede.dcn.davis.ca.us>
Subject : [env-trinity] Allocation of Developed water Resources
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By VIC POLLARD, Californian Sacramento Bureau
e-mail: vpollard at bakersfield.com
SACRAMENTO -- Massive water projects have protected California's cities and
farms from droughts, but
they have left many minorities and low-income residents suffering from too
little water or too much
pollution, according to a report issued Wednesday by an environmental group.
The report by the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water condemned
developments like Klamath River
irrigation projects, blamed for depriving Indians along the Northern
California stream of their traditional
salmon food supply and disrupting their cultural heritage.
Another example cited in the report is the influx of mega-dairies, driven
out of the Chino Basin by the
crackdown on water pollution there, to towns like heavily Latino Wasco,
which seem powerless to block
them.
The report contends that powerful water agencies and government regulators
neglect or harm ethnic and
low-income communities by failing to protect them from pollution and
blocking them from
decision-making processes.
"Water is the lifeblood of California communities; sucking it away from
native tribes and Latino
farmworkers will only dry up their local economies, their rivers, their
fisheries, their farmland and their
cultural connections," said Alisha Deen, an author who contributed to the
report.
At a news conference in Sacramento, one of several around the state called
to release the report, officials
said they do not have specific legislative proposals to remedy the problems.
However, the report called for more water conservation by farms and cities
to reduce consumption and
greater involvement in the decision-making process by minorities and
low-income people affected by water
policies.
Officials of the Kern County Water Agency, one of the big agencies that
benefit from water projects, did not
respond to a request for comment.
The coalition is made up of a number of environmental and human rights
groups, officials said, and the
report was funded by grants from charitable organizations.
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