[env-trinity] Sac Bee 12 29 08

Byron Leydecker bwl3 at comcast.net
Mon Dec 29 13:30:02 PST 2008


Yolo County ranch's sale of water prompts lawsuit threat


Sacramento Bee - 12/29/08


By Mary Lynne Vellinga 

The owners of the vast Conaway Ranch in Yolo County this year sold much of
its annual allotment of water to an irrigation district in Central
California - prompting the threat of a lawsuit by environmental groups.

 

Yolo County leaders who two years ago were in court trying to seize control
of Conaway through eminent domain are keeping a wary eye on what its private
owners are doing. The county dropped its lawsuit in exchange for greater
assurances that the land would not be developed, and that its ample supply
of Sacramento River water would not be sold out to outside interests.

 

Conaway Ranch is unusual in the region for its large size, proximity to
downtown Sacramento and habitat for myriad waterfowl species. Much of the
ranch lies in the Yolo Bypass flood area. 

 

"The good news is I haven't seen any real material changes on the ground;
they're still farming it," said Supervisor Mike McGowan, who led the eminent
domain charge. "I'm not ecstatic about the water transfers," he said.

 

Tovey Giezentanner, a spokesman for the Conaway ownership group, emphasized
that the sale of 12,000 acre-feet of water to the San Luis and Delta-Mendota
Water Authority was for one year only. The county was first given a right to
negotiate to buy the water, in compliance with the terms of the court
settlement, he said. When the county demurred, and the water was sold,
Conaway paid Yolo a 2 percent fee on the $2 million sale.

 

Conaway is owned by the Conaway Preservation Group, which is led by
Sacramento developer Steve Gidaro and includes other prominent Sacramento
developers and builders. Their purchase of the 17,300-acre property for $60
million in 2004 stoked suspicion that a plan to build on the ranch and sell
off its 50,000 acre-feet of Sacramento River water would be forthcoming. An
acre-foot of water covers 1 acre a foot deep, enough to supply an average
family of five for a year.

The land was previously owned by National Gas and Energy Transmission, a
successor to PG&E Properties.

 

Conaway Preservation Group has insisted it wants to preserve Conaway - a
place where some of its members enjoy hunting ducks - and make money from
its attributes as farmland, habitat and flood basin.

 

Giezentanner said the ownership group has pursued that strategy since the
county dropped its lawsuit.

"We've been hard at work trying to do the right thing," he said.

 

For instance, Giezentanner said, Conaway is negotiating with the city of
Davis to use part of the ranch as a disposal site for the city's treated
wastewater, which would be used to irrigate crops that would be fed to
animals.

 

The city of Davis faces a state requirement that it upgrade its sewage
treatment plant, which could cost $200 million.

 

Maintaining the current level of treatment but disposing of the water on
Conaway - rather than into the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta - could be
a much cheaper option.

 

Davis Public Works director Bob Weir said the Davis plant discharges about
5.6 million gallons of treated sewage per day, which now winds up in the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. The city plans to go before the Central Valley
Regional Water Quality Control Board in early February to discuss the
possibility of using Conaway instead.

 

"The regional board is interested in promoting the use of recycled water,
and they're also supportive of looking at regional wastewater solutions,"
Weir said. "We believe this meets both of those objectives."

 

He noted, "Our treatment plant is right next to Conaway."

 

Giezentanner said Conaway is discussing a similar agreement to handle sewage
from Woodland. In addition, the ranch is viewed as a possible long-term
supplier of water to Davis and Woodland.

 

The settlement agreement that ended the county's eminent domain lawsuit
contains no guarantees that Conaway's water will remain in Yolo - or even in
the Sacramento region. It merely gives the county the right to negotiate for
the water before it is sold, and requires Conaway to pay a fee to the county
if it sells the water somewhere else.

 

Much of Conaway Ranch is used for rice farming, a water-intensive crop.
Still, the ranch is an efficient user of water due to a closed drainage
system, and it usually does not draw its full allocation, Giezantanner said.

 

This year, the ranch sold about 12,000 acre-feet of water, he said. In order
to make the water available, about 1,000 acres of rice fields were fallowed,
and 500 converted to crops that don't require as much water.

 

On Dec. 16, the Butte Environmental Council and the Center for Biological
Diversity filed a notice that they plan to sue the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for allowing the
transfer. The groups contend the review by the wildlife service did not
adequately determine the effect of the water transfers on the endangered
giant garter snake, which relies on rice fields for habitat.

 

Leaders of the two groups said water transfers from north to south are
becoming an increasingly significant issue after two years of drought and
increasing demands on the state's water supply.

 

"Our concern is with the giant garter snake and the habitat," said Lisa
Belenky, senior attorney for the San Francisco-based Center for Biological
Diversity. "Most of this area was wetlands originally, and it was converted
to cropland. The rice crop is more similar to native wetlands, so it was
able to be a substitute habitat for species."

 

Byron Leydecker, JCT

Chair, Friends of Trinity River

PO Box 2327

Mill Valley, CA 94942-2327

415 383 4810 land

415 519 4810 cell

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(secondary)

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