[env-trinity] Article Submission: Brown Administration Media Tour Excludes Delta Communities
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Wed Sep 25 07:58:36 PDT 2013
http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/brown-administration-media-
tour-excludes-delta-communities/
Brown Administration Media Tour Excludes Delta Communities
By Dan Bacher
The Brown administration on Monday, September 23 amped up its public
relations campaign for the Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP) to
build twin tunnels to export massive quantities of northern
California water to corporate agribusiness interests on the west side
of the San Joaquin Valley. As usual, the voices of Delta communities
were completely excluded.
Restore the Delta (RTD) called out the Natural Resources Agency and
the Department of Water Resources for choreographing a media tour of
the Delta that does not include one Delta area representative. The
group strongly opposes Governor Jerry Brown’s rush to build
peripheral tunnels under the Orwellian-named Bay Delta "Conservation"
Plan, noting that the $54.1 billion dollar boondoggle would drain the
Delta and doom Central Valley Chinook salmon and other Pacific
fisheries.
Restore the Delta Executive Director, Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla,
said, “Directors and public relations officials are conducting a tour
with officials from the Metropolitan Water District in the Delta at
taxpayer expense to sell the project to Southern California media,
but they have managed to exclude all Delta community representatives
from talking with these members of the media to learn the Delta
perspective of the peripheral tunnel project."
"While we do not fault the media for participating in the tour, as
listening to multiple sources is part of their job, we note that the
Department of Water Resources is expanding its tax-fueled media
campaign to sell Californians on a $54 billion boondoggle project
that Federal fisheries agencies have said will not save endangered
fish species, will destroy wintering habitat for endangered Sandhill
Cranes, and will destroy the Delta family farming community," she
said. "All of this is being pushed forward by the Brown
Administration to serve the special interests of a few big water
districts like the Metropolitan Water District, Westlands, and the
Kern County Water Agency which operate as the middlemen to control a
limited, public resource for profit– California’s water supply.”
Delta residents, including farmers, fishermen and recreation
enthusiasts, showed up with signs protesting the twin tunnels
throughout the tour to answer questions on the Delta reaction to the
proposed tunnel project.
Barrigan-Parrilla added, “What DWR officials will not tell the media
is the level of destruction that will be inflicted on the Delta with
this project. They also won’t tell the media that there is a better
solution for the Delta and California, including: upgrading levees,
reducing water exports, fixing the existing pumps, retiring drainage
impaired farmland, and investing in projects throughout the state
that will make more water for Californians. This will save the Delta
and ensure that southern Californians have the water that they need.”
The construction of the tunnels would hasten the extinction of
Central Valley salmon and steelhead, Delta smelt, longfin smelt,
green sturgeon and other species, as well as imperil the salmon and
steelhead populations of the Trinity and Klamath rivers. The "habitat
restoration" proposed under the plan would take huge areas of fertile
Delta farmland out of production in order to continue irrigating
selenium-filled, drainage-impaired land on the west side of the San
Joaquin Valley.
Ironically, the exclusive media tour took place the exact same day
that two articles slamming the Bay Delta Conservation Plan to build
the tunnels, one by columnist George Shelton and the other by
reporter Bettina Boxall, appeared in the LA Times.
Shelton’s column, “Buffaloes threaten pristine landscape," stated,
“The Brown administration and some water buffaloes want to muck up
one of the most unique, mysterious and picturesque areas of
California. Muck it up literally.” (http://www.latimes.com/local/la-
me-cap-water-20130923,0,2269382.column)
Jerry Cadagan, longtime water activist, quipped, “In hockey it's a
hat trick, in baseball a grand slam, in buffalo hunting it's a sharp
arrow right in the heart; LA Times columnist George Skelton got
himself a trophy buffalo today."
“And while Mr. Skelton handled the bow and arrow, his LA Times
colleague Bettina Boxall took a very sharp knife and cut the
buffalo's heart,” he added.
Boxall’s piece, “Who will pay for Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta tunnel
project,” said, “Hints have been dropped that to keep the water
project alive, urban ratepayers in Southern California may pay more
than their share, in effect subsidizing San Joaquin Valley
agribusiness interests.” (http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-delta-
cost-20130923,0,6231604,full.story)
Restore the Delta is a 10,000-member grassroots organization
committed to making the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta fishable,
swimmable, drinkable, and farmable to benefit all of California.
Restore the Delta works to improve water quality so that fisheries
and farming can thrive together again in the Sacramento-San Joaquin
Delta.
http://www.restorethedelta.org
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