[env-trinity] State agencies owe counties over $17 million as Brown fast-tracks tunnels
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Thu Nov 14 18:10:12 PST 2013
http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/state-agencies-owe-counties-
over-17-million-as-brown-fast-tracks-tunnels/
State agencies owe counties over $17 million as Brown fast-tracks
tunnels
by Dan Bacher
Opponents of Governor Jerry Brown's Bay Delta Conservation Plan
(BDCP) to build the peripheral tunnels asked how taxpayers would
trust "deadbeat state agencies" to pay billions for seized farmland
and habitat when news reports reveal that the agencies owe counties
over $17 million.
Restore the Delta (RTD) today responded to news reports in the
Sacramento Bee and on Capital Public Radio that the State of
California has failed to pay for land it acquired from thirty-six
counties.
This report of defaulted payments comes as the State pursues its plan
to purchase, or seize through eminent domain, tens of thousands of
acres of farmland to build a pair of water export tunnels to deliver
massive quantities of Sacramento River water to corporate
agribusiness, developers and oil companies.
“Why would we trust these same agencies to keep their promises about
the $54.1 billion tunnels, the land they will purchase or the
‘habitat’ they will buy and manage?" asked RTD Executive Director
Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla. “The failure to repay for lands is just
one in a long series of broken promises by these same agencies. They
are not trustworthy.”
The $54.1 billion cost of the tunnels includes $14.5 billion for
construction, $1.5 billion for O&M (operation and maintenance), $26.3
billion for interest on tunnel revenue bonds, $7 billion for habitat
and conservation, $3.2 billion for interest on General Obligation
Bonds and $1.6 billion for administration and research.
The state currently owes the counties more than $17 million,
according to California Public Radio (http://www.capradio.org/
articles/2013/11/12/fish-and-wildlife-owes-counties-millions-of-dollars/
Bob Moffitt at California Public Radio explained, "The Department of
Fish and Wildlife long ago bought properties for wildlife projects in
three dozen counties. The department agreed to make yearly payments
equal to the amount of property taxes that counties would lose as a
result of the sale."
H.D. Palmer of the California Department of Finance told Moffitt that
the state hasn't made a payment since the end of the 2001 fiscal year.
"The rural counties have sent letters to the governor seeking that
those payments be re-instated and we are still working on the
decisions on the budget that the Governor will submit in January,"
Palmer said. "So, we can't say one way or the other what will be in
that budget regarding the in-lieu payments."
"This week, Yolo County sent the Department of Fish and Wildlife a
past-due invoice for about $1.4 million. The county says property
like the one known as 'No Man's Land' near the Yolo Causeway are not
generating tax revenue because they are owned by the state and are a
burden on neighboring landowners who pay more than their fair share
for fire protection services," Moffitt reported.
The state owes Riverside $2.7 million - the most of any county-
followed by Napa, Yolo, Butte, Merced, Lassen and San Diego,
according to Moffitt.
To read the Sacramento Bee article, go to: http://www.sacbee.com/
2013/11/12/v-print/5906242/yolo-county-asks-state-for-14.html
Protesters have greeted Governor Jerry Brown at his recent
appearances throughout the state to oppose his support of fracking,
the peripheral tunnels, massive fish kills on the Delta and REDD.
(http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/10/18/18745051.php
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