[env-trinity] Governor's Bay Delta Conservation Plan Point Man Resigns
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Tue Dec 17 10:47:25 PST 2013
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/12/17/1263376/-Governor-Brown-s-
Bay-Delta-Conservation-Plan-Point-Man-Resigns
Governor's Bay Delta Conservation Plan Point Man Resigns
by Dan Bacher
Jerry Meral, Deputy Secretary of the California Natural Resources
Agency and Jerry Brown's point man for the Bay Delta Conservation
Plan to build the peripheral tunnels, announced his retirement from
"state service," effective December 31.
The resignation was announced the day after over 400 people,
including fishermen, Tribal leaders, farmers, Southern California
water ratepayers, and environmentalists rallied at the state capitol
against the proposed water export tunnels.
In spite of a rapidly accumulating pile of evidence against the
project, including the $54.1 billion estimated total cost and the
scathing criticism of the plan's "science" by federal scientists,
Meral forecasted that the plan's implementation is "virtually
certain." (http://mavensnotebook.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Meral-
letter-to-Governor-Brown.pdf)
"With the publication of the BDCP and the EIR/S in the federal
register on December 13, the Plan should be completed and approved in
2014. While additional permits will be required, it is virtually
certain that the plan will be implemented," Meral said in his letter
to Brown.
“I look forward to doing whatever I can in the future to support
completion and implementation of a Bay Delta Conservation Plan which
will achieve the co-equal goals of ecosystem restoration and water
supply reliability, while fully respecting the values treasured by
those who live, work, and recreate in the Delta," Meral concluded.
Jane Wagner-Tyack of Restore the Delta noted that the Brown
administration won't have any difficulty in finding somebody to
replace Meral.
“Of course, we are speculating about whom Governor Brown will find to
replace Dr. Meral," said Wagner-Tyack. "But what we know for sure is
that the Governor will not have any difficulty finding someone else
willing to push his Peripheral Tunnels agenda. After all, we’re
talking here about the heady cocktail of California water and
political power.”
“It is also worth remembering that Governor Brown is responsible
ultimately for pushing the BDCP boondoggle onto Californians, as part
of the special 50 year relationship between each and every California
Governor and specific moneyed water interests in California,” she
said. “ It’s a shame that Governor Brown cannot help himself, but
instead continues operating within this less than honest status quo.”
Deputy Director Meral became the focus of a huge controversy this
spring when he acknowledged on April 15 that 'BDCP is not about, and
has never been about saving the Delta. The Delta cannot be saved.'"
He made his controversial comments while speaking with Tom Stokely of
the California Water Impact Network (C-WIN) in a private conversation
after a meeting with Northern California Indian Tribes, according to
Restore the Delta's "Delta Flows" newsletter (http://
www.restorethedelta.org/or-is-it-the-point/)
After Meral made the revealing, candid comment, five Congressional
Democrats - George Miller, Mike Thompson, Jerry McNerney, Doris
Matsui and Anna Eshoo - called for Meral's immediate resignation.
(http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/congressional-democrats-
call-for-brown-administration-officials-resignation/)
"Meral’s statement, if accurately reported, suggests the Brown
Administration intends to explicitly violate the established
statutory co-equal goals of ecosystem restoration in the Bay-Delta
and water reliability throughout the state," according to the
Representatives' statement. "This fuels speculation that the
Administration’s plan, if unchanged, will devastate the Sacramento-
San Joaquin River Delta and the communities that rely on it, a
concern that Northern California Lawmakers and other stakeholders
have voiced throughout the process."
The widely-criticized plan proposes to construct three new intakes in
the north Delta along the Sacramento River about 35 miles north of
the existing South Delta pumping plants. Two 35-mile long twin
tunnels would carry the water underground to the existing pumping
plants that feed canals sttetching hundreds of miles to the south and
west.
The release of the public review draft of the Bay Delta Conservation
Plan and its corresponding Draft Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement (EIR/EIS) triggers a 120-day period
for the gathering of public comments, from Dec. 13, 2013 through
April 14, 2014.
The construction of the twin tunnels will likely hasten the
extinction of Sacramento River Chinook salmon, Central Valley
steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt, green sturgeon and other fish
species, as well as threaten the steelhead and salmon populations on
the Trinity and Klamath rivers.
For more information, go to: www.restorethedelta.org
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