[env-trinity] Bay Delta Conservation Plan Delayed!
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Thu Aug 28 12:20:45 PDT 2014
http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/bay-delta-conservation-plan-delayed/
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/08/28/18760835.php
Photo: Caleen Sisk, Chief and Spiritual Leader of the Winnemem Wintu
Tribe, and Jessica Lopez, Chair of the Concow Maidu Tribe, at a
protest against the Bay Delta Conservation Plan to build the
peripheral tunnels at the State Capitol in Sacramento on July 29.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
800_caleen_sisk_and_jessi...
Bay Delta Conservation Plan Delayed!
by Dan Bacher
State officials announced Wednesday that the Bay Delta Conservation
Plan (BDCP) to build the peripheral tunnels will be delayed and a new
plan, EIR/EIS and implementing agreement will be drafted, followed by
the beginning of a new public comment period.
The decision was made after the state and federal agencies received an
avalanche of thousands of public comments, the vast majority sharply
criticizing the plan and accompanying environmental documents for an
array of flaws.
"The Department of Water Resources and the other state and federal
agencies leading the Bay Delta Conservation Plan will publish a
Recirculated Draft BDCP, Environmental Impact Report/Environmental
Impact Statement (EIR/EIS), and Implementing Agreement (IA) in early
2015," according to yesterday's announcement on the BDCP website. "The
agencies are currently reviewing the comments received through the
public comment period that ended on July 29, 2014. The scope of the
partially recirculated draft documents will be announced in
approximately six to eight weeks."
The recirculated documents will include those portions of each
document that "warrant another public review" prior to publication of
final documents. The public will also have the opportunity to review
the final documents prior to their adoption and any decisions about
the proposed actions.
Restore the Delta and other opponents of the environmentally
destructive peripheral tunnels hailed the delay and redrafting of its
Draft Bay Delta Conservation Plan EIR/EIS and a new public comment
period. The opponents said the delay and redrafting of the governor’s
water tunnels plan shows it is "fatally flawed, does not meet state or
federal standards, and lacks a financing plan."
“The delay in the BDCP shows that it is fatally flawed. There is no
financing plan. They cannot finance it because the water is not
there,” said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of RTD.
“Delaying the BDCP will not change the fundamental flaws underlying
it: it doesn’t pencil out, there is no surplus water for export, and
you can’t restore the San Francisco-San Joaquin Delta estuary by
draining water from it. The delay shows the power of public
engagement. Thousands of pages of comments were turned in, everything
from simple statements from citizens to complex analyses by experts.”
Barrigan-Parrilla said the EIR/EIS is "fatally flawed" due to its
failure to include a viable funding plan, exclusion of any true no-
tunnels alternatives, failure to comply with the Endangered Species
Act as evidenced by numerous scientists’ red flags, misrepresenting
taking water to be a “conservation” plan, secret BDCP planning with
the exporters and their consultants, and lack of public outreach to
non-English speakers.
Tom Stokely, Water Policy Analyst with the California Water Impact
Network (C-WIN), said he was not surprised with the delay in the BDCP
and accompanying federal documents.
"This is not unexpected because we knew the environmental documents
were fatally flawed," said Stokely. "The problem is that that they
can't fix the BDCP because the project can't meet the requirements of
the Endangered Species Act and other state and federal environmental
laws."
The Bay Delta Conservation Plan to build the peripheral tunnels will
hasten the extinction of Sacramento River Chinook salmon, Central
Valley steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt, green sturgeon and other
fish species, as well as imperil salmon and steelhead populations on
the Trinity and Klamath rivers. Under the guise of habitat
"restoration," The $67 billion project will take vast tracts of Delta
farmland, among the most fertile on the planet, out of production in
order to deliver subsidized water to corporate agribusiness interests
irrigating toxic, drainage impaired land on the west side of the San
Joaquin Valley.
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