[env-trinity] Article Submission: Governor Brown makes false claims about tunnel plan during debate
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Mon Sep 8 19:17:35 PDT 2014
http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/kashkari-clashes-with-brown-over-twin-tunnels/
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/09/07/18761244.php
Photo: The Raging Grannies sing at a rally against Jerry Brown's Bay
Delta Conservation Plan to build the peripheral tunnels at the State
Capitol on July 29. Photo by Dan Bacher.
800_raging_grannies_again...
Governor Brown makes false claims about tunnel plan during debate
by Dan Bacher
The Republican and Democratic Party establishments have been steadfast
supporters of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP) to build the
peripheral tunnels, so Neil Kashkari, the Republican challenger to
Governor Jerry Brown, surprised many when he attacked Brown's tunnel
plan during the debate in Sacramento on September 4.
Kashkari said, “The Obama EPA is saying your tunnel program is
fundamentally flawed. That’s your own president, President Obama
saying that, not me.”
Brown replied: “That doesn’t make it right, by the way.”
The clash began after the debate moderator asked Brown how the tunnels
project could proceed after the Environmental Protection Agency issued
a scathing comment letter stating that the tunnels would violate the
Clean Water Act.
Brown, clearly on the defensive, used the debate to tout the false
claim that the Delta is uniquely threatened by an earthquake or other
disaster, even though the exported Delta water goes through hundreds
of miles of aqueducts and canals in earthquake and disaster prone
areas to reach its destination.
"We have a Delta system that protects the fresh water that goes to the
farms, not just to Southern California but to Alameda County and Santa
Clara County, and that salt water is only protected by dirt levees. We
have to find a way to make sure the conveyance through the Delta will
withstand an earthquake or rising sea levels or extreme weather
events. That’s why for 50 years people have been trying for either a
peripheral canal or tunnels or some other kind of conveyance," Brown
contended.
Consulting Engineer Dr. Robert Pyke strongly disagrees with Brown’s
claim that a peripheral canal or tunnels are needed to “protect” fresh
water in the Delta. In a letter to the State Water Resources Control
Board on November 23, 2013, Pyke wrote, “The ‘earthquake bogey’ is a
red herring that has been used for some years by the Metropolitan
Water District and others to try to scare people into supporting what
is now the curiously named Bay Delta Conservation Plan
(BDCP).” (http:// nodeltagates.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/
pyke_comments_on_cwap.pdf)
He also noted, “In the unlikely but nonetheless possible event of the
failure of one or more Delta levees in a major flood, the Delta will
be awash with fresh water and, while the demand for exports would
likely be small at that time, there would be no reason for exports to
be interrupted because of salinity intrusion."
Brown also made the false contention that the Delta tunnels would
somehow prevent saltwater intrusion into the Delta when a myriad of
scientific studies and reports, including the recent EPA letter
slamming the tunnel proposal for potential violations of the Clean
Water Act, demonstrate that the Delta salinity would increase - and
freshwater outflows to the estuary would actually decrease - if the
tunnels were in place.
"If that salt water intrudes, half the water to Silicon Valley will
disappear in a matter of days. That would be a catastrophe for the
economy of California and I don’t think this man really understands,"
opined Brown.
Actually, the EPA diagnosis pointed out that operating the proposed
conveyance facilities “would contribute to increased and persistent
violations of water quality standards in the Delta, set under the
Clean Water Act,” and that the tunnels “would not protect beneficial
uses for aquatic life, thereby violating the Clean Water Act." (http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/08/29/18760890.php
)
The EPA also criticized the failure to analyze upstream/downstream
impacts and observed that there is broad scientific agreement that
“existing freshwater flow conditions in the San Francisco Estuary are
insufficient to protect the aquatic ecosystem and multiple fish
species, and that both increased freshwater flows and aquatic habitat
restoration are needed to restore ecosystem processes in the Bay Delta
and protect native and migratory fish populations.”
Brown also used the discussion of the tunnels during the debate to
promote the water bond, Proposition 1, a measure that is strongly
opposed by a broad coalition of fishing groups, environmental and
consumer organizations and the Winnemem Wintu Tribe.
Brown stated, "But I’m telling you the way we protect the water in the
middle of California and in the south while balancing what is right
for the north and the water rights of the Northern California rights-
holders, it’s going to take something like the Proposition 1 that will
be on your ballot (in November) and, by the way, I hope people will
vote for Proposition 1, the water bond.”
The California Sportfishing Protection Alliance (CSPA) and other
environmental and fishing groups strongly disagree with Brown's
contention that Proposition 1 would "protect the water in the middle
of California and in the south while balancing what is right for the
north and the water rights of the Northern California rights-holders."
On September 2, the CSPA released a 14-Point Statement of Opposition
to Proposition 1. After reviewing the provisions of the Water Quality,
Supply and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014, the group concluded
that Proposition 1 "represents a grave and insidious threat to core
environmental values and principles buttressing protection for
fisheries and the environment."
"Among the numerous reasons the water bond is bad for California is
that Proposition 1 undermines: the public trust doctrine by purchasing
water the public already owns, at inflated prices, to protect the
public’s rivers and environment; the principle of beneficiary pays by
subsidizing projects that benefit special interests and the core
principle that projects should be responsible for mitigating their
adverse impacts," according to CSPA.
Furthermore, CSPA says Proposition 1 paves the way for a new era of
big dam building; is a pork-filled barrel of special interest
subsidies, including BDCP; provides little near-term drought relief;
eliminates public oversight; crowds out other critically needed
investments in roads, schools and public health and safety; is
fiscally irresponsible and sabotages efforts to meaningfully address
California’s continuing water crisis.
“Proposition 1 is a poster-child of why California is in a water
crisis; it enriches water speculators but accomplishes little in
addressing the drought, solving California’s long-term water needs,
reducing reliance on the Delta or protecting our rivers and
fisheries," said CSPA Executive Director Bill Jennings. "When the
public focuses a critical eye on Prop. 1, they’ll realize that it’s
just another expensive pork-filled gift basket to special interests.”
Opponents of Proposition 1 include the CSPA, the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, San Francisco Crab Boat
Association, Restore the Delta, Center for Biological Diversity,
California Water Impact Network, Food & Water Watch, Southern
California Watershed Alliance, South Delta Water Agency, Central Delta
Water Agency, Concerned Citizens Coalition of Stockton, Winnemem Wintu
Tribe, Small Boat Commercial Salmon Fisherman’s Association and
numerous other fishing, environmental, water and civic organizations.
As the November election draws closer and closer, you can expect Jerry
Brown, a strong supporter of the environmentally destructive practice
of fracking, to deliver more Pinocchio lines about the budget-busting
peripheral tunnels and Proposition 1.
To read the complete 14-Point Statement, go to: http://www.calsport.org
Here is the transcript of the section of the debate focusing on the
peripheral tunnels, courtesy of Alex Breitler of the Stockton Record (http://blogs.esanjoaquin.com/san-joaquin-river-delta/#sthash.8zSY2UDw.dpuf
)
Brown: “I’ve lived in Southern California and I have a ranch in
Northern California. I was born in San Francisco. It is true a lot of
our water is in the north, and a lot of the people are in the south.
That’s why my father passed Proposition 1 on the 1960 ballot and
that’s been a marvel for California. It has created jobs and abundant
agriculture, ranking California No. 1 in fruits and vegetables. But we
have a problem here. We have a Delta system that protects the fresh
water that goes to the farms, not just to Southern California but to
Alameda County and Santa Clara County, and that salt water is only
protected by dirt levees. We have to find a way to make sure the
conveyance through the Delta will withstand an earthquake or rising
sea levels or extreme weather events. That’s why for 50 years people
have been trying for either a peripheral canal or tunnels or some
other kind of conveyance. We now have a plan and the plan is going
through the environmental impact process. Very extensive. 75,000 pages
of analysis. It’s not cooked yet. We’re still taking comments. So over
the next year we will go over that and look for if anyone else has
another suggestion. But I’m telling you the way we protect the water
in the middle of California and in the south while balancing what is
right for the north and the water rights of the Northern California
rights-holders, it’s going to take something like the Proposition 1
that will be on your ballot (in November) and, by the way, I hope
people will vote for Proposition 1, the water bond.”
Kashkari: “I’m very concerned about the tunnels. $25 billion for these
tunnels and the Obama administration has serious concerns. Look, if
you look at Gov. Brown’s legacy of infrastructure projects — take the
Bay Bridge, many billion dollars over budget, many years late — if
that’s the track record this thing is going to cost $50 or $75 billion
by the time we’re done with it. I’m an aerospace engineer. When I look
at a big engineering project that’s way over budget and way over-
delayed I have real concerns about mismanagement. I’m not going to
plow ahead with $25 to $50 billion into the tunnels. We’re going to
put a brake on it, study it and make sure we get it right.”
Moderator John Myers: “So no tunnels?”
Kashkari: “No tunnels.”
Myers: “And no tunnels, then, governor?”
Brown: “This has been on the table for 50 years. If that salt water
intrudes, half the water to Silicon Valley will disappear in a matter
of days. That would be a catastrophe for the economy of California and
I don’t think this man really understands — ”
Kashkari: “The Obama EPA is saying your tunnel program is
fundamentally flawed. That’s your own president, President Obama
saying that, not me.”
Brown: “That doesn’t make it right, by the way.”
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