[env-trinity] Article submission: Feinstein delays controversial drought legislation until next year
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Thu Nov 20 18:30:56 PST 2014
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/11/20/1346309/-Feinstein-drops-controversial-water-bill-for-now
Feinstein delays controversial drought legislation until next year
by Dan Bacher
Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) announced today that she has abandoned
the secret negotiations for craft a controversial drought relief bill,
but said she will try to pass the legislation next year.
The delay is a victory by a coalition of fishing groups,
environmentalists, Indian Tribes and family farmers who organized an
action alert campaign over the past week to defeat the bill. They said
the bill would amount to a water bailout for corporate agribusiness
interests on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley that would
devastate salmon and other fisheries and family farms.
“Over the past several weeks I have been working closely with members
of the California delegation who expressed interest in reaching a
bipartisan agreement on legislation to address California’s drought
crisis without violating the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water
Act or biological opinions," said Feinstein in a statement. “Although
we have made progress, it has become clear that we will be unable to
present an agreed-upon proposal before Congress adjourns this year."
Feinstein also claimed that, in spite of much evidence otherwise
provided by opponents of the legislation, that this wasn't "some kind
of secret process."
“I deeply believe the people want both parties to work together, and
that is the only way we will be able to enact water legislation," said
Feinstein. "Claims that this has been some kind of secret process are
false. In order to come up with a bill that is ready for public
comment, back-and-forth negotiations and consultations are often
necessary, including extensive technical assistance from federal and
state agencies. That process is ongoing and we have no agreed-upon
bill at this time."
She also emphasized that there is a "real human fact" to the current
drought, although she failed to mention the people most impacted by
the drought - recreational and commercial fishing families, family
farmers, and Indian Tribes that depend on salmon and other fish as
part of their religion, culture and existence.
“It is important to remember there is a real human face to this
crisis," Feinstein continued. Some communities can no longer deliver
water to homes. Thousands of residential wells have run dry. And many
families lack very basic necessities like water for showers and
cooking."
Then Feinstein claimed that the bill wasn't "about corporate
agriculture," failing to explain why heavy hitters from the water
community, including Tom Birmingham of the Westlands Water District,
Stewart Resnick of Paramount Farms, the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California and the Kern County Water Agency, were all at the
table of the negotiations while fishermen, Tribes, family farmers,
Northern California legislators and Northern California legislators
were completely excluded.
“California is in a state of prolonged drought, and we must come
together to find ways to provide the water necessary for life and well-
being. This isn’t about corporate agriculture, this is about
California," she said.
Feinstein then took aim at drought bill opponents, concluding,
“It’s my hope that groups critical of this effort will strive to be
productive rather than destructive. It’s clear that we need to get
more water to our cities, businesses, farmers, households, fish and
the Delta. And it’s equally important that we continue to protect
wildlife and the environment. Only together will we stand a chance of
agreeing on a bill that can help accomplish all of these goals.”
Bill opponents greeted Feinstein's announcement with relief - and
vowed to stop similar legislation gutting fish protection and Delta
water standards in the 2015 Congressional Session.
"We would like to thank the senator for listening to our constituents
and we hope that she and Senator Boxer will ensure that all
Californians are taken into account during the formulation of
legislation in the next Congress," said Tom Stokely, water policy for
the California Water Impact Network (C-WIN).
"This bill has been delayed," said Ronald Stork, Senator Policy
Director of Friends of the River. "Feinstein said it will be
reintroduced and go through the regular order in the new GOP led-
Congress instead of being hatched in secret in the back rooms. That's
a good thing, but it doesn't matter if California's two Senators are
unwilling to stand up to the San Joaquin Valley Congressmen. Somebody
has to show some courage."
"The dynamics haven't changed. Feinstein is more than willing to
accede to the demands of the Southern San Joaquin Valley Congressmen.
Their demands are pretty simple: disrespect the Wild and Scenic Rivers
Act, Endangered Species Act (ESA) and other peoples' water,"
concluded Stork.
On November 18, representatives of California’s leading grassroots
water conservation and environmental water organizations, fishing
groups and the Winnemem Wintu and Karuk Tribes signed a letter
strongly criticizing the legislation.
"We are disturbed by a resurgence of media reports and the potential
movement of a purported 'drought bill' for California," the letter
stated. "As we understand it, the draft legislation now being
finalized attempts to reconcile provisions from S.2198 and HR.3964,"
two bills designed to benefit corporate agribusiness at the expense of
other water users."
The groups and Tribes expressed concern that there would be
"destructive elements" in the reconciled bill that were in past
versions of either or both bills. These include the following:
• Water transfers from the Sacramento Valley are expedited
circumventing public processes in federal environmental laws.
• Refuges are pushed to turn to groundwater instead of relying on
what the Central Valley Improvement Act requires in the way of surface
water deliveries.
• Most benefits are for desert agriculture in the southwestern San
Joaquin Valley—not California as a whole—and especially not the
area of origin where most of the water comes from: the Sacramento
River Watershed.
• Permanent, devastating impacts on migratory bird and fish
populations in California, Oregon, Washington State and Alaska.
Defenders of the public trust are gearing up for a big battle by
Feinstein and the Republican-controlled Senate and House of
Representative to pass "drought relief" legislation that serves
corporate interests at the expense of fish, wildlife and the people of
California during the next Congressional Session.
To read the complete letter, go to this link on the Restore the Delta
website: http://restorethedelta.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/EWC-Opposition-Letter-FINAL.pdf
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