[env-trinity] Jerry Brown admits Delta Tunnels is "unpopular" as legislators slam projec
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Thu Oct 6 13:12:35 PDT 2016
Photo meme courtesy of Restore the Delta.
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/10/6/1578495/-Jerry-Brown-admits-Delta-Tunnels-is-unpopular-as-legislators-slam-project
Jerry Brown admits Delta Tunnels is "unpopular" as legislators slam
project
by Dan Bacher
On the same day that Governor Jerry Brown jokingly praised former
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger for saddling him with the Delta Tunnels
and other “unpopular policies,” four Northern California Congress
Members and twelve state legislators issued letters strongly opposing
the tunnels project.
Brown lauded Schwarzenegger for focusing on environmental issues at
the tenth anniversary celebration of the passage of Assembly Bill 32,
the legislation that established the state’s greenhouse emissions
reductions, in the California Museum in Sacramento on Wednesday,
October 5.
“Arnold, thanks for being for climate change, cap and trade, the
tunnels project, high speed rail and all the other unpopular policies
that I’m saddled with,” quipped Brown.
You can listen to Brown’s comments here 1:01:24: bit.ly/...
Restore the Delta (RTD) responded to Brown’s quote, noting that “
Jerry Brown thanked former Governor Schwarzenegger for saddling him
with unpopular issues such as the Delta Tunnels -- even though, since
he was first elected, he's been pursuing the tunnels like Captain Ahab
pursuing Moby Dick!”
As an acknowledgement of the growing resistance by Californians to the
WaterFix, Brown for the first time recognized the Delta Tunnels as
"unpopular, according to RTD.
Of course, neither Schwarzenegger nor Brown mentioned the many other
controversial neo-liberal environmental policies that they are
responsible for.
These include authorizing record water exports out of the Delta;
driving Delta and longfin smelt, winter run Chinook salmon, Central
Valley steelhead, green sturgeon and other fish species closer and
closer to extinction; overseeing the creation of faux “marine
protected areas” under the oil industry-lobbyist overseen Marine Life
Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative; appointing Big Oil executives, Big
Ag lobbyists, and other corporate officials with numerous conflicts of
interest to state agencies and regulatory bodies; and doing everything
they can to weaken the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and
other environmental laws.
Nor did Schwarzenegger and Brown mention one of the least discussed
issues in California environmental politics – and one of the most
crucial to understanding the Delta Tunnels Plan - the clear
connection between the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative and the
California WaterFix, formerly called the Bay Delta Conservation Plan
(BDCP). In spite of some superficial differences, the two processes
are united by their leadership, funding, greenwashing goals, racism
and denial of tribal rights, junk science and numerous conflicts of
interest.
To read my report, Deep Regulatory Capture Exposed: The Links Between
Delta Tunnels Plan & MLPA Initiative, go to: www.dailykos.com/...
Congress Members ask for responses to Dr. Jeffrey Michael’s cost-
benefit analyis
As Brown, Schwarzenegger and other state officials were delivering
their comments at the AB 32 anniversary commemoration, Representatives
John Garamendi, Jerry McNerney, Mike Thompson and Doris Matsui (D-CA)
sent a letter to the Bureau of Reclamation and the California
Department of Water Resources (DWR) calling for responses to a recent
cost-benefit analysis of the California WaterFix Tunnels project
conducted by Dr. Jeffrey Michael at the University of the Pacific (UOP).
Michael’s analysis raises “key questions” about the plan, according to
a joint news release from the Representatives. The letter also raises
a number of questions based upon another recent and unofficially
released cost-benefit analysis prepared by David Sunding for the
California Natural Resources Agency.
“Both reports confirm what we’ve long suspected –WaterFix doesn’t make
good financial sense for California,” said Rep. Thompson. “Under these
analyses, water users and even federal taxpayers would be on the hook
for investments in a project that can’t promise better water
deliveries. State and federal water agencies must not be allowed to
squander taxpayer dollars on infrastructure that would devastate the
Delta without any guaranteed benefit.”
“The analysis done by Dr. Michael shows that the advertised benefits
of the Twin Tunnels simply don’t hold water,” said Congressman
Garamendi. “Both cost-benefit breakdowns of the WaterFix that have
been released to the public raise major questions about the viability
of the project, and its funding sources.”
“The numbers don’t pencil out for farmers south of the Delta,” said
Congressman McNerney. “Delta farming operations could be severely
disrupted, and endangered species are at risk of not surviving the
consequences of this massive project. The WaterFix plan’s costs do not
outweigh the alleged benefits and would require a large federal
subsidy, while causing irreparable harm to Delta and Northern
California communities who have not been adequately included in
project negotiations.”
McNerney urged the state to “move away” from Governor Brown’s flawed
WaterFix tunnels plan and “implement the cost-effective policy
solutions already outlined in the California Water Action Plan – like
conservation, recycling, increased efficiency, and storage – that will
ensure sustainable water supplies for a healthy Delta ecosystem and
California’s farmers and communities statewide.”
You can view the letter here
12 Delta/Bay Area legislators slam proposed California Water Fix
diversions
Also on Wednesday, twelve state legislators representing the Delta and
Bay Area regions urged the State Water Resources Control Board to
reject a petition to change water rights that would reduce fresh water
flows to the Delta as part of the controversial WaterFix proposal, a
move the lawmakers say will “cause catastrophic damage to the
environment and economies of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and San
Francisco Bay region.”
The letter by Senator Lois Wolk (D-Davis) and 11 other legislators
denounced the proposed water diversions, citing evidence that doing so
will cause “serious and potentially irreparable harm to hundreds of
plant and wildlife species, and also significantly damage the
agricultural, fishing, tourism and recreation industries that rely
upon the Delta.”
“Contrary to its name, the WaterFix fixes nothing," said Wolk, who
represents four of the five counties in the Delta, in a press release.
“The project won’t provide any additional water supply or increase
water deliveries, and will only exacerbate conditions in the Delta.
Further reducing fresh water flows to the Delta will cause serious and
potentially irreparable harm to the Delta’s fragile ecosystem, as well
as its communities and economy. That includes the Delta’s $5.2 billion
agricultural economy, as well as the iconic Delta and Coastal fishing
industries, which are worth billions annually.”
The Department of Water Resources and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation,
the principal backers of the California WaterFix Project, submitted
the petition to the Water Board to add three new points of diversion
from the Sacramento River.
Wolk, a long-time opponent of the Tunnels project, was the lead author
of the letter to the Water Board. The letter’s other authors include
Senators Mark Leno, Loni Hancock, Jerry Hill, Cathleen Galgiani, Steve
Glazer, Dr. Richard Pan, and Bob Wieckowski, and Assembly Members Bill
Dodd, Susan Eggman, Catharine Baker, Ken Cooley, and Phil Ting.
Wolk and the other legislators urged the Water Board to consider the
effects of diverting up to two-thirds of the Sacramento River from the
Delta, including increased salinity that would contribute to further
declines in species including the critically endangered Delta Smelt,
the endangered Sacramento River winter-run Chinook salmon, and the
Greater Sandhill Crane.
Wolk said the letter notes the “widespread concern from scientific
bodies including the federal Environmental Protection Agency and the
Delta Independent Science Board that flawed science is being used to
advocate for the WaterFix’s proposed benefits to the Delta environment
and water quality.”
“Current water diversions are already overtaxing the Delta ecosystem.
Reducing stress on the Delta by reducing reliance on fresh water
exports is a fundamental and necessary step to ensure the sustainable
and resilient water supplies needed by the economies, communities and
ecosystems in the Delta and throughout the state. It’s time for a Plan
B that can succeed where the WaterFix has failed, a plan that help us
achieve the coequal goals established by The Delta Reform Act, while
protecting the Delta as a place,” Wolk stated.
Winnemem Wintu: Shasta Dam Raise, Sites Reservoir and Delta Tunnels
are one project
While the state and federal governments and mainstream media try to
portray the Shasta Dam raise plan, Sites Reservoir proposal, and Delta
Tunnels as “separate” projects, Caleen Sisk, Chief and Spiritual
Leader of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, believes they “need to be
considered as one project.”
“Without one, you can’t have the others," Chief Sisk told me during
the historic Run4Salmon prayer journey from Vallejo to the McCloud
River from September 17 to October 1. “If the tunnels are built, there
will be no water to put in them. You need Sites Reservoir to provide
the water for the tunnels and the Shasta Dam raise to provide water
for Sites.”
“Although the state and federal governments are saying they are
separate projects, they are all really one project,” noted Sisk. “Why
do you think Westlands Water District, the Resnicks, Metropolitan
Water District and other water districts are all pushing for the
Shasta Dam Raise, Sites Dam and the Delta Tunnels?”
“We consider Shasta Dam a weapon of mass destruction,” said Chief
Sisk. “It has already taken our homes, sacred sites, burial sites,
and stopped the salmon from returning to their historical spawning
grounds. If these tunnels are built, Governor Brown’s so called
‘California WaterFix’, they will not only cause more death and
destruction to the already endangered salmon, but they will encourage
and motivate plans to enlarge Shasta Dam. An enlarged Shasta Dam will
flood what remaining sacred sites, and cultural sites that we still
use today.”
In written testimony submitted to the State Water Resources Control
Board for the ongoing hearings regarding Reclamation and DWR’s water
diversion change petition required to build the California WaterFix,
Winnemem Wintu Governmental Liaison Gary Mulcahy asks:
“Drowned cultures, dead and extinct fish, broken promises, stolen
lands, environmental destruction, water grabs, and years and years of
litigation – is it truly worth it?”
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