[env-trinity] Westlands Water District Votes No on Delta Tunnels Project!
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Tue Sep 19 17:23:39 PDT 2017
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/9/19/1699905/-Westlands-Water-District-Votes-No-on-Delta-Tunnels-Project
Map of Westlands Water District courtesy of WWD.
Westlands Water District Votes No on Delta Tunnels Project!
by Dan Bacher
In a major victory for Delta Tunnels opponents, the Board of Directors
of the Westlands Water District today voted 7 to 1 against their
participation in Governor Jerry Brown’s California WaterFix project.
Growers in the massive district, located on the west side of the San
Joaquin Valley, cited the high cost of the state-federal proposal as
their reason for rejecting the project. Politically powerful Westlands
is the largest irrigation district in the country.
The district would be one of the key beneficiaries of the proposed 35-
mile long twin tunnels under the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta —
and their rejection of the project is a major loss for the Brown
administration’s efforts to fast-track the construction of the
project. It also sends a message to other water districts that the
cost of the controversial plan is not worth the potential benefits.
The Metropolitan Water District (MWD) of Southern California board is
slated to vote on the tunnels in early October, but the Westlands
vote delivers a major blow to the project.
“Westlands’ decision to not participate in the California WaterFix
will make it very difficult for other agencies to participate,” Tom
Birmingham, the General Manager of Westlands, told the Los Angeles
Times.
Delta Tunnels opponents are very pleased with the Westlands decision.
"Today is a very good day for California,” said Barbara Barrigan-
Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta, in a statement. “By
rejecting California WaterFix, the Westlands Water District has dealt
a blow to the project. There are many better solutions for creating a
sustainable water supply in California.”
She noted that Metropolitan Water District's math used to justify the
construction of the project is based on a “sizable contribution from
Westlands,” as is the Santa Clara Valley Water District’s math.
“They now have to come up with a lot more money for the Delta
Tunnels," Barrigan-Parrilla stated. “It won't pencil out for them
either.”
The Westlands vote against the tunnels is not the only victory in the
campaign to stop the project today. The Los Angeles City Council
Energy and Environmental Committee also voted no for the Delta Tunnels
project -- “until the project is fully financed and Metropolitan Water
District meets all their considerations,” according to RTD.
Yesterday, over 40 ratepayers drew significant media attention by
holding a No Tunnels, No Water Rate Hike rally in front of Los Angeles
City Hall.
Rally and meeting participants included representatives of Food &
Water Watch, Consumer Watchdog, Union de Vecinos, Restore the Delta,
Los Angeles Waterkeeper, Concerned Citizens of Compton, Southern
California Watershed Alliance, Sierra Club Angeles Water Committee,
March and Rally-LA, People Organized for Westside Renewal (POWER), and
Ground Game LA, neighborhood council leaders and faith leaders.
“The Delta Tunnels would raise water rates and property taxes in Los
Angeles, costing ratepayers a total of $2.5 to $4 billion,” said
Brenna Norton of Food and Water Watch. “These massive tunnels would
change the way water is diverted from the Bay Delta and would send
additional water to corporate agribusinesses in the Central Valley,
while Southern California ratepayers pay more for no additional water.”
Norton said the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power has endorsed
this rate hike, which would be imposed by the Metropolitan Water
District, even though it plans to reduce water imports from the Delta.
Also today, the Santa Clara Valley Water District in San Jose voted to
pass a "no regrets package" planning $100 million for 9 different
projects like stormwater capture, leak repair and gray water, RTD
stated.
Delta Tunnels opponents are urging people to show up for their public
meeting on September 26th to tell them to vote no on the project.
On Monday, the Associated Press revealed that "dozens of water
agencies and millions of families and farmers would be on the hook”
for building the Delta Tunnels. AP obtained new documents from
Westlands — and confirmed the expanded funding demands in phone and
email interviews with state and local water officials: https://apnews.com/712b5954fa3a4b4e9494cbbadefa6575/APNewsBreak:-Millions-of-Californians-on-hook-for-water-plan
Also on Monday, the California Indian Water Commission joined three
environmental groups — the California Water Impact Network,
AquAlliance and California Sportfishing Protection Alliance — in
filing a legal challenge to the financing of the Delta Tunnels.
A recent landmark 9th Circuit ruling that federally reserved Indian
water rights have precedent over all state and federal water rights
puts a new twist on how much water there really will be available for
the tunnels or any other project — and could put a big wrench in state
and federal plants to build the massive 35 mile long tunnels under the
Delta. For more information, go to www.indybay.org/...
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