[env-trinity] Hoopa Valley Tribe Press release May 30, 2023- President Biden and Speaker McCarthy, US Taxpayers Shouldn’t Pay Big Agribusiness’ Water Bills

Tom Stokely tstokely at att.net
Wed Jun 7 12:13:52 PDT 2023


See attached press release with HVT letterhead.

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
HOOPA VALLY TRIBE
May 30, 2023

CONTACTS:Joe Davis, Chairman
530 515-0433 (mobile)
hoopachairman at gmail.com

Michael Orcutt, Fisheries Director707 499-6143 (mobile)
mworcutt at gmail.com

President Biden and Speaker McCarthy, US Taxpayers Shouldn’t Pay BigAgribusiness’ Water Bills

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy accuses President Joe Biden of “playing politics” with theU.S. debt limit by saying, “We got to get moving . . . we can’t spend more money next year, we
have to spend less than the year before.” Yet, on his watch, the Speaker is giving a pass to his
Central Valley agribusiness constituents on more than $400 million dollars they owe the U.S.
Treasury for environmental damages!

How did we get here? Beginning in the mid-20th Century, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamationdammed the Trinity River and devastated the salmon fishery that sustained the Hoopa Valley
Tribe for millennia. The water that once flowed through our homeland to the Pacific Ocean is
the core of the Hupa peoples’ well-being and survival. Since 1964, our dammed and diverted
water, sheathed in steel tunnels and concrete canals, disappeared south into California’s Central
Valley industrial farmlands 450 miles from our homeland.
Reclamation’s Trinity River Division, along with its other Central Valley dams and reservoirs,
had catastrophic impacts on salmon fisheries in California’s largest river systems: the
Sacramento, the San Joaquin and the Klamath/Trinity. Industrial agriculture in the Central Valley
Project (CVP) destroyed or damaged aquifers and wildlife habitat essential to migratory birds in
the Pacific flyway.

Speaker McCarthy’s congressional predecessors told the American people that the CVP wouldreplace the groundwater that agribusiness was well on the way to depleting by the time Trinity
River water began flowing to them in 1964. The Central Valleys’ ground surface began to
collapse in the 1940s, eventually subsiding up to 70 feet in elevation as wells mined irreplaceable
water.

However, the CVP was never an either-or proposition for agribusiness. Instead, it was both: TakeTrinity River and other surface water and keep extracting the groundwater. Aquifer depletion
continues unabated.

To reverse the CVP’s destruction, President George H.W. Bush signed the Central Valley ProjectImprovement Act (CVPIA) into law in 1992. The CVPIA gave all Californians a stake in a
healthy environment. It allocated a small percentage of CVP irrigation water to restore fish and
wildlife habitats, and charged habitat restoration costs to CVP water and power customers.
Further, the CVPIA also established a special federal trust duty to restore the Hoopa
Valley Tribe’s Trinity River fishery, and ordered that restoration costs be billed annually
to CVP contractors who have profited enormously at the Tribe’s expense.

Since 1993, Congress has expended more than $400 million for CVPIA environmentalrestoration programs and yet Reclamation has not billed or collected any of it from Speaker
McCarthy’s agribusiness supporters. Making matters worse, the Trump Administration’s
political appointees added to the Nation’s deficit by rewriting CVP water contracts that made
sure Reclamation would never collect these environmental restoration costs.

At a May 16, 2023, Board meeting of the Westlands Water District (Westlands) Director JustinDiener explained what happened. “In 2017, we had so much bureau-related debt service on the
water rate that it made the surface water rate so expensive relative to the cost of pumping that it
was hard not to use the wells in some circumstances. But the dynamics of refinancing the debt
with the bureau [of Reclamation] has reduced our water rates to be much more cost effective.”
In 2020, the Hoopa Valley Tribe sued the Trump Administration after discovering that the
“dynamics of refinancing” were actually financial misconduct that violated numerous federal
laws, regulations, and Reclamation procedures. The Tribe’s case is pending in the Eastern
District Federal Court in Fresno and Westlands has intervened to protect its “refinancing
interests.”

Westlands also reckoned with its ongoing depletion of Central Valley aquifers. Director JeremyHughes reported, “I mean, really, the big thing, lately--last month--I think has been water
quality, the turbidity. I mean these things [pumps] are flushing like they have never flushed
before. I mean the water is so dirty it looks like oil, damn near.” Seemingly in a state of denial
about the crisis of their own making, and heedless of groundwater depletion impacts on Central
Valley municipalities that are home to many of their own employees, the Westlands Board
wrapped up the discussion with the statement, “So, no action today [on groundwater]. Just report
back on groundwater usage [at the next meeting].”

The story becomes even more absurd: On the last day of the Trump Administration, January19,2021, Interior Secretary David Bernhardt declared that his administration had completed the
CVPIA’s environmental restoration programs. It wasn’t true, but that lie is part of an ongoing
scheme that our litigation exposed by which Reclamation lets water contractors escape
environmental restoration costs. Speaker McCarthy joined that scheme with his sponsorship this
year of H.R. 215, which would declare restoration complete even though facts on the ground
belie that conclusion.

On December 15, 2022, Secretary Haaland rescinded the Trump decision and filed testimonyopposed to H.R. 215.

Now it is time for Secretary Haaland and the Biden Administration to finish the job. They needto do three things to achieve fiscal responsibility and environmental justice, and protect our
Tribal fishing rights.

First, withdraw the Trump administration’s water contracts and rewrite them as required byCongress under the CVPIA.

Second, recover the funds owed but never paid by CVP contractors.
Third, use the recovered funds to restore salmon and meet federal trust responsibilities to theHoopa Valley Tribe.
* * *
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.dcn.org/pipermail/env-trinity/attachments/20230607/a7659aa4/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: Hoopa Valley Tribe Press Release May 30, 2023.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 451944 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://mailman.dcn.org/pipermail/env-trinity/attachments/20230607/a7659aa4/attachment-0001.pdf>


More information about the env-trinity mailing list