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Invasive Weeds in the Delta – Meeting August 28

Bill Wells, Executive Director of the Delta Chamber of Commerce and author of the regular “Bay and Delta Yachtsman” magazine’s “Delta Rat” articles, has requested that anyone who is available this Friday to attend a meeting in Sacramento about the Invasive Week problem in the Delta and voice your opinion. Also please forward this to other interested persons. Here’s the meeting info and agenda – Click Here.

Bill’s email said:

Our governor Jerry Brown and resource secretary John Laird have totally dropped the ball on this rolling disaster. As near as we can tell area boaters are picking up the full tab for the Division of Boating & Waterways effort to “control” invasive plants. Local marina owners and business people are spending their own funds to try to stop this scourge. It looks like about $15 million is funded for the effort and about $50 million is needed. It is time for all “stakeholders” to start paying their fair share. The water districts that export water from the Delta should pick up the lions share of the expense and the Corps of Engineers charged with keeping navigable waterways open needs to provide adequate funding too.

We have gotten to this point because of inept management of our water resources in the past and we need to put a stop to it now before it totally destroys the Delta. We need a complete audit of the Natural Resources Agency and in the future we need far better oversight of the agencies charged with keeping our waterways clear.

For more background and why the weed clean-up should be paid for by the water contractors who are exporting too much water causing the issue and not just the boaters here in the Delta stuck with the issue, see Gene Beley’s film of Gary Rogers interviewing DBW Director Chris Conlin regarding invasive plants in the Delta.

Where is the common sense?

The editorials are coming out of the woodwork now. Wonder if someone is paying for them to do these or they are getting the “bright idea” on their own.

Today’s was an opinion piece in the Sacramento Bee called “Brown’s new Delta fix makes all sorts of economic sense,” by Betty Jo Toccoli, President of the California Small Business Association.

She says that the California Small Business Association supports the plan because the availability of a reliable water supply is of great importance to all of our members.

What she obviously doesn’t understand is that her Small Business Association members are getting nothing, nada, squat out of the “California Water Fix.”

She goes so far as to say the opponents of the plan’s economics “don’t pan out,” referring to Dr. Jeffrey Michaels, an independent economist at the University of the Pacific. Instead she quotes as truth/fact economist David Sunding, who is paid by the DWR and has been slanting the economic reports in the tunnels’ favor for years.

I love this part (it is often repeated) – that we must consider the “economics of a catastrophic failure. According to an analysis by leading UC Davis professors, the old dirt levees that protect water supplies have a 64 percent probability of collapse or catastrophic failure in the next 50 years. The Department of Water Resources analyzed the economic consequences of multiple levees failing should a large earthquake occur. Water exports would be cut off for months, if not years. The total cost of disruption to our water system would cost the economy $30 billion to $40 billion over five years – more than twice the total construction costs of the pipelines.”

OK – now, really. So she bought into the faulty (no pun intended) Earthquake Bogey and reports of failing levees. I actually love that one. Because if the levees are so precarious and the state is not doing anything to fix them, then the state is risking hundreds of thousands of lives of people living in the Delta. And, even if true, the water exports would NOT be cut off for years, according to true scientists. Bogus. Stupid. Wrong.

I wish these people wouldn’t write about what they know nothing about. People like Betty Jo Toccoli, President of the California Small Business Association, should stick to what they know instead of buying the hype being put out by the the DWR and Gov. Brown in support of the Corporate Farmers (not small businesses) and Big L.A. Developers (again not small businesses) about why they want the “wonderful” California Water Fix. Instead, she should consider that the Delta Tunnels will destroy acres and acres of fertile, family-owned (small business) Delta farmland, impact Delta communities, ruin Delta recreation (and related small businesses), not to mention the most important, destroy the salmon runs off the entire coast of California and Oregon (commercial fishermen). Why? For big business profits. Profits from more almonds. Profits from re-selling water.

There’s nothing there to help small businesses. It’s only to make the very, very rich richer.

Published here.

Delta farms planned to be taken by eminent domain

State contractors have readied plans to acquire as many as 300 farms in the California delta by eminent domain to make room for a pair of massive, still-unapproved water tunnels proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown, according to documents obtained by opponents of the tunnels.

Farmers whose parcels were listed and mapped in the 160-page property-acquisition plan expressed dismay at the advanced planning for the project, which would build 30-mile-long tunnels in the delta formed by the San Joaquin and Sacramento rivers.

“What really shocks is we’re fighting this and we’re hoping to win,” said Richard Elliot, who grows cherries, pears and other crops on delta land farmed by his family since the 1860s. “To find out they’re sitting in a room figuring out this eminent domain makes it sound like they’re going to bully us … and take what they want.”

Read more here.

Carly doesn’t have the answer

So much for Carly Fiorina as a potential President (and I’d LOVE to see a female president). She said it “may well be true” that climate change has worsened effects of the drought. Like many Republicans, however, she blamed environmentalists and their Democratic allies for blocking the construction of dams in the state.
“California has had droughts for millennia,” Fiorina told The Sacramento Bee. “And so knowing that, you would think that you would prepare for droughts by building reservoirs and water conveyance systems so that you could save the rainwater during years when there’s a lot of rain.”

Oh, Man … Reservoirs and the Delta Tunnels aren’t the answer. We have empty reservoirs (which would have been empty even if there was more capacity before the drought) because the paper water system uses more water each year than exists. We need to refurbish our water distribution laws, encourage desal and recycling and conservation, and plant according to available water. It’s not the environmentalists that are the issue – they are the last barrier to the total destruction of the salmon runs!

Cruz and Walker were right there with Fiorina.

http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article31237517.html

Can we have it all?

In the water debate, the state’s Central Valley big ag and L.A. developers continue their push for more and more water to be shipped South while urban users, fish, Delta farmers, and communities raise objections and concerns about the various projects and plans being proposed to continue to do so. There’s the biggest project, the Delta Tunnels, but also numerous studies and proposals considering gates and obstacles throughout the Delta to try to manufacture a North-to-South pipeline.

The alternative, limiting agriculture expansion and huge housing developments in the desert, is never up for discussion. Can California have it all? Is there a way to support “growth” given the current climate changes?

Farmers
From The Fable of the Farmer and the Fish

The Governor and the Pope

The Sacramento Bee July 19th reported Gov. Jerry Brown going off to the Vatican to talk with the Pope on climate change.

“But as much as their visit highlights shared concerns about the environment, the politician and the pontiff come at climate change from very different points of view.”

“Like many Democrats, Brown argues that governments can enact greenhouse gas reduction policies without inhibiting economic growth.”

“The pope?”

“On the day this month that Brown attended an exclusive gathering of media and technology moguls in Sun Valley, Idaho, Francis was in Bolivia, quoting from a fourth-century bishop: The unfettered pursuit of money, he said, is the dung of the devil.’ ”

Francis lamented politics saying “there are too many special interests [which] easily end up trumping the common good.”

In particular, he criticized programs (like the plan for the tunnel construction pollution) where polluters pay to offset polluting emissions which, Francis wrote, “may simply become a ploy which permits maintaining the excessive consumption of some countries and sectors.”

Read more here.

If We Try to Have Both “Growth” and “Climate Solutions”, We’ll Have Neither

In another article, the writer, Gaius Publius, also believes Brown is wrong. He states:
“The meme of the wealthy is that (a) climate proposals are a threat to ‘growth’ — by which they mean literally GDP, but also by implication they mean “your big-screen, smart-phone lifestyle.” And (b) losing “growth” is a line no consumer will want to cross; not the rich, not the poor, no one. …

In response, climate solution advocates counter with an argument that says, in effect, “But wait … we’ve got a way to keep ‘growth’ and also fix the climate problem.” To which I say, “Not a good answer” …Saying “we can have (consumer) growth and a climate solution” is only true … if it’s actually true. What if it’s not true at all? Then what’s the solution on offer? (Hint: There is none.) California Drought, the “Bigger Water Crisis” & the Consumer Economy,” by Gaius Publius.

Publius also states: “Those ‘Senior Water Rights’ Are the Tip of the Social Contract War. Consider — the population of the American Southwest, not just California, continues to grow. Water continues to be less and less available. Competing interests — some very very wealthy, like the big farmers and the big oil companies doing the fracking — are in a classic neo-liberal struggle for resources (and the source of their wealth) with ordinary people, like the urban dwellers of Los Angeles, San Diego, Phoenix and Las Vegas. Urban people need water to live, and by and large, they’re willing to share the sacrifice with others in the state. The entitled wealthy, however, the major corporations, the mega-rich farmers, some of which are hedge funds, by and large aren’t.”

It’s The Fable of the Farmer and the Fish.”

Publius continues, “Any attempt to have (consumer) ‘growth’ and a climate solution means we’ll have neither. Put differently, all fast, effective climate solutions will involve some sacrifice of the consumer economy.”

He also criticizes a solution some are now proposing (I read about it in the Sacramento Bee last weekend as something we can learn from Australia): “competitive water markets.” Publius says, “It’s the preferred solution of people with most of the money. It’s also a trap, a way to delay real solutions.”

“The only way to guarantee ‘growth’ in the consumer economy is to have a slow and ineffective solution — until it all comes apart.” In other words, there is no true, long-term strategy without limiting growth. Related to water, that means less big ag and restricting new land development.

“Growth” versus “Water Resources” in the Climate we Enter Now

In today’s “On the Public Record” post, “Someone who thinks about climate change and markets the way I do (3 of 3)“, “On the Public Record” says “Exactly. We are entering a climate that provides much less wealth. Modifying our infrastructure to be comfortable in that climate will cost additional money. Adaptation is not going to involve growth. Smart adaptation will mean managed retreat. No adaptation will mean even more retreat and more pain in the process. We start from a rich baseline and are using water in some real dumb ways, so there can be comfort and enjoyment of water for Californians for a long ways to come. But I don’t believe in any solutions that propose both growth and managing water resources in the climate we enter now.”

He adds, “Publius is talking about attributing drought to climate change, but that same reasoning is why I estimate that three million acres of irrigated ag will go out of production.”

We need to request a 180 day comment period for the “new” BDCP

Hi all – We need help once again. We need to request getting the BDCP (California Water Fix aka Delta Tunnels plan) comment period extended beyond August 31 – now only a 45 day review. The entire plan has changed now that they have dropped the environmental provisions from the plan. We need everyone to request an 180 day review. Instead of just sending it to the BDCP, we have four people to send to.

Here’s what STCDA sent that you can use for a template (but change it up if you would):
—————————————————————————
Alternative 4a represents an abdication of seven years of assurances from the state that the twin tunnels would be a part of a habitat conservation plan that met the “gold standard” of environmental stewardship. All previous review and comment has been predicated on those representations from the state.

A 45 days comment period for an entirely new and radically different approach is inadequate. Alternative 4a does not represent an adjustment or response to previous comments. It is entirely different in character from previous proposals and requires at least the same length of comment period that was originally allocated for the HCP version of the BDCP.

Please extend the comment period to 180 days to allow for a meaningful and forthright public process that is the cornerstone of NEPA and CEQA.

———————————————————————————

Here are 4 people to ask. Email is OK but ordinary mail shows we put in more effort so if you can, send both email and snail mail. PLUS also send a copy via email of whatever you send to other places also to BDCPComments@icfi.com so there is an “official” copy of the comments.

The Honorable Sally Jewell
Secretary of the Interior
U.S. Department of the Interior
1849 C Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20240
exsec@ios.doi.gov

David Murillo, Regional Director
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
2800 Cottage Way
Sacramento, CA 95825
dmurillo@usbr.gov

John Laird, Secretary
California Natural Resources Agency
1416 Ninth Street, Suite 1311
Sacramento, CA 95814
Kinberly.goncalves@resources.ca.gov

Mark W. Cowin, Director,
California Department of Water Resources
P.O. Box 942836, Room 1115-1
Sacramento, CA 94236-0001
Mark.cowin@water.ca.gov

Comment by July 18th on Delta Island Plan

Besides the Delta Tunnel plan being released today, I just became aware of two other projects in the review cycle that have worrisome components.

The one I’ll address in this blog is the Delta Four Island proposal. The comment period ends July 18. So if you have any concerns, please send email comments to: Marc.A.Fugler@usace.army.mil

The 2nd project involves different types of gates but I don’t understand it yet so will post more information when I get it.

The proposal under review with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is SPK-1901-09804, SDEIS Delta Wetlands Project, San Joaquin & Contra Costa Counties, CA. If you go to the link you can get the information plus attachments showing all four islands.

Some time ago, water agencies down south purchased four Delta islands: Bouldin Island, Webb Tract, Holland Tract, and Bacon Island, Bacon is just west of Mildred Island. Bouldin is north of the channel, north of the two Potato Sloughs. Webb is north of Franks Tract, Holland is south of Franks Tract, and Bacon Island is between Holland Island and Mildred Island.

Two (Bouldin and Holland) are planned as new habitat islands – marshlands, etc. Seems like a good idea, don’t know of any issues. Two (Webb and Bacon) are planned as reservoir islands to have their levees reinforced and intake pumps on the north and discharge pump on the south. They will be filled with water in the spring and available to release later in the year.

Issues:
(1) For South Delta boaters, especially those who like to anchor at Mildred Island or on the west side of Bacon, at “The Horseshoe” or near there, they are adding docks where the intake and discharge pumps are. They are locating the docks in an extremely bad place for water skiiers/wake boarders that use Mildred – near the north of the favorite ski run. Another dock is near horseshoe and I’m not sure the impact to recreation there but could block again. At the south if you ski along the railroad cut and go north, it’s right there across from Bullfrog.

That really wipes out or impacts a significant portion of the recreational areas if people need to go 5 miles and hour everywhere. My bigger concern is these projects don’t even consider or look at if they are going to disrupt and make a mess of the anchorages. I know in the scheme of things, all of the projects proposed that are much worse, but I worry if these things all take away from Discovery Bay the quick access to beautiful ski areas it’s going to really affect our economy and home values. So in my comments I asked them to consider any docks be near the bridges (Connection and Bacon Island) instead of in the middle of everything.

(2) The bigger concern is, with especially Webb but also Bacon, will they have even more reason to try to put in more gates to block salinity, once they invest in making these reservoirs for their farm/agriculture water?

It’s clear that the agribusinesses in the Central Valley look at the Delta as just a pipe to ship water from north to south. There’s never any consideration of the Delta as an estuary and beautiful place to enjoy.

Bacon Island and Webb Tract are very far West (especially Webb Tract). There already is an issue this year with salinity because of the drought coupled with the way the water has been handled in the state – moving too much from the reservoirs in the north to the L.A. reservoirs and the Kern Water Bank in the south. Even San Luis has gained a lot of water the past months. The pumps have continued to export during this year even though L.A. has enough until 2016 and the junior water rights holders shouldn’t get any even if they decided to plant almonds.

If Webb Tract becomes a reservoir island, will there be a push to keep the False River dam in place and put in even more dams and gates? In Discovery Bay, we are extremely anxious due to the 2009 Two-Gates Fish Protection Project which would have virtually blocked boating for significant amounts of time (because the only way in/out then would have been through the Bacon Island Bridge which isn’t 24×7 and has maintenance issues periodically. In the winter there are days it doesn’t even operate.

This project needs to have a disclaimer or caveat that says that it is accepted that in drought years there may not be fresh water to store in these reservoirs even if they are built. Else the project is totally unacceptable and these agencies need to invest in real solutions instead of continuing to impact the Delta.

The Delta Tunnel’s are Back :-(

Here we go again! The Delta Tunnel Plan is back.

They just released the updated BDCP/California WaterFix (aka Delta Tunnel) Plan. Here is the link for you to browse through the tens of thousands of pages and at least a hundred (or more) files: http://baydeltaconservationplan.com/2015PublicReview/PublicReviewRDEIRSDEIS/PublicReviewRDEIRSDEIS_508.aspx.

My concerns (besides the fact that the Delta Tunnel plan is moving again):

  1. There is only a 45 day comment period! Until August 31, 2015. Last time we had 180 days.
  2. They say they incorporated 12,000 comments (good) but they failed to post the comments so no one can tell what was incorporated and what was not.
  3. There are only two public meetings and both are on adjacent days. That seems pretty unreasonable to only hold two, both in the North, and on the same week. There should be at least four, on 3-4 different weeks, and one in Discovery Bay. The two public meetings are in Sacramento July 28 and Walnut Grove July 29.
    But as we know, they are afraid to come to Discovery Bay. Our turn-outs are too big and they don’t want to face us. I love Discovery Bay 🙂
  4. The two meetings aren’t even presentations or group meetings. They are one-on-one’s with the field reps. Sounds like those ineffective “In-Delta Meetings” they held. Those weren’t helpful. You can talk to a field rep but like the “In Delta Meetings”, your comments went nowhere, weren’t recorded accurately, etc. Plus the reps didn’t know anything/had nothing to help us understand the plan.
  5. They say you can talk to a court recorder (3 minute limit) if you want your comments videotaped, but again, no one else can hear those and discuss them. This is a very lousy way to conduct a public review meeting.
  6. No videoing during this meeting. They “say” that’s to encourage full participation. From the “In-Delta Meetings” where they got after Gene Beley and CBS’s Linda Yee when videotaping, we think that instead it is to suppress the information from getting out. Partipants were always asked the participants if it was OK to videotape. No one ever minded and it certainly did not suppress participation. They are afraid the protests will show up on the evening news.

You can comment as much as you like. Here’s the email link: BDCPComments@icfi.com. Here’s their link about how to make effective comments.

Ask Feinstein and Obama to oppose the agri-business bills passed by the House

“Blame the fish” proposals backed by agri-business advanced by the House would weaken environmental protection and threaten endangered salmon, among other species, to further a single goal: diverting more water from the fragile Delta estuary into the aqueducts that serve Central Valley irrigators. The latest bill, unveiled last week, would again scrap restoration plans for the San Joaquin River.

Fortunately, (according to the Santa Rosa Press article) none of these proposals stands much chance of becoming law. There’s resistance in the Senate — though not nearly enough from California Sen. Dianne Feinstein — and the Obama administration.

Hope that’s true! Contact Feinstein and Obama and let them know you oppose the agri-business bills weakening protections for the Delta.

Jerry Brown’s Two Big Wishes

We still have work to do!

From 6/27/15 Opinion in the Sacramento Bee by Dan Walters:

“These are not personal legacies, he insists, merely what California needs to prosper sustainably during the remainder of the 21st century. And pushing them from the drawing board into physical reality, he says, is just doing the job he was elected to do in 2010.

“Never mind that the tunnels are supported by virtually no one except construction unions and two giant water districts whose financial commitments are growing shakier by the day because many clients don’t see enough benefit to offset the immense cost. Never mind that federal environmental regulators have branded the tunnels as destructive to the estuary’s fragile habitat.

“’I’m here to deal with a challenge, which I didn’t invent,’ Brown insisted in a recent presentation to the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, one of the tunnels’ major sponsors.

“The other big sponsor, Westlands Water District, has spent millions of its farmer-members’ money on tunnel plans, but has told the state it won’t cough up any more money until the project’s uncertainties are resolved.”


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