Archive for the 'STCDA News' Category



The Fable of the Farmer and the Fish

A year ago I sent a notice out about the children’s book I wrote, The Fable of the Farmer and the Fish.

  I’d hoped to write a clear explanation that even children will understand illustrating the fundamental issue behind the California water wars, why Governor Brown’s Delta Tunnels are not the needed solution and instead propose a true, long-term solution. Set in the format of a children’s book.

I received a lot of feedback that people would like to see it more available for their children. Even adults enjoyed it.

Available on Amazon (Click Here) for iPhone, iPad, PC and Kindle. There is a nominal Kindle download cost. Proceeds go to the Save the California Delta Alliance.

Illustrations by Steve Greenfield, Discovery Bay resident. Thanks, Steve.

I hope people enjoy it.

The Water Problem is an Almond Problem

This article highlights the main water problem in California.

“Clearly, we are in a crisis. Many cities have mandated water rationing, and these strictures will only increase as water availability tightens. We could reasonably expect a similar response from the agribusiness sector. But this is California, where corporate agriculture is king. Rather than conserving water, corporate farmers have moved in the opposite direction; specifically, they are planting vast new almond orchards throughout the San Joaquin Valley.”

“70 percent of the state’s almonds are sold for export. It takes a full gallon of water to produce a single almond; further, more water is required to yield four almonds than an entire head of lettuce. Between the summer of 2013 and the summer of 2014, when the state was deep in the throes of the current drought, growers planted 48,000 acres of new almond orchards.”

“So while urban ratepayers across the state must endure severe cutbacks in water consumption, San Joaquin Valley corporate farmers are planting new almond orchards at breakneck speed. ”

“When it comes to surface water, the law is against them. San Joaquin Valley growers actually are among the most junior of the state’s water rights claimants. They are hoping their power in Sacramento and Washington will trump their flimsy legitimacy claims. They take the water, frankly, because they can.”

To read the entire article, go to The Santa Barbara Independent “Drought in California”.

And check out next time you are at Safeway’s how many beans, asparagus, lettuce and other fresh produce is now coming from Mexico or Costa Rica instead of California.

Can’t Kill the Earthquake Bogey

In August, 2014, I wrote Can we Kill the Earthquake Bogey Yet?

Unfortunately, the answer is “No”.

December 14, 2014, the Sacramento Bee printed another article: UC Davis study finds next Napa earthquake could imperil Delta levees.

Of course, the BDCP re-distributed that on their BDCP Facebook page January 21, 2015.

I commented both places – anyone else who wants to add a comment and chime in is appreciated. (I’m always kind of wordy – any pithy smart one-liner responses would probably make more of an impact. Help me out here.)

——————————- Jan’s Comment ————————————-
Why do we keep repeating this erroneous incorrect storyline? First, if there were a big risk of levee failure in the Delta, wouldn’t the state be taking rapid action to insure that human lives aren’t lost if levees fail and Delta communities flood? Would the state really be risking the economic issues of the railroads and major highways in the Delta flooding? Of course they wouldn’t. They are not taking action because the “Earthquake Bogey” is a false, erroneous scare tactic.

The scare tactic was thought up by the proponents of the BDCP tunnels (i.e., Big Ag) following the Katrina disaster and it has been effectively used since to scare Southern California water users into thinking there are risks to their water supply to try to get their buy-in to the expensive BDCP plan.

The fact that there are no active fault lines in the Delta should have put this issue to rest long ago. The Hayward Fault (the nearest active fault line) is 30-60 miles away from the Delta. Levees have been shown to not be affected by shaking.

Immediately after the Napa shaker, the civil engineering firm Kjeldsen Sinnock and Neudeck (KSN), the Stockton civil engineering company that maintains about half the levees in the delta, went out to inspect the levees. Delta Levees once again proved the “Earthquake Bogey” argument of the BDCP to be what it is – just a scare tactic. Just as during the Loma Prieta earthquake, the levees were unaffected. Neudeck insists delta levees are now even wider, taller and stronger. He also said inspections are done constantly by the engineers hired by reclamation districts.

The article states that during the last “century”, 162 levees have failed. It does not add that since 2004, no levee has failed. Levees are continually being expanded and improved. The article does not also identify that not one of the 162 levee failures was due to earthquake – not even during the 1906 earthquake when the levees were narrower. Nor during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.

Shame on the Sacramento Bee for printing this biased, un-researched article. Please get input from non-biased sources and show both sides of the story.

Delta fish species decline

All Delta fish species are known to decline in drought years. That’s because they depend on ample freshwater outflow to support their habitat, and such flows decline during drought. The fish have long been affected by water diversions from the estuary, as well as other factors. The drop is quite staggering.

DeltaFish

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/water-and-drought/article6603369.html#storylink=cpy.

Does California need more dams?

Some argue that a new dam here, raising a dam there, is part of the answer to the California water crisis.

The McClintock-Costa bill HR 934 which is expected to pass the House and may win Senate approval as well would remove the “wild and scenic” status from the Merced river to allow expand its large dam on the Merced River. Write Senators Feinstein and Boxer and ask them to vote against this bill.

Why is this an issue? Don’t we need more dams for more water?

The McClintock-Costa bill would do much more than help a water district enlarge its reservoir and ruin a portion of a majestic river. If passed by Congress, it would set a national precedent. The federal government has never before removed a wild and scenic designation on a river. The designation is considered to be one of the nation’s most important and powerful environmental regulations, and protects many California rivers from being further dammed up and diverted.

A great article was released today, Tunnel Vision Part Two that identifies the real risk in HR 934.

HR 934 is backed by the Merced Irrigation District, a water agency representing agricultural interests in the Central Valley that want to expand its large dam on the Merced River, but can’t — unless Congress lifts the wild and scenic status.

The bigger prize, though, is the rivers along the North coast. Wild and scenic — that’s the strongest designation that we have,” said Jon Rosenfield of the Bay Institute. “If we’re willing to remove that for one irrigation district, who’s going to stop us from doing that to another river?” The Eel, the Smith, and the Trinity are now protected by wild and scenic designations. Those rivers contain millions of acre-feet of water that could be diverted.

Currently, Big Agribusiness and powerful water interests in California are not only blocked from accessing North Coast rivers because of their wild and scenic designations, but they’re also stymied by the state’s water conveyance system, particularly the Delta. The fragile estuary serves as a natural barrier to those who want to move more freshwater from Northern California to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California.

That’s where the Delta tunnels come in with their oversized capacity.

“If you build this infrastructure,” said Jeff Miller of the Center for Biological Diversity, referring to the giant water tunnels, “at some point, it’s going to be used to its max.”

Read more: Tunnel Vision Part Two.

Time to Write the Senators Again

Update on Federal Legislation which would destroy our Central Valley Salmon Runs. Need letters to legislators. Click http://water4fish.org/campaigns/index.php/.Water to send your comments.

In early 2014 a water bill was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives which would have devastated the Central Valley salmon populations. It was sponsored by the San Joaquin agricultural members of the House. In early December, both Senators Feinstein and Boxer were instrumental in stopping an amended version of that bill in the Senate because it would have overturned the Endangered Species Act protections for the salmon. Undeterred, later in December the House passed a new bill which contained most of the same salmon killing provisions.

The new Congress will take up these bills again in 2015. Water4Fish, the Golden Gate Salmon Association and other organizations are gearing up for the battle. You can help. Letters to Senators Feinstein and Boxer thanking them for their 2014 actions and requesting their continuing help in 2015 can have a big impact.

The WaterForFish group have drafted an email that you can easily send to Senators Boxer and Feinstein. Go to www.water4fish.org and click on “Send Letters to Legislators”. Fill out your information and click on “Send Emails”.

Let’s learn from others’ mistakes

Seattle’s “Big Dig” tunnel project shows another example of what a Delta Tunnel project will look like.

How does Seattle’s “Big Dig” compare to the planned Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP) tunnels?

Seattle’s Big Dig Delta Tunnels
Number of Tunnels: 1 2
Diameter: 56 feet 40 feet
Depth below the ground: 120 feet down 150 feet down
Length of Project: 2 miles 30 miles
Number of vertical shafts: 0 10 – every 3 miles
Type of soil: soft landfill soft, alluvial soils

After the first 3 weeks of the beginning of boring the Seattle tunnel in 2013, they were already 2 weeks behind schedule. Currently the projected 14 month project which was planned to complete December 2014 is now projected to take until August 2016 or later (almost 3 times as long as original projections). They’ve only tunneled 1,000 feet of the 2 miles/9,200 feet (our tunnels are 30 miles long) and have already used 70 percent of the estimated total cost (do I hear huge overruns?) Seattle’s “Big Dig” is only 2 miles long yet the tunnel-boring machine has been stuck underneath Seattle for more than a year. The machine is stuck in soft ground which used to be underwater (sound like Delta ground?) Now they are having to dig a huge hole down to haul the behemoth tunneling machine out to repair it. The huge hole caused them to have to dewater surrounding ground water and is causing nearby buildings to sink and crack. What a mess!

Why isn’t this what we will be looking at in the Delta if the tunnel plan goes through? Huge delays, cost overruns and unforeseen damage surrounds Seattle’s “Big Dig” and it’s only 2 miles long versus the Delta tunnel 30 mile, dual tunnel project.

Going “under the Delta” sounded so much less pervasive and more environmentally correct than a peripheral canal. Easier to “market” and “sell” to the general populace. But it is what it is – a huge construction project through the heart of sensitive Delta wetlands and rich farmlands that will do endless amounts of economic and environmental damage to Northern California.

Read the December 30, 2014 Washington Post Article.

An Example of Wrong-Thinking in the Central Valley

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The Tehachapi-Cummings water district is currently debating whether to rejoin the BDCP. Previously they provided $400K funding but then dropped out. The district’s general manager, John Martin, recommended participating at the 100 percent level in order to receive more data (more reliable information about the project moving forward).

As reported in the Tehachapi News December 31, 2014:

    “Historically, the district has never imported more than 45 percent of its water allocation from the State Water Project, or 8,000 acre-feet. It’s sold some of its water to other agencies from the remaining 55 percent.”

    “That is expected to change.”

    “With all the permanent crops that are being planted, we’ll be approaching 100 percent (demand) within the next five to seven years. With the agriculture demand increasing up here and the growth of the communities, the city and CSDs, we will need to bring up water in greater quantities in the future.”

Where’s the thinking? Most of that water increase, as we know, is the agriculture, not the communities. Permanent crops (aka almonds) are among the most thirsty year-round crops being planted.

There’s a lack of water. There will be less water in the future. Let’s plant more almonds!

Shouldn’t someone stop and say “We’re running out of water! Maybe we should switch some of this acreage back to line crops and stop expanding our footprint of crops in the desert.” ???

Happy Holidays from STCDA!

It’s the Holiday Season!

Happy Holidays

Wishing you a happy Holiday Season and a joyous New Year (without tunnels)!

Happy Holidays

Merry Christmas to the BDCP

Merry Christmas to the BDCP, the DSC and the NRA, et al.

Burt Wilson, Editor
bwilson5404@sbcglobal.net
12/22/14

Twas the night before Christmas at BDCP,
But their eggnogs were downed amidst much misery.
Their heads were hung low, their brows were all sweated,
‘Cause it looked like their tunnels wouldn’t be vetted.

Seven years or more they had worked through the night,
To make us believe the twin tunnels were right.
When pressed to explain things, they just hemmed and hawed,
Cause they knew all along what they planned was a fraud.

Then out on the Delta there arose such a clatter,
The people looked ’round to see what was the matter.
It was old Marc Cowin. He yelped like an otter:
“I promise we’ll never take any new water.”

The people yelled back, “We’ve heard that before.”
And the MWD says they want a lot more.
The co-equal goals will never pass muster.
And the fish screens have lost their original luster.

Read more…


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