Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
May 22, 2007
1. Top Items
Delta smelt numbers plunge; Debate over state's pumping of water after only 25 found - San Francisco Chronicle
Editorial: State must pump out a solution - Stockton Record
Delta smelt numbers plunge; Debate over state's pumping of water after only 25 found
San Francisco Chronicle – 5/22/07
By Patrick Hodge, staff writer
A rare delta fish that recently almost triggered a shutdown of the state's major water system has plummeted in number, bringing it perilously close to extinction, state and federal experts warn.
Spring trawls aimed at measuring the size of the delta smelt's juvenile population found just 25 fish, the smallest number ever recorded and 93 percent fewer than the previous year. In most trawls, biologists caught no smelt at all.
That has alarmed state and federal fish experts, who say the state should significantly cut the use of giant pumps that export water out of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta for use by 24 million people and farmers. Some environmental groups have likened the Tracy-area pumps to huge vacuum cleaners that cause water to flow upstream, sucking the fish into the pumps or stranding them in areas where they are vulnerable to predators.
In March, an activist group won a decision from an
Top officials with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration agreed Monday that the survey data from the Delta Smelt Working Group were extremely serious, and said pumping had been slowed.
But they blamed use of pesticides for killing many smelt this spring in the Sacramento River, and said they might not be able to reach the Delta Smelt Working Group's goal of reducing pumping in the south delta so that fresh water actually flows toward
The Delta Smelt Working Group, which includes scientists from three federal and two state agencies, said water should not run backward in the south delta until later in the summer when water temperatures rise. Smelt typically migrate to
Department of Water Resources Deputy Director Jerry Johns said that stopping the pumps is not necessarily the answer and that the pumps have not been killing many fish recently.
"We need to take a more holistic approach rather than just focusing on the pumps,'' he said.
Chuck Armor, acting regional manager for the Department of Fish and Game's bay-delta region, agreed. He said water tests on the
Johns said Schwarzenegger is seeking a comprehensive solution through the Delta Vision task force established in October. That group is supposed to come up with a plan for helping the delta by the end of 2008.
In the meantime, Johns said, various actions have been taken to help fish, including cutting current pumping levels as much as possible without, for example, affecting supplies to users in the
Bill Jennings, executive director of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, called Johns' assertions a smoke screen. His group sued the state over pumping operations and the effect on the smelt.
"They're still in a state of denial,''
Michael Lozeau, an attorney working with
But such findings would have to be based on scientific data showing no significant harm would be done to the species, and according to a memo from the Delta Smelt Working Group, there is virtually no likelihood that could happen, he said.
"The delta smelt are an indicator species. They show the health of the delta,'' said Dan Bacher, editor of the Fish Sniffer, a publication for fishing enthusiasts, who is calling upon readers to put pressure on state officials. "If the smelt go extinct, other species are going to follow.''
According to the working group, five surveys caught only 25 juvenile smelt, about 7.7 percent of the 326 taken during the same time in 2006, and only 7.1 percent of the 2000-2006 average of 353.
Kevin Fleming, a senior Fish and Game biologist who is with the smelt working group, said Monday that he was satisfied that state officials were responding appropriately to the latest information, even if they might not be able to achieve the group's recommendation.
"I've attended all those meetings, and they are taking this very seriously,'' Fleming said.
As to whether those efforts will be enough to save the smelt, Fleming was unsure.
"I haven't a clue. Things don't look good, but at this point, what we have is a major concern,'' he said. #
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/22/BAG0NPV4411.DTL
Editorial: State must pump out a solution
Stockton Record – 5/22/07
State officials have been given more time to find a way to pump San Joaquin Delta water to
Whether this is a good or bad development will depend upon how state Department of Water Resources officials use the reprieve. They have failed for years to get required Department of Fish and Game permits.
Environmentalists have agreed to allow more time to avoid a shutdown of the pumps near
Now, they must find an operational plan that meets the dual, but often-conflicting, goals of pumping water and protecting fish.
"Our prime motivation is to not see a curtailment of the pumps," said Lester Snow, director of the California Department of Water Resources. He needs to balance that thinking with state environmental laws.
So far, no one has found a way to avoid compliance. State officials need to find a solution, no matter how impossible that might seem. #
http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070522/A_OPINION01/705220302/-1/A_OPINION06
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