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[Water_news] 5. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: AGENCIES, PROGRAMS, PEOPLE - 5/31/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment

 

May 31, 2007

 

5. Agencies, Programs, People

 

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA LEVEES:

Feds praise Yuba levee; Herger, Army Corps official visit Bear River - Marysville Appeal Democrat

 

SALMON FISHING FUNDS:

Thompson fights for speedy release of emergency salmon funds - Eureka Times Standard

 

 

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA LEVEES:

Feds praise Yuba levee; Herger, Army Corps official visit Bear River

Marysville Appeal Democrat – 5/30/07

By john Dickey, staff writer

 

A top U.S. Army Corps of Engineers official visited a new Yuba County levee Wednesday that was built entirely from state and local funds – bypassing the typical federal process for levee building.

“This is truly 21st-century flood control,” said John P. Woodley Jr., assistant secretary of the Army, Civil Works. “Because what we’re looking at here is what the Dutch call ‘room for the river.’”

Woodley had good words for the Bear River setback levee, a 1.8-mile embankment that protects against a 200-year flood. He noted the fact that the setback levee eases the constriction on the river and provides 600 acres of valuable habitat.

The setback levee is located about a mile or so from Plumas Lake homes, which help pay for the Three Rivers Levee Improvement Authority levee repairs using a $29,345 fee charged to each home.

Yuba County’s plan to bypass the federal levee-building process and instead fund improvements using fees generated by Plumas Lake homebuilding has garnered some critics in the past, who said it was putting people in a deep flood zone before levee repairs were finished.

Even Rep. Wally Herger joined in the chorus at one point with a January 2005 letter to Yuba County supervisors expressing concern over the danger of developing in Plumas Lake.

But on Wednesday, Herger brought Woodley and a host of local and state government officials to one of the results of the program, the Bear River setback levee, as part of a two-day tour of Yuba-Sutter flood protection facilities, including Shanghai Bend, the Wadsworth Canal and the Marysville ring levee.

“We’re very proud of where you’re standing now,” said Herger, R-Chico. “This shows what we can do. And we have more of this we need to do.”

The levee was the result of a decision by Yuba County officials to move ahead with a developer-funded partnership that built homes in a flood zone before the levee improvements were completed, rather than wait for funding from Washington – the more typical route for levee improvements.

Yuba County officials and developers agreed to a plan that allowed limited building to occur in Plumas Lake as a way of raising nearly $70 million for the levee work, according to a statement issued earlier this month after the Army Corps certified levee work on the Yuba and Bear Rivers and along the Western Pacific Interceptor Canal.

Wednesday’s press conference brought no specific proposals for new federal funding or projects, other than some discussion of Army Corps credits for Yuba County’s recent improvements. The credits could be used to reduce the state and local share of an estimated $50 million in repairs needed for the Marysville ring levee.

But Woodley expressed optimism about the prospects for flood-control funding in Yuba-Sutter during the press conference held on the Bear River setback levee.

“I think that you’re going to see, going forward, a continued and ever-increasing commitment from the federal government to fund projects such as this one, said Woodley, who oversees the Army Corps Civil Work Program, including levees. “And I think that our investments in flood-control projects in this region will be at a very, very high level.”

Herger said he would be working with locals and the state to get the funding needed to bring levees up to 200-year levels. While the Bear River setback levee is locally funded, it is part of an overall project that uses federal funds, the Yuba River Basin Project, according to officials.

“I am four-square behind, again, ensuring that Yuba and Sutter areas have the flood protection that we need to protect our citizens,” said Herger. “The fact is, we have the homes here now. It behooves all of us to work together to make sure they have the flood protection they need.” #

http://www.appeal-democrat.com/onset?id=49163&template=article.html

 

 

SALMON FISHING FUNDS:

Thompson fights for speedy release of emergency salmon funds

Eureka Times Standard – 5/31/07

 

North Coast Congressman Mike Thompson, following the president's signature on emergency disaster relief for the Pacific salmon industry, has assembled members of Congress from California and Oregon to call for the prompt distribution of the funding.

 

”The president's approval of this disaster relief is long overdue,” said Thompson. “The administration's failed water policies resulted in our country's largest commercial salmon fishery disaster, and North Coast residents have suffered because of it. Our salmon fishermen and businesses will finally get the aid they desperately need.”

 

The $60.4 million in emergency funding will be distributed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency, which has regulatory jurisdiction over the nation's fishing industries. Thompson and members of the state congressional delegations formally invited William Hogarth, director of NOAA Fisheries, to a meeting in Washington, D.C. to discuss how and when those affected by the disaster will receive aid.

 

”We've been working for the past two years to get this funding, and now that we have it, we can't waste another minute getting it to our salmon fishermen and related-businesses,” said Thompson.

 

In other business, Thompson, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Terrorism, Human Intelligence, Analysis and Counterintelligence, has embarked on a five-day intelligence oversight trip to the United Kingdom and Sweden.

 

The purpose, according to his office, is to examine the growth of religious extremism in Europe and the threat that this trend poses to the U.S. and our allies. In addition, Thompson will meet with local officials to discuss how the U.S. and European countries can better coordinate counterterrorism measures and the sharing of intelligence.

 

”Strong intelligence is our best weapon for fighting terrorism,” said Thompson. “And close collaboration with our allies and partners is critical given that many of these extremist groups operate in multiple countries. We need to share information with our allies and learn from each others' experiences if we are to counter the threats posed by these dangerous groups.”

 

Thompson, a Vietnam combat veteran, will also spend a day with wounded soldiers at the Army's Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany. This is his second visit to the hospital since fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan began. #
http://www.times-standard.com/local/ci_6027869

 

[Water_news] 4. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: WATER QUALITY - 5/31/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment

 

May 31, 2007

 

4. Water Quality

 

Aeration system gives life to Lake Elsinore - Riverside Press Enterprise

 

Local officials unveil lake aeration system - North County Times

 

 

Aeration system gives life to Lake Elsinore

Riverside Press Enterprise – 5/30/07

By Mary Bender, staff writer

 

LAKE ELSINORE - Tiny bubbles ripple to the surface of this recreational lake, a sign that 12 new pipelines are infusing the water with oxygen, which experts say will significantly improve the quality of the lake.

 

Today city officials will dedicate Lake Elsinore's new diffused aeration system, which pumps air into the lake through 4,000-foot-long polyvinyl chloride pipelines that radiate from opposite shores. The lake's caretakers say that less algae will grow and fewer fish will spontaneously die in the aerated, oxygenated water -- problems that have plagued the lake for much of its history.

 

On Wednesday, members of the State Water Resources Control Board and the Elsinore Valley Municipal Water District got an up-close look at the long, snaking pipes during a tour with Pat Kilroy, the city's director of lake and aquatic resources.

 

Dennis Waite, who handles lake maintenance operations for the city, steered a 35-foot barge from the dock at Lake Elsinore's Seaport Boat Launch. He took the passengers to several spots on the lake, where they could see the pipelines that Water District crews floated to the surface.

 

Deputies from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department escorted the vessel in their patrol boat to make sure other lake users didn't collide with the pipelines.

 

Each black pipe, measuring 1 ½ inches in diameter, is perforated for its final 2,500 feet so the air is released not just at its mouth but at numerous points along the way, said Andrew Komor, project manager from Pacific Advanced Civil Engineering, the Fountain Valley firm that designed the aeration system.

 

The holes are small -- just .04 inches -- and are spaced about 5 feet apart, Komor said. A series of concrete blocks weigh down the pipelines to keep them on the lake floor, and each pipe is lashed to a slightly bigger, 2-inch-diameter companion that maintenance crews employ to float the pipes to the lake surface when necessary, he said.

 

"Eighty percent of man-made lakes have a form of diffused aeration," Komor said, adding far fewer natural lakes are similarly equipped.

 

Lake Elsinore is a natural lake.

 

Four air compressors, each with a 200-horsepower engine, pump air into the lake through the pipelines that fan out like fingers.

 

Two air compressors are housed together on the south side of the lake, near Grand Avenue, and the other pair is on the north side, near Lakeshore Drive.

 

Each compressor can pump 1,000 cubic feet of air per minute along the bottom of the lake, which gets to about 27 feet at its deepest points.

 

"We don't want to churn up the bottom sediments," said Mark Norton, administrator of the Lake Elsinore & San Jacinto Watersheds Authority, explaining that carp, a non-native fish, thrive on those nutrients. "We have this huge overpopulation of carp."

 

With a surface area of more than 3,000 acres, the lake is the largest freshwater body in Southern California. But its shallow depth leads to problems with an overgrowth of algae, which depletes the amount of oxygen in the water beyond the level that fish can survive.

 

Further, the lake typically loses about 4 ½ feet of its depth per year due to evaporation, which makes its harder for the water to stave off a swampy smell or murky appearance.

 

"We've seen the lake get pea-soup green," Norton said. "One of the biggest factors of a healthy lake is having a full lake."

The watersheds authority teamed with the Elsinore Valley Municipal Water District to administer state grants from water bonds approved by California voters in recent years.

 

Lake Elsinore received $15 million from Prop. 13, which passed in 2000. Those funds paid the $2.2 million construction cost of the diffused aeration system, along with related water quality projects on the lake, such as the annual removal of carp -- 1.5 million pounds of the fish since 2002 -- and the stocking of lake with hybrid striped bass, which feed on baby carp. #

http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/stories/PE_News_Local_C_lake31.3e99d3c.html

 

 

Local officials unveil lake aeration system

North County Times – 5/31/07

By Jose Carvajal, staff writer

 

LAKE ELSINORE -- Tiny bubbles in the lake had local officials feeling fine Wednesday as they unveiled a $2.2 million aeration system they say will improve water quality in the lake and reduce fish die-offs.

Consisting of six 4,000-foot-long pipelines strung along the bottom of the lake, the system will circulate oxygen throughout the water and thus prevent algae blooms near the surface from choking off the air supply and leading to the die-offs, officials with the Lake Elsinore-San Jacinto Watersheds Authority said.

 

When it formed in 2000, the authority received $15 million in bond money from the state to improve water quality and protect wildlife habitats in a 770-square-mile area that reaches from the San Jacinto Mountains to Lake Elsinore. The city of Lake Elsinore and the Elsinore Valley Municipal Water District, who share responsibility for the lake, are among the authority's member agencies.

 

While the authority kicked in $1.5 million from the bond for installation of the system, the city, county and water district split the remaining $700,000 evenly. The water district will operate and maintain the system, with the three agencies also expecting to split the expected $150,000 annual bill.

The installation of the system is the second phase of a two-part plan to improve the quality of the lake's water, which has traditionally suffered because of the odorous fish die-offs. The first phase called for the installation of 20 underwater fans that mix the lake's water and circulate oxygen.

Those fans, which were installed in 2004, can only do so much, said Phil Williams, president of the watershed authority's board and an Elsinore Valley Municipal Water District board member. The fans only mix water near the surface, he said, and the pipelines will help get oxygen moving farther down.

"It's basically like the bubblers people put in their aquariums to keep their fish alive," Williams said. "In essence, we're doing the same thing. It's just on a much grander scale."

The pipelines, which total nearly 9 miles of 1 1/2-inch-wide plastic pipes, are perforated every five feet with holes 1/4 of an inch in diameter. Williams said the authority spent $10,000 for the rights to use such a pattern because it had previously been patented.

The pipes are attached to 2-inch-wide pipes that can be filled with air so they can be floated to the surface for maintenance. Both sets of pipes are connected to one of two sets of compressors on opposite shores of the lake.

The compressors run automatically and are triggered by a computer that receives information from two sensors near the middle of the lake. The sensors measure the lake's temperature, salt content, pH levels and oxygen amounts. When the water reaches certain benchmarks in those categories, the compressors will come on.

On Wednesday, authority officials turned on one of the air pipelines during a media tour.

At about every 5 feet along the length of the line, bubbles could be seen rushing to the lake's surface.

Andy Komor, an engineer for the Fountain Valley-based company that designed the system, said it is not all that different from systems installed at other lakes. About 80 percent of man-made lakes have aeration systems, he said, while only about 20 percent natural lakes, including Lake Elsinore, use them.

At Lake Elsinore, Southern California's largest naturally occurring lake, the changes to the water will likely be subtle, Komor said.

"It won't turn the water from pea soup green to Aquafina, but it'll turn it from pea soup green to light green," he said.

Mark Norton, administrator for the watershed authority, said the system should help meet the ultimate goal of reducing fish die-offs.

"We want to prevent fish kills," Norton said. "That's a big part of what we do here." #

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/05/31/news/californian/4_02_505_30_07.txt

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[Water_news] 3. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: WATERSHEDS - 5/31/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment

 

May 31, 2007

 

3. Watersheds

 

Editorial: Sea timetable is ridiculous

Imperial Valley Press – 5/31/07

 

While the state’s recommended plan for the Salton Sea realistically takes into account some Imperial County concerns, the timeline to get a restoration done at the sea is far from realistic.

California Resources Agency Secretary Michael Chrisman last week turned over to the state Legislature his selection of a plan to restore and revitalize the Salton Sea.

The sea straddles the border of Riverside and Imperial counties and long has been plagued by salt buildup, pollution and lack of freshwater inflows. Many environmentalists say the sea is terribly close to dead.

That the revitalization plan includes a cleaner but smaller sea that would still reach into Imperial County and that land would be provided for geothermal development in Imperial County both demonstrate that Chrisman and his staff actually considered input from leaders in our area.

The plan selected by Chrisman certainly has some better aspects than did previous versions coming from the state. Considering that Imperial County has little political sway in Sacramento, getting the concessions we did get is a pleasant surprise.

 

 

That said, it seems ridiculous that the $8.9 billion restoration plan has a 75-year time span. Basically, such an amount of time divorces everyone involved from accountability and does not allow those at the genesis of the restoration to see their work come to fruition.

Frankly, many of us would like to see with our own eyes a revitalized Salton Sea while our own eyes are still functioning.

Seventy-five years in this scenario might as well be 175 years. Ten, 15 or even 20 years to get this project done would be a time frame people could wrap their minds around, although paying $8.9 billion for the revitalization over 75 years rather than 15 or 20 years may make it more palatable to many in the statehouse.

The proposal still must make it through the Legislature and in the process it may face alterations. We hope our representatives in Sacramento will work hard to keep the positives for Imperial County included in Chrisman’s plan in whatever bill ultimately is approved by the Legislature.

Considering reality and all the political ramifications, we are happier with Chrisman’s Salton Sea restoration proposal than we thought we would be.

Now we would like to see is a sensible timeline attached to the plan. #

http://www.ivpressonline.com/articles/2007/05/31/opinion/ed02_5-31-07.txt

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[Water_news] 2. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: SUPPLY - 5/31/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment 

 

May 31, 2007

 

2. Supply

 

PUMPING COSTS:

Report: Big farms get unfair electricity subsidy to pump water - KESQ Channel 3 (Palm Springs)

 

LOCAL WATER SUPPLY ISSUES:

Officials assess water supply - Agoura Hills Acorn (Southern California)

 

WATER SUPPLY OPTIONS:

Water agencies will try to bring on rain - Bakersfield Californian

 

GLEN CANYON DAM:

Disputed dam marks 50 years - Casper Star Tribune (Wyoming)

 

 

PUMPING COSTS:

Report: Big farms get unfair electricity subsidy to pump water

KESQ Channel 3 (Palm Springs) – 5/30/070

 

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - An environmental group is claiming that some of the nation's largest farming operations are paying rock-bottom rates for the electricity they use to pump government-subsidized water to their fields.

 

About 7,000 farming operations in California get their water from the Central Valley Project, an irrigation system that only charges irrigators about a penny per kilowatt-hour to move the water to their fields.

 

Officials with the Department of Water Resources say by comparison, farmers that rely on a state-run irrigation system paid about 22 cents per kilowatt hour for wholesale electricity last year.

 

Bill Walker -- a vice president of the Oakland-based Environmental Working Group -- says the system is what he calls "socialized agriculture supported by corporate welfare."

 

Federal water officials disagree with the idea that farming operations fed by the nearly 500 miles of canals and pumping stations had a competitive advantage over other California farmers. #

http://www.kesq.com/Global/story.asp?S=6585905&nav=9qrx

 

 

LOCAL WATER SUPPLY ISSUES:

Officials assess water supply

Agoura Hills Acorn (Southern California) - 5/31/07

By Stephanie Bertholdo, staff writer

 

Water is precious in arid climates like Southern California's. In summer months, water districts throughout the state, especially in the south, attempt to stretch their supplies by using conservation measures and tapping into stored water from alternate facilities.

 

As levels run low and the Las Virgenes Municipal Water District draws water from other local reservoirs, some consumers might notice slight differences in the taste and smell of their tap water, said John Mundy, district general manager.

 

"The changes are usually subtle but they are a normal experience at this time of year," Mundy said. "Many people don't notice it at all, but each year a few call us to ask why it's different."

 

Several factors affect the seasonal change in water taste, Mundy said. Warm weather triggers algae blooms in supply reservoirs, resulting in an "earthy" odor or taste, even after the water has been treated and filtered.

 

Although water might taste differently or have a slightly odd scent, Mundy said it is completely safe and healthy to drink.

 

During summer, the water district meets added demand by drawing supplies from the Las Virgenes Reservoir in Westlake Village.

 

"No two treatment facilities are alike, so there are small differences some people notice in the water's taste," Mundy said, while renewing the district's familiar call for conservation.

 

"Because of the dry winter across the state, we're asking customers to reduce their outdoor water use through shorter watering times and by refraining from using water to wash down driveways and sidewalks," Mundy said. "If there is another dry winter, the water we save this year could well be water we need next year."

 

The last statewide drought occurred in the 19871992 period, according to the California Department of Water Resources. The department says one dry year doesn't necessarily constitute a drought.

 

Customers in the Las Virgenes district receive water from the State Water Project. The water travels more than 400 miles in pipes and aqueducts from the Bay Delta in the north and serves more than 20 million people in Southern California.

 

To keep customers abreast of all things concerning water, the district distributes its annual Water Quality Report, which offers a scientific analysis of the water delivered by the district.

 

Potable water flowing to residents from the Las Virgenes District has no contaminants and is considered "high quality," exceeding state or federal regulatory guidelines.

 

"Las Virgenes Municipal Water District customers have traditionally enjoyed very high water quality, and this year is no exception," Mundy said.

 

Because May is Water Awareness Month, the district put several educational programs into place to remind residents about the need to conserve water due to the increased demand that coincides with rising temperatures.

 

The district conducted several community outreach events during the month, including its annual water awareness poster contest and its 12th annual "gifting" of waterrelated books to local libraries.

 

At last week's Agoura Hills City Council meeting, community library manager Raya Sagi accepted a wide assortment of books for the Agoura Hills Library from Glen Peterson, a Las Virgenes board director and Metropolitan Water District representative.

 

The Las Virgenes Municipal Water District serves a population of 65,000 in the cities of Agoura Hills, Calabasas, Hidden Hills, Westlake Village and unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County. #

http://www.theacorn.com/news/2007/0531/Community/005.html

 

 

WATER SUPPLY OPTIONS:

Water agencies will try to bring on rain

Bakersfield Californian – 5/30/07

By James Geluso, staff writer

 

Faced with a dry year, three area water providers and a possible fourth are planning to take unusual measures to wring the last bits of moisture from the sky.

 

They'll hire Fresno-based Atmospherics Inc. to fly cloud-seeding missions over the Kern River's north fork during the summer.

 

They already pay the firm to seed clouds in the winter, but this is the first time they're trying the summertime approach.

 

"I'll call it a little bit of a gamble on our part," said Florn Core, Bakersfield's water resources manager. "It's a trial basis, it's a dry year, it's worth it to give it a try."

 

The targets of the seeding efforts are storms that come up from the Gulf of California into the upper part of the Kern River watershed. The clouds head north through a narrow trough that reaches from Kernville to Mount Whitney.

 

The idea of seeding the clouds is to make them dump their moisture over the Kern River basin, where it will come to Kern County, said Steve Lafond, Bakersfield's hydrographic supervisor.

 

Core said the company already made a flight earlier this month under its existing winter-season contract. A day and a half later, there was a noticeable bump in flows, Core said, although it's impossible to be sure the seeding was responsible.

 

Each of the providers involved can expect to pay $16,000 to $18,000 for the service over the four months, depending on factors ranging from the number of storms that come up the trough to the cost of fuel, Core said.

 

For decades, the providers have paid for cloud seeding during the winter to increase the amount of snowfall over the basin. But this is the first time they will try summer seeding.

 

Cloud seeding involves airplanes firing silver iodide into clouds to induce rain.

 

The Bakersfield Water Board approved the move Tuesday. The North Kern Water Storage District and Buena Vista Water Storage District boards have already approved it. The Kern Delta Water District hasn't approved it yet, Core said. If Kern Delta doesn't join the effort, the three remaining providers will likely just split the cost, he said.

 

The providers are desperate because the snowmelt this year is less than a third of normal, Lafond said. Isabella Lake currently holds about 243,000 acre-feet of water, or 79.3 billion gallons, and is expected to drop to half that this fall, he said.

 

Lafond said the area is on track for the 11th driest in the 105 years that records have been kept. #

http://www.bakersfield.com/102/story/153755.html

 

 

GLEN CANYON DAM:

Disputed dam marks 50 years

Casper Star Tribune (Wyoming) – 5/31/07

By Christopher Smart, Salt Lake City Tribune staff writer

 

PAGE Ariz. -- Fifty dam years. Make that "50 Dam Great Years."

Yep, the city of Page -- on the lip of Glen Canyon and dubbed "the town the dam built" -- is throwing itself a birthday party Friday and Saturday.

But some environmentalists, charting the receding waters of Lake Powell, wonder if Page will live to see 100.

Once described as the most desolate place in the contiguous 48 states, the camp where construction workers bivouacked in dusty trailers in 1957 now is an oasis complete with churches, schools and parks. And the 7,000 full-time inhabitants of this tourist hub on Lake Powell's picturesque Wahweap Bay are pretty "dam proud.”

 

We're like any other small town," says longtime Page resident and booster Joan Nevills-Staveley as she strolls along manicured Lake Powell Boulevard, "except we have this tremendous swimming pool out our back door."

It's difficult to talk about Page without considering the 186-mile-long reservoir named for explorer John Wesley Powell. About 3.5 million visitors take it in each year, spurring tourist economies in southern Utah and northern Arizona.

Eventually, though, Lake Powell discussions flow to the controversy that has backed up -- along with the muddy waters of the Colorado River -- against Glen Canyon Dam since its completion in 1963.

A political tide aimed at damming the Colorado and its tributaries coursed through Washington, D.C., in the 1950s, recalls Ken Sleight, a southern Utah environmentalist and former river runner who was immortalized as Seldom Seen Smith in Edward Abbey's anarchist primer, "The Monkey Wrench Gang."

 

Sleight and a handful of critics warned that the dam would come at a huge price, burying what he calls "the heart" of canyon country, including such natural wonders as Cathedral in the Desert, Music Temple and Gregory Natural Bridge, beneath Lake Powell's waters.

"The momentum grew and grew, and then it became necessary to build the dam. It's like the Iraq war. Once you get so far, it's hard to back down," Sleight recalls while sipping coffee at his ranch south of Moab.

Nearly five decades later, burgeoning demands on the Colorado coupled with dire forecasts about global warming equal a big question mark for the future of the river that is the lifeblood of the Southwest. Uncertainty about upstream flows and the population explosion downriver make the crystal ball for Lake Powell's future murky.

Fifty years from now, there will be no reservoir upstream from Page, predicts Richard Ingebretsen, the founder of the Glen Canyon Institute who views the dam as an ecological disaster.

 

"The dam will be there, or it won't be there," he says while surveying the partially revealed Cathedral in the Desert on the reservoir's Escalante arm. "But with the overuse of the water and global warming, Lake Powell won't be here."

Nevills-Staveley, whose father was the first commercial river runner in Glen Canyon, sees a bright future for her city. Fifty years hence, she says, Page will be thriving with a population twice what it is today. Its 1,600 motel beds may double as well.

"As long as people can get to the water -- they may grouse and carry on (about low lake levels) -- but they will come."

It isn't just Page's tourist economy that lies downstream of an uncertain Colorado River. It's the entire Southwest that pins the future on the waterway. A planned 158-mile pipeline from Lake Powell would feed the ever-growing population in Utah's Dixie.

The $500 million aqueduct would deliver 70,000 acre-feet of water annually and double the area's present capacity. (One acre-foot is the amount required annually by a family of four.) The pipeline would nurture growth for decades to come, says Ron Thompson, manager of the Washington County Water Conservancy District.

 

"If we grow at the rate everyone says, we'd be tapped out (by 2020) without it."

Portentous predictions about low Colorado flows don't faze the veteran water manager, who has watched the desert alternatively bake and flood through the years.

"If you look at the long-term average of Lake Powell, it looks to me like there's very little risk," Thompson says. "Even if you get a decrease in snow pack, global warming means you get some wet years."

Recent dry years -- with the exception of the winter and spring of 2005-06 -- show Lake Powell is functioning as planned, says Barry Wirth, spokesman for the federal Bureau of Reclamation, which built and maintains the dam. It stores water in wet periods to help cover dry spells and allows upper-basin states to meet obligations of the 1922 Colorado River Compact to their lower-basin partners.

Water released from Lake Powell travels down the Colorado to Lake Mead, impounded behind Hoover Dam. Mead is vital to the lower basin -- Arizona, California and Nevada -- where the population is expected to swell by the millions in the next decade.

"The system," Wirth says, "is more important now than it's ever been."

Nonetheless, Wirth concedes, Southwest growth will keep Lake Powell lower than in the past.

"It's going to fill less frequently because there is more (water) demand."

Ingebretsen, on the other hand, contends such observations are an understatement.

"The latest, very conservative data, using Bureau of Reclamation (global-warming) models, shows it will be empty 15 (percent) to 50 percent of the time. Over the next 25 years, there is a good likelihood Lake Powell will be empty." #

http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2007/05/31/news/regional/c13674a66b787860872572eb006c1d0f.txt

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[Water_news] 1. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS - Top Item for 5/31/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment

 

May 31, 2007

 

1.  Top Item

 

Survey of Delta smelt produces troubling results

Stockton Record – 5/31/07

By Alex Breitler, staff writer

 

THE DELTA - Finding a finger-long fish in the West Coast's largest estuary sounds difficult.

 

But it's never been this hard.

 

Surveys by biologists this spring have turned up record-low numbers of juvenile Delta smelt - just 25 fish as of last week, dismal compared with the 326 smelt that had been counted at this time last year.

 

Even by the latter standard, the smelt was in danger of extinction, conservationists said. Now that danger may be imminent.

 

State officials say they've reacted by slowing down the large export pumps near Tracy, although they say the pumps are likely just one cause for the smelt's rock-bottom crash.

 

Conservationists aren't happy with the government's response and are threatening to sue - again.

 

"We have a species that is so close to being gone, it's horrifying," said Tina Swanson, a biologist for the conservation group The Bay Institute.

 

The problem is that the smelt is an annual species. Most of the fish live only one year.

 

The alarmingly low numbers of juveniles this spring means that those who survive to adulthood will have difficulty spawning next year.

 

"It's a miracle to find one smelt," said Stockton conservationist Bill Jennings. "Are they going to find each other?"

 

The smelt has little commercial, recreational or aesthetic value but is considered a benchmark for the overall health of the Delta.

 

If the smelt goes, some biologists warn that species more valuable to humans, such as the splittail or striped bass, could be next.

 

State officials have temporarily delayed increasing pumping flows to the 6,000 cubic feet per second slated to be exported this summer. That's enough water to fill an Olympic-size swimming pool in about 14 seconds.

 

For now, the pumps are churning about 1,200 cubic feet per second. The goal is to prevent the Old and Middle rivers from flowing backward toward the pumps, sucking smelt into the danger zone.

 

It's not clear how long the reduced pumping might last. The potential impact on water users is "pretty dicey," said Jerry Johns, deputy director of the state Department of Water Resources.

 

More than two-thirds of Californians rely on water pumped from the Delta. The state has purchased some water to offset the loss. But in an already-dry year, some farms and cities must rely heavily on groundwater and reservoir storage, Johns said.

 

Several other measures have been taken to protect smelt, Johns said, including sending more water down the San Joaquin River and removing a barrier at the head of the Old River one week early.

 

He says, however, that the pumps are only part of the problem.

 

The Department of Water Resources and the Department of Fish and Game say that toxic contaminants found in the Sacramento River system this year might be part of what's plaguing smelt, as well as exotic clams that gobble up plankton needed by smelt and other fish.

 

B.J. Miller, a biologist who consults for water contractors, said the smelt may be starving to death.

 

"There's a whole lot of people who want to blame the pumps for the Delta smelt problem," he said. "Look at this year. They didn't salvage any smelt at the state pumps, and they (the fish) are going in the tank."

 

Johns confirmed, however, that it's possible no smelt have been taken at the pumps because the population is so depleted.

 

Last week, state Sen. Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said the government hasn't done enough to protect the smelt. In a letter to the Water Resources and Fish and Game departments, he called the latest smelt numbers "frightening."

 

Earlier this year, a judge ruled that the state had never gotten proper permits to kill smelt and salmon at the pumps. The judge ordered the pumps shut down, and the state is appealing that order.

 

Meanwhile, a coalition of conservation groups announced Thursday it intends to sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for not responding to a March 2006 request to upgrade the smelt from threatened to endangered status. Conservationists are requesting a similar move by the state government.

 

"If the agencies are sincere in saying that they want to protect this fish and preserve it and ultimately recover it, then they can't just sit on their thumbs and hope things will be better," The Bay Institute's Swanson said. "Our first objective has to be to save as many of these young fish as possible so there are fish left to spawn." #

http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070531/A_NEWS/705310323

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