A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
May 8, 2008
3. Watersheds -
Bill reviving the San Joaquin River gets an OK
San Francisco Chronicle – 5/8/08
By Peter Fimrite, staff writer
(05-07) 16:12 PDT WASHINGTON -- Long-stalled legislation to bring life back to the dried-up San Joaquin River and restore its historic salmon run cleared a significant hurdle Wednesday when a U.S. Senate committee gave its approval.
The bill passed by the Energy and Natural Resources Committee now joins similar legislation approved by a House committee in November. The legislation would pay for restoring the once-mighty river, which foamed with spawning salmon until it was dammed in 1942.
The two bills are expected to be consolidated and brought to the floors of the House and Senate for final approval later this year.
"This is badly needed good news for West Coast fishermen who are faced with the complete closure this year of the salmon fishery," said Monty Schmitt, project manager and senior scientist for the Natural Resources Defense Council. "Restoring the
Environmentalists have characterized the draining of
The fighting was supposed to have ended when a federal judge in
But the legislation necessary to pay for the restoration, known as the San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement Act, stalled in House and Senate committees while supporters searched for ways to offset the costs.
The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Rep. Jim Costa, D-Hanford (
The
Starting in the 1950s, San Joaquin water was diverted to more than 1 million acres of desert farmland from Chowchilla (
The salmon, which old-timers say used to splash around on top of one another and were so plentiful they were scooped up and used as hog feed, were wiped out. The river is no longer a constant source of freshwater to
The lawsuit that led to the 2006 agreement was filed by environmentalists in 1988, prompting years of courtroom sparring as the government and farmers attempted to protect their rights to the water. In 2004, U.S. District Judge Lawrence Karlton ruled that the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's operation of Friant Dam violated state fish and game codes by eliminating the salmon.
The settlement agreement, supported by almost every member of the
One possible catch is that environmentalists plan to replace the extinct San Joaquin chinook with
Environmentalists and fishermen are hoping the restoration work can be completed before the
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/08/BA5D10IFPU.DTL
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