Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
June 27, 2008
5. Agencies, Programs, People –
Water agency rips grand jury report
Water rates to rise as of January
Some Coastal Woes Begin Far Inland: Farm runoff creates “dead zones” offshore, but no national authority is tasked to address them.
AlterNet- 6/25/08
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Water agency rips grand jury report
Josh Dulaney, Staff Writer
Beaumont-Cherry Valley Water District officials slammed a
On Thursday, they demanded an apology from the grand jury.
"They missed the boat," said district spokesman Timothy Smith. "An apology is in order for missing so many points in their investigation."
Officials with the Riverside County District Attorney's Office declined comment on the district's news release.
"The DA's office has received a copy of the grand jury report, and we are in the process of reviewing the contents at this time," said spokeswoman Ingrid Wyatt.
The grand jury began investigating the district over the winter after a slew of complaints surfaced about how it was operating.
In the news release, General Manager Chuck Butcher contradicted the grand jury's finding that the district did not submit financial statements from 2004-06, saying its board completed and accepted audits on April 2.
The grand jury "neglected to discuss the fact that the audits have been completed and show no mishandling of funds," wrote Butcher, who could not be reached for comment Thursday.
The grand jury also misconstrued as "unpaid invoices" unapproved invoices for unauthorized work submitted by contractors, according to Butcher. The contractors submitted no change orders for work they performed beyond their original contract agreement, Butcher wrote.
He denied the grand jury's finding that the district's housing agreements have led to numerous violations of the Brown Act, the state open-meeting law.
The district's top four employees, including Butcher, have lived rent-free in district-owned houses without having to pay for utilities since 2000.
Smith said the officials live in the houses in
Butcher, in the news release, disagreed with the grand jury's statement that the district misused public funds by helping to pay education costs for two relatives of district officials.
"The board can establish education agreements on a case by case basis," Butcher wrote.#
http://www.sbsun.com/sanbernardino/ci_9713009
Water rates to rise as of January
The San Diego County Water Authority on Thursday approved an 11.9 percent increase in its 2009 wholesale rates for treated water.
Starting in January, typical homeowners will pay $3.42 more a month for water. The exact price jump will vary among retail water districts.
“These rates and charges are necessary to continue diversifying our water supply portfolio, improve water supply reliability and complete vital infrastructure projects,” said Fern Steiner, chairwoman of the water authority's board of directors.
No one from the public spoke about the rates during Thursday's hearing at the water authority's offices in Kearny Mesa.
Several water leaders said to expect similar rate jumps in coming years if water supplies remain tight and conservation efforts reduce water districts' revenue from water sales. #
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20080626-2049-bn26water.html
Some Coastal Woes Begin Far Inland: Farm runoff creates “dead zones” offshore, but no national authority is tasked to address them.
AlterNet- 6/25/08
In the early 1970s, Earl "Rusty" Butz, the
Around the same time, large algal blooms began appearing with increasing regularity in the shallow, coastal sea at the mouth of the
The nation had a new problem, one that underscored how the ocean's problems can begin 1,000 miles inland: Fertilizer applied throughout the huge
Scientists understand the causes and have proposed a bevy of possible solutions. A decade ago, state and federal agencies began to coordinate their efforts to address Gulf hypoxia. The effort got off to a strong start, but has since foundered for lack of funds.
"It's the tragedy of the commons," says Nancy Rabalais, executive director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium in
Since the widespread adoption of man-made fertilizers in the 1950s -- the innovation behind the "green revolution" -- fertilizer and pollution runoff has caused hypoxia to increase in many shallow waters. By one estimate, the number of dead zones worldwide has doubled every 10 years since the 1960s, to 170. The
The Gulf dead zone has grown steadily, doubling in average size between 1980 and 2000. Scientists expect it to get bigger. More fertilizer than ever is washing down the
"We're ... playing roulette with the Gulf fisheries," says Doug Daigle, coordinator of the Lower Mississippi River Sub Basin Committee on Hypoxia in
The problem, which embraces the 1.2 million-square-mile
Mitigation measures are relatively low-tech. Planting a buffer of certain crops - switch grass, for example - around farmland can cut nutrient-rich runoff. Wetland systems absorb nutrients in the water, which places a premium on wetland restoration. Changing when and how farmers fertilize also lessens runoff.
When polled, farmers say they would prefer the more diverse landscape implied by buffers and restored wetlands. Indeed, various programs exist at both state and federal levels to pay farmers to let land go fallow, or even restore it. But currently the incentives to plant crops -- including direct subsidies and high food prices -- are much greater than those for conservation. In the top polluting counties, EWG puts the ratio at 500 to 1.
"They're being paid to grow more and more corn rather than to implement these conservation measures," says Donald Scavia, professor of natural resources and environment at the
he only way to address the problem, say experts, is through a coordinated effort led by a central authority.
In 1997, the Environmental Protection Agency convened a task force to address the problem. Four years later, the group produced a comprehensive action plan aimed at halving the size of the hypoxic area by 2015. To do so, nutrients would have to be cut by almost one-third. (A later study found that a 55 percent cut would be required.)
Eight years later, some are calling it the "no-action plan." Individual states have moved to address their water quality issues locally, but the coordinated effort called for in the action plan has yet to emerge. Lack of money is the biggest obstacle, a fact noted in the in the 2008 Action Plan signed earlier this month.
"The goal was to achieve something like $2 billion per year to fight hypoxia," says Len Bahr, director of applied science in the
"We don't really have the legal authority in place for anyone to fix this," says Catherine Kling, a professor of economics at
Ethanol production is likely to enlarge the dead zone. A March study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that if the
Already, last year farmers devoted a nearly California-sized tract of land to corn cultivation, a 15 percent increase over the previous year, and a 60-year high. Last year, the dead zone reached the third-largest extent ever observed.
Heavy rainfall throughout the Midwest this year has increased the
A study published earlier this year speculates that, after 30 years of excess nutrients, the Gulf ecosystem may be near a tipping point. The northern Gulf's sediments have become so saturated, the authors say, that the ecosystem is showing less resilience. Compared with 30 years ago, it takes a smaller nutrient load to cause the same size dead zone.
Some fishermen are worried, too.
"It has the potential to affect fisheries," says Ms. Rabalais. Fish can flee when an area turns hypoxic. But often the bottom-dwelling bivalves and worms that form an integral part of the ecosystem can't. "It reduces biodiversity," she says. And with each reduction, returning fish find the ecosystem less able to sustain them.
Others think the dead zone's potential impact on fisheries is being oversold. How oxygen-depleted waters affect an ecosystem depends on the ecosystem itself, says James Cowan, a fisheries oceanographer at
In
But at the mouth of the
http://www.alternet.org/water/89393/
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