Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
February 10, 2009
Top Item–
Delta bill rekindles debate on exports
By Alex Breitler
A group of lawmakers says the government should be allowed to bypass endangered species law and export Delta water to farms and cities during times of devastating drought.
Republican George Radanovich of Mariposa, who introduced a bill to this effect last week, called the Endangered Species Act a "horrendous" law and said that pumping restrictions to protect Delta smelt and other species at the expense of farmers amounts to "economic eco-terrorism."
That is strong language, his spokesman, Spencer Pederson, acknowledged Monday.
"He is very serious," Pederson said. "This is his No. 1 priority, and we'll be looking at any way possible in the future to get this or something like this moving."
Rep. Dennis Cardoza, D-Atwater, is among seven sponsors of the bill. "Between the environment and our need for food, we must find a balance," Cardoza said.
That's because the giant pumps near
Giving the state and federal governments a pass around the Endangered Species Act is hardly the answer, one environmental group said Monday. Strict water conservation and recycling strategies - and eliminating water uses that don't make sense - would alleviate pressure on the Delta and spare sensitive species, said Jeff Miller, a spokesman for the Center for Biological Diversity in
"We have a fundamental problem with prioritizing (water) deliveries to agriculture at the expense of species that are on their way to extinction," he said.
The 35-year-old act requires the government to save, "to the extent practicable," species faced with extinction. The law has survived repeated attempts to alter it.
Next week, the federal Bureau of Reclamation is expected to tell its contractors, mostly farmers, how much water may be delivered in 2009. No one expects good news; barring a hefty supply of rain and snow in February and March, it's likely no water at all will be delivered by the bureau.Westlands Water District could see 40,000 jobs lost, according to a
"It's fair to say we appreciate what the congressmen are doing to alleviate the pressure," Westlands spokeswoman Sarah Woolf said. "But that doesn't get us to the end result."
"In some years it just might not be available," he said. "There's a crisis going on because people have built their lives around water that isn't available at times."#
http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090210/A_NEWS14/902100316
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