Senate
Democrats on Thursday cast doubt on Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to
build a pair of dams, saying they have a cheaper and easier way to
maintain the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
"We
want more water supply and we want better flood protection as cheaply and
as quickly as possible," Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, D-Oakland,
said during a Capitol new conference to unveil his party's flood
protection plan.
He
added: "We don't believe new dams at this point are needed. They cost
billions of dollars and they take years, in fact decades to build."
The
Schwarzenegger administration has proposed building two dams, most likely
in Temperance Flat just above Friant Dam near Fresno, on the San Joaquin
River, and Sites reservoir in Colusa and Glenn counties.
In
proposing four bills, Democrats said they favor a mix of conservation,
groundwater storage and better floodplain management to provide twice the
amount of water than the dams could provide.
Their bills seek to change how the state manages water and flood
protection, as well as direct new bond money toward fixing existing
levees. Democrats said their proposal ensures that flood agencies put
public safety first, requires the state to rebuild weak levees, and
reforms the structure of a 1940s-era flood protection board by requiring
Legislative oversight.
Mike Henry
Assistant Executive
Director
California Farm Water Coalition
717 K Street, Suite 417
Sacramento, CA 95814
(916) 441-7723 ph -
(916) 441-7842, fax
mhenry@farmwater.org
FOOD GROWS WHERE WATER FLOWS
www.farmwater.org
_______________________________________________________________________
http://www.capitalpress.info/main.asp?SectionID=75&SubSectionID=768&ArticleID=30210
California visitors better bring lunch
Mike Wade,
Executive Director California Farm Water Coalition
Guest Comment Capital
Press 2/2/07
Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger's proposal to seriously consider adding two new reservoirs
to our state's water supply system was immediately met with criticism by
some individuals who have long called for conservation and recycling as
the only means to answer our future water needs.
Make no mistake about it, conservation and recycling must be a part of the
answer but these efforts alone will not satisfy a thirst by 46.4 million
Californians by the year 2030, compared to 33.8 million in 2000. New
reservoirs must be a part of the formula for our future.
These critics characterize the governor's proposal to create new surface
storage as "projects that make no sense." Some are pointing a finger at
farmers as attempting to get taxpayers to "build them another
billion-dollar handout."
These comments come from individuals within the environmental community,
which they claim has received too much blame for stalling reservoirs.
Instead, they insist that the fault lies with urban water agencies
unwilling to pay their share and farmers who are always looking for a
hand-out.
Can you believe it?
Nothing has stood in the way of new water development more than hard-core
environmental groups. Some environmental groups have been very open to
discussing how to cooperate in safeguarding California's water future. But
others have done everything possible to prevent new reservoirs from taking
shape.
Unfortunately, their voices are magnified each time they are interviewed
by the news media.
Urban and agricultural water agencies have been very open about their
willingness to pay for any water benefits they receive from new projects.
The rub comes when water agencies are asked to pay for public benefits,
such as environmental projects when they are clearly a public benefit and
ones for which the public should pay.
Critics of new reservoirs want the public to believe that farms have
unfairly benefited from past water projects, such as the federal Central
Valley Project or the State Water Project. What they don't say is that
farmers have been paying for the water they receive and are willing to pay
their fair share of the costs for any new water delivered from new water
projects.
It is my opinion that hard-core environmentalists want to prevent - yes,
stop - any new water development in California.
By doing so, they know that the inevitable growth the state will
experience in coming years will ultimately get its water from the supply
that currently goes to farms.
That is an unbalanced approach to planning and a cowardly way to address
the needs of the next generation.
What this state needs is a balanced approach to meeting its resource
needs. Conservation and recycling programs have done a tremendous job of
meeting new growth while only a small amount of new water has been
developed in the past 30 years. That can't go on forever.
If we don't develop more water to meet our needs through the 21st century
then we will have to meet new water supply needs by taking water away from
an existing water user. That somebody is the California farmer.
If critics of the governor's proposal had their way, the sign at the
border would say, "Welcome to California. Bring your own food."
Mike Wade is executive director of the California Farm Water Coalition.