CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BOTH LOGIC AND ILLOGIC IN BROWN’S DROUGHT PLANS”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BOTH LOGIC AND ILLOGIC IN BROWN’S DROUGHT PLANS”
There is both sense and nonsense in
the $1 billion drought relief package announced by Gov. Jerry Brown in a
parched Sierra Nevada Mountains meadow that usually is covered in deep snow on
the date Brown walked through it.
But the rationale behind the single
largest part of the package is fundamentally contradictory.
Brown says California must ready for
new and lasting, drier realities, then bases the most expensive part of his
plan on weather patterns he previously said are most likely things of the past.
Authorized spending on all this now
comes to $1.7 billion, including almost $700 million Brown proposed and the
Legislature approved last year, most of it not yet spent.
It certainly makes sense to assist the
most drought-stricken communities, as the package does with more than $14
million to better purify existing but polluted groundwater supplies and to
truck water into those areas. No one complains, also, about more than $40
million for food and other relief for citizens and cities with lost jobs and
tax revenues because local farms have fallowed many thousands of their acres.
There’s also no quarrel with the
plan’s spending more than $10 million to make some existing irrigation systems
more efficient. Nor with putting more than $500 million into improved capture
of storm water and expanded use of recycled, purified “gray” water for
irrigation and landscaping.
But Brown has taken heat over the fact
that his emergency rationing plan does not force farms to cut use of surface
water or lower pumping of ground water. Leaving farmers’ ground water out of the
order, of course, exposes the weakness of the ballyhooed underground water
regulations Brown signed into law last year – a law that will lack teeth for
more than 10 years.
This all leaves plenty to question.
One big question is why the plan includes only about $270 million – just over
15 percent of the package funding – for helping develop new sources of fresh
water, including innovative desalination methods other than the hyper-expensive
and power-sucking reverse osmosis technique now in use in a few places. Brown
has not yet spoken about that.
But he has talked about why he
included $660 million for new flood control projects – essentially building
dams and reservoirs and lining some streams with concrete, a la the Los Angeles
and Santa Ana rivers, where activists regularly push to remove concrete and
return streams to their natural state.
The governor cited the danger of
“extreme weather events,” caused by climate change, even though the only
changes so far in California’s weather from global warming have been extended
dry periods. “All of a sudden, when you’re all focused on drought, you can get
massive storms that flood through these channels and overflow and cause havoc,”
he said during a news conference.
But the state already has an extensive
system of flood control channels and huge reservoirs designed to capture and
control flood waters. Existing reservoirs are so low now there is little
imminent danger they will overflow in the foreseeable future. So why not spend
the money earmarked for flood control on building innovative new desalination
plants, a tactic that would leave California far better off in future droughts?
Essentially, Brown and the Legislature
are focusing on old technology to solve new problems, a criticism also leveled
at them over the high speed rail project, which will use 1970s-era technology
rather than exploring newer ideas like magnetic levitation and the “hyperloop”
suggested by Tesla Motors founder Elon Musk.
But Brown insists that “History shows
us that every time California comes out of one of these droughts, it’s with a
boom-and-bust cycle of rain.” This is the same man who likes to preach that
times have changed and so has nature. It has been more than 40 years since any
part of the state experienced 30 days of steady rains, the sort of phenomenon
that might justify massive new reservoirs.
If the current measures are a way
to justify shoring up levees in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta area, fine,
but say so. Don’t sell them as something quite different.
All of which means that as with most
government spending and projects, there’s a lot to like in the governor’s
measures – but also a lot that needs a harder, more critical look than the
Legislature gave it while rubber-stamping the entire package.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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