CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“COLOSSAL ARROGANCE IN THE ‘WATER FIX’ TUNNELS”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“COLOSSAL ARROGANCE IN THE ‘WATER FIX’ TUNNELS”
The way
environmental activists in California’s Delta region tell it, there is no part
of government in this state more arrogant than the Metropolitan Water District
of Southern California.
The
huge MWD, supplier of water to the majority of the state’s populace, is
certainly acting the part as it pushes for a project Gov. Jerry Brown is trying
to make an irreversible fait
accompli before he leaves office (presumably for the last time) at
the end of this year.
That’s
the so-called “California WaterFix” or Twin Tunnels project to bring Northern
California river water to San Joaquin Valley farms and urban Southern
California via gigantic culverts running around and through the delta of the
Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers east of San Francisco Bay. ( Another desired
Brown legacy is the troubled bullet train.)
No one
claims the tunnels project would produce much more water than now comes from
the same rivers. But Brown and other supporters assert it would make supplies
steadier and more reliable.
His administration and other
project backers only lately renamed this the WaterFix because that sounds more
positive than tunnels. But environmentalists led by the group Restore the Delta
see it not as a fix, but a problem which could deprive the Delta and its fish
of much fresh water they now get.
After
substantial lobbying by Brown, the MWD’s governing board without a public vote
this summer committed millions of its customers to pay a large share of the
project’s costs. About the only recourse customers might have would be voting
out many of the myriad city council members and county supervisors who make up
that board. This is highly unlikely, so added water charges for millions of
customers are pretty much assured.
It’s
much the same in the San Jose-based Santa Clara Valley Water District, whose
much smaller board voted narrowly also to help pay the multi-billion-dollar
freight. Agricultural water districts in the San Joaquin Valley that stand to
benefit most were reluctant to make similar commitments.
The
moves by the urban water districts were the embodiment of arrogance by public
officials because they were taken with little public input and without say-so
from those who will actually pay. No sooner were those votes over than the
water districts and the state formed a partnership for designing and building
the tunnels, a move plainly aiming to cement the project in place long before a
spade is turned.
Meanwhile,
the only time anything like the WaterFix plan got a full public hearing came 36
years ago, after Brown and state legislators authorized building a so-called
Peripheral Canal to bring water south around the Delta via a large ditch. A
statewide referendum eliminated that plan by a resounding margin. It became
political anathema for decades, but the idea plainly stuck in Brown’s mind. The
WaterFix amounts to an updated, more expensive, version of the ditch Brown
backed long ago.
Then
there is the move by a Southern California Republican congressman to cement the
project via federal law.
This
comes from Rep. Ken Calvert of Corona, one of California’s more secure GOP
congressmen, not even close to being a Democratic target this year.
Calvert
in May quietly slipped language into a proposed budget bill to ban legal
challenges of the tunnels, a move that could instantly end more than two dozen
current lawsuits by local governments, water districts, recreational and
environmental groups and tribal governments. To Brown’s credit, his
administration after months of consideration, now opposes that bill, but it is
very much alive in Congress.
“A proposal
like (this) raises the question: what are the supporters of the tunnels trying
to hide?” wrote Democratic Rep. John Garamendi of Mokelumne Hill, the former
lieutenant governor who represents part of the Delta area.
Added
Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta, “Bypassing
due process and violating states’ rights …creates a constitutional nightmare.
Tunnels proponents are attempting to rewrite the rules of the game so they
can’t lose.”
The
water district votes and the Calvert move both represent almost unprecedented
arrogance. That makes it high time for some major public and consumer protests
over the manner in which Brown and his allies are rushing the tunnels into
reality without permission of the people who will pay for them.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment