Enviros and GOP Oppose Gov. Newsom Having Fish Agency Divvy Out Farmers’ Water

Does the back end of Newsom’s new water deal contain a surprise in a dry year?

By Wayne Lusvardi California Globe

The true test of Newsom’s “use-some-water/take-some-fish” water deal (called Incidental Take Permit) is will water be diverted to Los Angeles in a dry year, thus subverting Pres. Trump’s allocation of Federal water to farmers?

Environmentalists and farmers both oppose California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new water deal, bureaucratically called the “Incidental Take Permit” policy for the long-term management of the State Water Project. One might think that a new method of allocating farm water that provides some water for farmers and cities and allows them to only incidentally “take” a few fish would be supported by both farmers, water contractors and environmentalists. But most are not pleased with what is called a political triangulation strategy crafted by the Democrat governor.

Triangulation

Newsom is being accused of political triangulation by environmentalists. Political triangulation is when a politician positions policy as above both right and left sides of an issue to neutralize the opposing party at the expense of alienating his own party. But does the back end of Newsom’s new water deal contain a surprise in a dry year?

To Republicans Newsom’s policy is like allowing a fox (State Fish and Wildlife – DF&W) to manage the henhouse. Who would believe that an agency that issues fishing permits would end up with the power to allocate water to farmers and cities over the Department of Water Resources? So Republican Congressmen Kevin McCarthy, Devin Nunes, Ken Calvert, Tom McClintock, Doug LaMalfa and Paul Cook sent a letter to Newsom opposing his Incidental Take Permit Policy.

Some Farmers Like the Newsom Deal

However, farmer Wayne Western is encouraged by the Incidental Take Permit policy. The permit policy sets aside previous biological opinions on the number of fish that can be “entrained” (caught) in the huge pumps of the State Water Project. Put differently, the permit process allows a limited number of fish to be sacrificed to get water to farmers.

But environmentalists wanted the number of fish that could be taken to be “zero”, preserving for them enormous power over farmers and thirsty cities in Southern California. Western points out that without the power to shut down water purportedly to save a few fish, there no longer is any reason for the existence of such environmental advocacy organizations. And there is no reason to raise the huge sums of money these organizations depend on.

Western is also encouraged by the recent April 7 action of Obama appointed U.S. District Court Judge Dale Drozd denying a restraining order to stop Delta pumping to farmers for about one week requested by the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Defenders of Wildlife and the Golden Gate Salmon Association (see Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations v. Wilbur Ross -Secretary of Commerce, April 7, 2020). If the NRDC had gotten their way 35,000 acre-feet of water would have been diverted from farmers to the Pacific Ocean.

One week of the farmer’s water is enough water to supply the city of Santa Clarita for one year (population 210,000) or for 18 square miles of row crop farming for a year.

A 2007 Wet Drought brought about……

The NRDC had previously used a lawsuit in 2007 to shut down water, purportedly to save a few Delta Smelt fish. This ended up creating what was called a “wet drought” because it was a wet year. In reaction, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD) proposed to build water conveyance tunnels under the Delta that did not trap fish so that water could not again be shut down to millions of people even in a wet year.

…….the MWD Twin Tunnels Project

The MWD, and other state water contractors, were willing to spend a gargantuan $20 billion to stop such legalized environmental extortion. Jeff Michael, a University of Pacific economist retained by Save The Delta, claimed in 2016 that the then $15 billion estimated cost of the tunnels made the project infeasible. But Michael didn’t acknowledge that cost was less a concern than having no imported water at all.

The State Water Contractors (see map here) are opposed to the new Incidental Take Permit because they see in it that water allocations would be arbitrary instead of more predictable under the previous Federal-State allocation system.

But What Happens in a Dry Year?

However, what Western didn’t realize is that, in a dry year, farm water could be curtailed by Department of Fish and Wildlife and diverted to Southern California cities, instead of farmers. 2018 was a drier year and 2019 a wetter year, but 2020 has been a drier year so far.

In January, 2020, Pres. Trump increased California’s imported dry-year water allocations to farmers flowing through the Federal Central Valley Project (CVP). What Newsom’s Incidental Take Permit does is potentially take away dry-year water from farmers.

The Department of Fish and Wildlife’s 140-page Incidental Take Permit document has so many contingencies in it that it is difficult to assure farmers, or cities, what their water allocation would be in a dry year. Table 9-A of the document provides that following a dry year water conveyance will operate for only 30 days. The moment of truth for Newsom’s Incidental Take Permit policy is when drought returns.

Wayne LusvardiWayne Lusvardi formerly worked for California’s largest urban water agency and lives in Rancho Mirage.

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