Anxiety is flooding the water world this month, as people await a Brown Administration plan for a “peripheral canal”, due in July (according to last report).
The
agitation is mixed with incredulity since the project has been so
roundly criticized as a fish killer, and the tradeoffs that seem to
be under consideration appear to be unworkable.
That
question echoes through the airwaves, along with rumors that the
Brown Administration plans to weaken laws protecting fish to get its
version of the peripheral tunnels built.
From front page of Restore the Delta website |
But
which plan?
A
state panel of scientists appointed to analyze the project – the
Independent Science Board (ISB) – couldn't figure out last week how
to proceed in evaluating an environmental impact report. “Is this
the project we will be looking at?” panel members wanted to know,
pointing to a 5,000-page draft EIR released in February. The
question went unanswered, but one member gave voice to the word that
can't be mentioned – “collapse” – as in “assuming the
project doesn't collapse.” He clearly thought it should.
Thirty years later, same canal; underground this time |
“It
won't fly,” said Sunne McPeak, president of the Delta Vision
Foundation, in an interview. She
said that current plans for the conveyance suffer from the same
deficiency as in 1982 when the last peripheral canal was defeated by
voters. It fails to couple new storage with conveyance so that water
can be taken in a huge gulp during wet years and little or not at all
in dry years. Lack of storage is an open admission that “you
intend to use the facility (in a way that would) starve the fish and
the delta of fresh water,” she said.
But
with few details on what the Administration plans to propose, all
eyes are fixed on the image of an enormous pumping operation up to five
miles long in the most scenic part of the Sacramento River, sucking
out most of the fresh water and sending it through tunnels right past
the delta.
California needs that dog. |
Where
is Toto when we need him?
But
if smoke and mirrors are clouding California's future water plans,
people on the ground – including opponents from north and south –
are working together better than ever. Without any state managers
in charge, the people who supply water and protect resources are
doing what lies in the best interests of everyone: meeting together
in democratic groups, under the name “Delta Projects Coalition,” to
figure out how best to repair and pay for improved levees. It's
about time.
A
project that has the support of major opponents in the water wars –
in both southern and northern California – would armor part of the freshwater corridor through the Delta that delivers water to some
23 million people and millions of acres of farmland. Proposed by the
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the project would
raise and widen the tops of levees, adding berms to their slopes, in
a stretch of the Middle San Joaquin River, at a cost of less than
$200 million.
The
aim is to strengthen the levees enough so that a large earthquake in
the Bay Area, while it might cause the levee to slump, wouldn't break
it, leaving time for workers to get out there with reinforcements,
said Roger Patterson, general manager of MWD in an interview.
“If
we can hold the Middle River pathway together (after a big
earthquake), we might still have limitations on water diversion, but
at least we wouldn't be out for an extended period of time.”
Patterson said they could probably put things together and be back on
line in six months, rather than the years estimated by state water
officials.
“We
will be diverting water from the south Delta forever,” said
Patterson, referring to the pumps near Tracy that get water via the
Middle River. “So having integrity in the levee system for the
long term is in our interest as well.” Almost half of Met's
diversion will continue to come from the south Delta, even with a new
conveyance – “if that ever happens,” he added.
Delta engineers build seismic-resistant levees along freshwater corridor |
“We're
willing to work with Met, just like we've worked with EBMUD,” said
Dante Nomellini, manager of the Central Delta Water Agency and
counsel for most of the local districts along the freshwater
corridor. Local expertise with levees is critical to the success of
any project there. Patterson said MWD plans to rely on that
expertise.
It
is a good example of democratic governance of a “common pool resource” as described by 2009 Nobel Laureate Elinor Ostrom who
died June 12 at the age of 78, after becoming the first woman to
win the prize in economics. Her work demonstrated that the people who
used the common resource created better water systems than
governments did because they bargained with each other, forming
cooperative relationships, even when they were prone to fight. This
advantage of “commons” governance held even when the government
could build bigger water works – a word to the wise for
California.
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