Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition 3806 Mar 1-15 2019 | Page 29
March 1 - 15, 2019
VOL.38 • ISS. 6
Governor Gavin
Newsom Calls for End
to Twin Tunnels, but
Backs One Tunnel
I
n his first State of the State
Address at the State Capitol
on February 12, Governor Gavin
Newsom called for an end to Jerry
Brown’s Twin Tunnels, but said he
supports one tunnel.
“I do not support the Water Fix as
currently configured,” said Newsom.
“Meaning, I do not support the twin
tunnels. But we can build on the
important work that’s already been
done. That’s why I do support a single
tunnel.”
“The status quo is not an option. We
need to protect our water supply from
earthquakes and rising sea levels,
preserve delta fisheries, and meet the
needs of cities and farms,” Newsom
said.
Newsom also announced that he
had appointed a new chair of the
State Water Resources Control
Board, Joaquin Esquivel, to replace
Felicia Marcus. Esquivel has served
on the board since 2017. Esquivel
was assistant secretary for federal
water policy at the California Natural
Resources Agency from 2015 to 2017.
The Governor decided to replace
Marcus, who supported increasing
flows from the San Joaquin River
into the estuary to preserve Delta fish
species and Delta farmland, because
of intense pressure from corporate
agribusiness interests in the San
Joaquin Valley, drawing concern from
environmental and fishing groups.
“We have a big state with diverse
water needs. Cities that need clean
water to drink, farms that need irriga-
tion to keep feeding the world, fragile
ecosystems that must be protected,”
said Governor Newsom. “We need a
portfolio approach to building water
infrastructure and meeting long-term
demand. To help bring this balance,
I’m appointing a new chair of the
California water board, Joaquin
Esquivel.”
On the same day, Newsom also
announced the appointment of Laurel
Firestone, 40, of Sacramento, to the
State Water Resources Control Board.
Firestone has been co-founder and
co-director of the Community Water
Center since 2006.
In addition to announcing his
support for a one tunnel project
and his water board appointments,
Newsom called for solving Califor-
nia’s clean drinking water crisis in
poorer communities:
“Just this morning, more than a
million Californians woke up without
clean water to bathe in or drink. Some
schools have shut down drinking
fountains due to contamination. Some
poorer communities, like those I
visited recently in Stanislaus County,
are paying more for undrinkable water
than Beverly Hills pays for its pristine
water.
“This is a moral disgrace and a
medical emergency. There are literally
hundreds of water systems across the
state contaminated by lead, arsenic, or
uranium.
“Solving this crisis demands
sustained funding. It demands political
will.”
Tunnels opponents gave mixed
reviews to Newsom’s announcement
on the Delta Tunnels.
In a statement, Barbara Barrigan-Par-
rilla, executive director of Restore
the Delta, expressed her gratitude
to Newsom for the ending the Twin
Tunnels project:
“We are grateful to Governor
Newsom for listening to the people of
the Delta, and California, and putting
an end to the boondoggle WaterFix,
twin tunnels project.
“We look forward to working with
his administration and the State Water
Resources Control Board to create and
enforce policies that will restore Delta
water quality and quantity, lessen
water dependence on the Delta, and
promote clean drinking programs and
regional self-sufficiency for the benefit
of all Californians.
“As we testified under oath at the
State Water Resources Control Board,
we will re-evaluate any proposed new
conveyance projects for their merits
and weaknesses and share our findings
with Californians.”
Assemblymember Jim Frazier
(D-Discovery Bay), whose district
encompasses a large portion of the
Delta, said Governor Newsom’s
“denunciation” of the twin tunnels
project is a “step in the right
direction.”
“I’m grateful Governor Newsom has
been willing to listen to local stake-
holders in the battle for the future of
the Delta. His unequivocal denun-
ciation of the twin tunnels project is
a step in the right direction. I look
forward to working with the governor
to convince him there are alterna-
tive water delivery solutions that are
economical and can be delivered in a
timely manner, nullifying the need for
even a single tunnel,” said Frazier.
Janet McCleery, Past President of
the Save the California Delta Alliance,
acknowledged that while the organi-
zation “appreciates the Governor’s
efforts to find a better solution than the
twin tunnels, the construction of even
a single tunnel along the through-Delta
route would still devastate the small
legacy communities in the North,
would still disrupt Delta farms, would
put all of our highways at a standstill
with truck congestion, and would
shut down boating and recreation
throughout the Delta.
“There were alternative routes
studied by the DWR, in particular the
Eastern Route, that was less destruc-
27
By Dan Bacher
tive and could provide a compromise
solution,” she noted.
“However, for any compromise to
work, the WaterFix operations would
need to insure sufficient water through
the Delta and continued use of the
Southern pumps (at Clifton Court)
during times of the year when needed
for migrating fish and water quality,
operational guidelines that are not part
of the current plan. The guidelines
would need commitments to reducing
exports and reliance over time,
commitments that have never been
made,” she explained.
“We would be happy to work with
the Governor representing the Delta
Communities if a new compromise
plan is being proposed,” she said.
She also was very disappointed with
the failure of Newsom to reappoint
Felicia Marcus to the water board.
“We are greatly concerned that
Felicia Marcus was not reappointed
to the State Water Resources Control
Board. Political expediency must not
drive the determination of the flows
that the Delta needs. The new appoin-
tees lack Marcus’ understanding of
the Delta, the flow needs, and have
not been involved in the past three
years of testimonies concerning
the WaterFix project,” McCleery
concluded.
Deirdre Des Jardins of California
Water Research also commented on
Newsom’s desire to build one tunnel
instead of two.
“It’s unclear that this is really a big
change in the project. Last year, DWR
was preparing a Supplemental EIR for
a one tunnel project that had two 3,000
cfs intakes and the same alignment,
similar locations of tunnel muck piles,
similar operations but with one fewer
intake,” said Des Jardins.
Jeffrey Kightlinger, general manager
of the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California, one of the key
proponents of the Delta Tunnels, tried
to portray Newsom’s decision as an
“endorsement” of conveyance. He said
his organization “welcomes Governor
Newsom’s endorsement of modern-
izing California’s water conveyance
system in the Delta.”
“While a single tunnel project will
not resolve all pumping problems
in the Delta and is less flexible for
dealing with climate change impacts,
it is imperative that we move forward
rapidly on a conveyance project.
Having no Delta fix imperils all of
California,” stated Kightlinger. “We
intend to work constructively with the
Newsom Administration on devel-
oping a refined California WaterFix
project that addresses the needs of
cities, farms and the environment.”
The California WaterFix project,
whether one or two tunnels, would
divert water from the Sacramento
River under the Delta to the state
and federal water export facilities in
the South Delta. The project would
hasten the extinction of Sacramento
River winter and spring-run Chinook
salmon, Delta and longfin smelt, green
sturgeon and other fish species, as well
as imperil salmon and steelhead popu-
lations on the Trinity and Klamath
rivers.
Lawyers and water policy experts
from fishing groups, Tribes, environ-
mental justice organizations, conser-
vation groups and Delta advocacy
groups are currently evaluating the
impacts of the Governor’s decision
and their next moves in the campaign
to stop Delta conveyance, whether
one of two tunnels, from becoming a
reality.
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