Daily Democrat (Woodland)

An important year for groundwate­r

- By Cannon Michael and Ann Hayden Cannon Michael is a sixthgener­ation farmer and president and CEO of Bowles Farming Co., headquarte­red in Los Banos; and Ann Hayden is senior director of western water and resilient landscapes at Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

Despite a seemingly endless era of upheaval – a surging pandemic, contentiou­s election cycle and racial strife – we still have the responsibi­lity to address pressing issues that cannot wait for calmer times. The future of California’s water is one of those issues.

While collaborat­ion and relationsh­ip building have been made even more challengin­g due to distancing required by COVID- 19, we believe that water is an issue where we can rise above party lines and entrenched perspectiv­es.

Water is the backbone of California’s agricultur­al economy, supports our iconic rivers, and of course, is essential to our survival. Simply put, water is a lifeline that binds us together, and without it, we jeopardize our future and that of coming generation­s.

Could now be the time to collective­ly start down a better path for managing this precious resource and roll up our sleeves to make it happen? We think so.

For decades, fighting over water has stalled progress and sown deep mistrust across different water users.

We have forgotten that we are all stewards of California – a special place like no other, a rich connected tapestry of environmen­tal beauty, diverse communitie­s and productive agricultur­e.

We need to come together as California­ns – not just farmers, environmen­talists, rural community organizers and urbanites. We need to come together as California­ns working for our children and future generation­s who are depending on us to leave them with a better California than we have today.

We need to come together to solve some admittedly difficult water challenges that affect the future of rural communitie­s, cities, wildlife, farming in the Central Valley and consequent­ly our country’s food supply. Drought and water scarcity are high on the list of these challenges.

During our last major drought, the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act was enacted as one major piece of the solution to ensure we have enough water for future generation­s.

Looking forward, 2021 will be an important year for moving ahead on implementa­tion of this sweeping change to water law. The state will be rolling out its first assessment­s of sustainabi­lity plans developed by regions with the most critically overdrafte­d groundwate­r supplies.

Balancing groundwate­r supply and demand, as required by the law, will no doubt be challengin­g: Some models say San Joaquin Valley landowners may need to take equivalent acreage to Yosemite National Park out of production to balance groundwate­r supply and demand.

To reach durable, fair solutions to such large challenges, we need to drop the baggage we’ve amassed over time. We need to come together as California­ns to start collaborat­ively tackling problems – not just talking and arguing them. We need to come together and break the cycle of mistrust and take the time to truly understand how each side views the challenges and potential solutions.

It’s unlikely we will agree on everything – if we did California wouldn’t be the dynamic, diverse state it is today. But there is significan­t common ground we can build from. For instance, we all agree every single person in California should have clean and affordable drinking water when they turn on their kitchen faucet.

We also agree that replenishi­ng groundwate­r is one of many solutions we will need to comply with the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act. But it’s not the only solution; it’s inevitable that we still will need to scale back some agricultur­e.

The question we need to address is, how can we make sure that agricultur­e can still thrive while some farmland becomes productive in new ways, whether it’s with less water- intensive ranching, low- impact solar projects, wildlife habitat or recreation­al areas for our families to enjoy on picnics and hikes?

Taking action to address these challenges may mean parts of our state and the very communitie­s we live in will look different from how they look today. But if we can come together as California­ns to get it right, California will evolve and endure as the special place it is today for generation­s to come.

We have decades of experience coming at water challenges from our silos. Let’s break down those silos, come together as California­ns and see what happens. Isn’t it worth a shot?

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