Trump opposes massive California water project
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The Trump administration pulled support Wednesday from Gov. Jerry Brown’s ambitious plan to build California’s biggest water project in decades, casting the current form of the $16 billion proposal to build two giant tunnels as another unwanted legacy from the Obama era
The comments from a U.S. Department of the Interior spokesman marked the first public statements by the Trump administration on the initiative and signaled the latest setback for the project that California’s 79-year-old leader had hoped to see launched before he leaves office next year.
The Obama administration gave millions of dollars for planning the tunnels, but “the Trump administration did not fund the project and chose to not move forward with it,” Russell Newell, deputy communications director for the U.S. Interior Department, said in an email.
Asked in an email exchange if his statement meant the Department of Interior “isn’t going to be moving forward with California’s tunnels project, is that right? The Trump administration has ruled that out?” Newell responded, “Yes.”
Newell later softened the statement, saying the Interior Department shared California’s goals for a more reliable and environmentally friendly water supply but “does not expect to participate in the construction or funding” of the project in its current form.
Interior officials “will continue to work with the state and stakeholders as the project is further developed,” Newell said.
While the plan is a state initiative that was never slated to draw upon federal financing, it would intersect with existing state and federal water projects and would require approval from the Interior Department to move ahead.
Brown wants California water agencies to pay to plan and build two, 35-mile-long tunnels to divert part of the state’s largest river, the Sacramento, to supply water to the San Francisco Bay Area and central and Southern California.
But the plan has hit its biggest obstacles yet in recent weeks, when two key water districts opted not to help fund it.
In another setback, the Interior Department’s inspector-general last month challenged the $84 million that the federal agency had contributed to the project under Obama, calling it an improper use of taxpayer funds.
As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump called broadly for more projects to bring water to farmers in California, the country’s leading agricultural state.
Lisa Lien-Mager, a spokeswoman for the state Natural Resources Agency, said the statement Wednesday from the Interior Department was good news for the project.
“The statement provided by the DOI confirms what the state and its water project partners already knew; while the federal government does not intend to fund the construction costs of the project they will continue working with the state and stakeholders to facilitate and permit WaterFix,” she wrote in an email, using the state’s term for the tunnel project.