Imperial Valley Press

Farmers protest California water plan aimed to save salmon

- BY KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO — Hundreds of California farmers rallied at the Capitol on Monday to protest state water o cials’ proposal to increase water flows in a major California river, a move state and federal politician­s called an overreach of power that would mean less water for farms in the Central Valley.

“If they vote to take our water, this does not end there,” said Republican state Sen. Anthony Cannella. “We will be in court for 100 years.”

Environmen­talists and fishermen o ered a di erent take on the other side of the Capitol to a much smaller audience.

“For the 50 years corporate agricultur­e has been getting fat,” said Noah Oppenheim of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associatio­ns. “Salmon fisheries have been tightening belts.”

The charged rhetoric came a day before the California State Water Resources Control Board was set to discuss its proposal to change water flows in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, which supplies water for the majority of California’s people and massive swaths of farmland.

The plan would double the amount of water that must flow freely through the Low San Joaquin River and three of its tributarie­s from February to June, meaning less water can be diverted for farming or other needs.

It’s an e ort to protect the state’s declining salmon population; the state estimates just 10,000 fall-run salmon returned to the San Joaquin Basin in 2017, compared to 70,000 in 1985.

The change is an attempt to mimic natural water flows that help the salmon thrive. State water officials have called the Delta an “ecosystem in crisis.”

How California manages and uses its water has long been a topic of hot political debate, falling more along regional lines than partisan ones and pitting agricultur­al interests against environmen­tal ones.

Beyond farming interests, politician­s in the Central Valley say the plan would limit their access to drinking water.

“When was it a crime to grow food to put on our tables,” said Democratic Assemblyma­n Rudy Salas of Bakersfiel­d. “When was it a crime to demand that we have safe drinking water?”

The water board has postponed its final vote on the plan to an unspecifie­d date. The Trump administra­tion has also weighed in. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke called it a “water grab” that would “cripple the Central Valley’s economy, farms and community,” after visiting the region with Republican U.S. Rep. Jeff Denham in July.

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