Lodi News-Sentinel

White House pushes for Shasta Dam project

- By Evan Halper and Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is pushing forward with a colossal public works project in Northern California — heightenin­g the towering Shasta Dam the equivalent of nearly two stories.

The problem is that California is dead-set against the plan, and state law prohibits the 602-foot New Dealera structure from getting any taller.

But in these times of unpreceden­ted tension between Washington and California, the state’s objection to this $1.3 billion project near the Sacramento River is hardly proving a deterrent. The Trump administra­tion is pursuing the project with gusto, even as it seeks to make deep cuts in popular conservati­on programs aimed at California’s water shortages.

The project promises a big payoff for water interests with close ties to the administra­tion. A former lobbyist for one of the biggest of those interests, the politicall­y connected Westlands Water District, holds a key administra­tion post with power over the flow of federal money.

And to ease the project’s path, senior Republican members of Congress, led by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfiel­d, are maneuverin­g to slip an amendment into a must-pass budget bill this month without hearings or other public scrutiny.

The measure would ensure that Westlands, which would be one of the biggest beneficiar­ies of a taller dam, would not have to help pay for it. McCarthy says such projects that increase the state’s water storage capacity are “absolutely critical.”

The sudden momentum behind heightenin­g the dam — a plan the federal government only a few years ago put on the shelf amid concerns it was incompatib­le with state environmen­tal laws — threatens to trigger a constituti­onal conflict that tests the state’s authority over what gets built on federal land within its borders.

“Under California law, this is an illegal project,” said Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael. “The Trump administra­tion would have to abrogate a century of federal deference to state laws on California water to go ahead with this.”

California Natural Resources Secretary John Laird wrote to congressio­nal leaders this week, urging them to reject the administra­tion’s plan to spend $20 million in 2019 on design and other “preconstru­ction” activities at Shasta Dam.

“The Shasta Dam enlargemen­t project would inundate several miles of the protected McCloud River in violation of state law,” Laird wrote. The McCloud is among the pristine California waters protected by the three decade-old Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, which prohibits the state from supporting any projects that disturb such rivers.

The dam-heightenin­g proposal has been bitterly fought in California for decades. The Central Valley farms served by Westlands are eager for the tens of thousands of acre-feet of water it could generate for their land. The farms, many of which grow water-intensive crops such as almonds, are among the first water users to see their allocation­s reduced in times of drought or when water is redirected to preserve the habitat of threatened and endangered species. They are in a long-running dispute with the government over the amount of water they are entitled to receive.

“Investing in new infrastruc­ture at Shasta will create a needed and significan­t new water supply for California’s families, farmers, cities and environmen­tal resources,” said Marlon Duke, a spokesman at the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, the division of the Interior Department overseeing the effort. He acknowledg­ed that California’s law may prohibit allocation of state money for the dam, but said the bureau planned to move ahead.

In the middle of this dispute is David Bernhardt, the former Westlands lobbyist who is now the No. 2 official at the Interior Department.

His appointmen­t was forcefully opposed last year by conservati­onists and Democrats, who argued Bernhardt has big conflicts of interest for too many matters before the department. In accepting the post, Bernhardt said he would relinquish his law firm partnershi­p to guarantee he would not financiall­y benefit from any of his actions in Washington.

But his critics are unsatisfie­d. “He’s the poster child of this specialint­erest revolving door between Interior and Westlands,” Huffman said of Bernhardt, who returned to work at the law firm representi­ng Westlands after his last tour as a high-ranking Interior Department official during the George W. Bush administra­tion. Once Bernhardt leaves his latest government job, “he will walk back out the door to a very lucrative payday,” Huffman said.

Bernhardt did not respond to a request for comment. The Interior Department said in a statement that its ethics officers had reviewed Bernhardt’s agreement with the department and advised that it does not require his recusal from decisions on Shasta Dam.

Whether the Trump administra­tion would ultimately be able to pour concrete without buy-in from Sacramento remains to be seen. The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act could prevent California from issuing any of the permits required for building. Water experts interviewe­d said they could think of no time in recent history that the federal government moved forward with such a mammoth public works project inside California’s borders without the state’s blessing.

Yet the Trump administra­tion has shown itself willing to break with such convention­s. “We’ve seen a strong willingnes­s by this administra­tion to disregard or try to overturn state law in a number of circumstan­ces,” said Doug Obegi, a water attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “This is a case of them wanting to preempt state law so they can flood a Wild and Scenic River for their project.”

Environmen­talists and fishing industry groups say federal findings that some wildlife could benefit from the project are undermined by government scientific studies showing it would create serious problems, particular­ly for salmon. The Golden Gate Salmon Assn. is among the groups rallying against a bigger Shasta Dam.

The project is also staunchly opposed by the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, which already suffered the destructio­n of most of its land, including homes and ancient burial sites, when the dam was built in the 1940s. A raising of the dam, tribe officials say, would inundate much of the sacred ground it has left.

But Westlands has gained the support of some prominent California­ns, particular­ly as periodic droughts have forged bipartisan support for building more water storage in the state. Democratic U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein is among those who have championed heightenin­g Shasta Dam in the past. Her office did not respond to questions about the Trump administra­tion plan.

“The Bureau of Reclamatio­n has been working on this proposal for decades,” said Tom Birmingham, general manager of Westlands. “Westlands Water District supports efforts by the Department of the Interior and members of the California congressio­nal delegation to move forward.”

The growers in the water district are positioned to profit handsomely from a bigger dam. As Bernhardt’s agency pushes for the $20 million to jump-start the project, Westlands’ allies in Congress are working to exempt it from a new federal law that requires state agencies to share in the costs.

That would help Westlands in two ways. It would allow the project to move forward despite California’s refusal to help fund it. And it would save Westlands from having to honor its offer to cover the state share; federal taxpayers would front the entire cost.

The plan is taking shape in the form of a budget amendment McCarthy is scrambling to tack onto whatever spending package Congress approves next week to avoid another government shutdown.

“If we’ve learned nothing else from the past years of catastroph­ic drought in our state, perhaps we now all agree that increasing storage capacity to capture water during wet years for use in dry years is absolutely critical,” McCarthy said in a statement. “It is my hope that the State of California and my colleagues in the Senate recognize the benefits of enlarging Shasta and will be a constructi­ve partner.”

In the case of the state, that is unlikely.

McCarthy does, though, have a very willing partner in the Trump administra­tion, even as his push for the federal government to take on the full cost of making the dam taller seems at odds with President Donald Trump’s agenda. Trump has been calling for beneficiar­ies of big federal projects to use more of their own money to get them built.

 ?? KENT NISHIMURA/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Mount Shasta, seen as a backdrop to Upper Lake Shasta, at the Shasta Dam on Feb. 17 in Shasta County.
KENT NISHIMURA/LOS ANGELES TIMES Mount Shasta, seen as a backdrop to Upper Lake Shasta, at the Shasta Dam on Feb. 17 in Shasta County.

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