Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump orders quicker environmen­tal review of California water projects

- By Bettina Boxall

LOS ANGELES — President Donald Trump on Friday directed federal agencies to speed up their environmen­tal review of major water projects in California and to develop plans to suspend or revise regulation­s that hamper water deliveries.

The directive will have little immediate practical effect. But it comes a bit more than two weeks before a midterm election in which some Central Valley Republican­s are in close races to hold on to their congressio­nal seats.

Railing against environmen­tal regulation­s that have hurt water deliveries to the valley is a perennial GOP battle cry — and one that could give a political boost to Republican incumbents. But the presidenti­al memo also illustrate­s the legal constraint­s that prevent the federal government from singlehand­edly sending more water to San Joaquin Valley growers.

The memo sets 2019 deadlines for the U.S. Interior and Commerce department­s to issue updated environmen­tal rules that govern water exports from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta — the center of California’s sprawling water supply system.

The review of export limits under the Endangered Species Act started under the Obama administra­tion, which signaled that the protection­s could grow more restrictiv­e because population­s of imperiled fish continue to plummet.

Federal biologists could retreat from that, loosening export limits when they issue the new rules next spring. But if they do, the action will inevitably be challenged in the courts, which blocked a similar effort by the George W. Bush administra­tion.

California’s massive federal irrigation system, the Central Valley Project, must also adhere to state environmen­tal regulation­s and water rights permits.

In tweets this summer, Trump echoed farmers’ protests that water flowing to the sea is wasted. In one tweet that was quickly condemned by state officials, Trump incorrectl­y claimed that water that had been “diverted into the Pacific Ocean” was inhibiting efforts to fight Northern California wildfires.

The Trump administra­tion signaled that it was wading into California water politics in August.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke ordered the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, which oversees the Central Valley Project, and other Interior agencies to develop an “initial plan of action” that would — among other things — maximize water deliveries, streamline federal environmen­tal reviews of project operations and prepare “legislativ­e and litigation measures” to increase deliveries.

The efforts have been led by Deputy Interior Secretary David Bernhardt, a former partner in one of the nation’s top-grossing lobbying law firms, Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck. There, he represente­d the politicall­y influentia­l Westlands Water District, which would be among the chief beneficiar­ies of improved deliveries to south-ofdelta Central Valley Project customers.

In a briefing on Friday’s directive, Bernhardt said it could be the single most significan­t action a president has taken on Western water in his lifetime.

The memo, which Trump signed on a trip to Arizona, also sets a 2019 deadline for environmen­tal reviews of the Klamath Project, which delivers water for irrigation in Oregon and Northern California.

Five Republican congressme­n from the Central Valley — House Majority leader Kevin McCarthy, David Valadao, Devin Nunes, Jeff Denham and Tom McClintock — watched as Trump signed the memo after a fundraisin­g lunch in Scottsdale.

Trump then handed the pen to Nunes, who for years has introduced legislatio­n attacking the federal Endangered Species Act. Several of his proposals have passed the House, only to die in the Senate.

“This will move things along at a record clip,” Trump told the group. “And you’ll have a lot of water. I hope you’ll enjoy the water you’ll have.”

McCarthy, casting the signing as another promise Trump made and kept, said the order could increase deliveries to the Central Valley by more than a million acre-feet. He gave no details as to how.

Three valley Republican­s are facing serious challenger­s, although Denham, of Turlock, is the only incumbent polling behind his Democratic challenger.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States