Los Angeles Times

State’s growers pressure Harris over water issues

New senator hopes to build a relationsh­ip with Central Valley.

- By Cathleen Decker

FOWLER, Calif. — The drought may be over in the minds of urban California­ns, quite literally washed away by huge accumulati­ons of rain last year that filled reservoirs and left the state’s mountains covered with snow even now.

But the farmers and others in the Central Valley, veterans of multiple droughtand-flood cycles, know the reprieve is only temporary. On Wednesday they pressed new U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris to work to ensure a more reliable source of water for the nation’s most bountiful farming region.

“This area is drying on the vine,” Ryan Jacobsen, executive director of the Fresno County Farm Bureau, told Harris during a roundtable with Central Val-

ley officials.

A long-term solution can come only through federal and state action to protect the area’s water supply, he said.

Jason Phillips, chief executive of the Friant Water Authority, said recent rainfall had done little to stem problems caused by nearly a decade of drought.

A canal that runs from Fresno to north of Bakersfiel­d sank in some places as much as 2 feet in two years, he said, wreaking havoc on a system that operates on the force of gravity.

“We cannot get all the water to our growers,” he said.

The meeting between Harris and nearly two dozen agricultur­e and water officials was meant to ease what is typically a fraught relationsh­ip between the state’s Democratic leaders — all of whose power bases are in metropolit­an areas — and the mostly Republican Central Valley powers that traditiona­lly look at them with skepticism.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein has worked for two decades to aid the agricultur­al industry — at the roundtable, several nodded as Harris referred to the senior senator as an “incredible warrior” for the area.

But Harris’ predecesso­r, former Sen. Barbara Boxer, was allied more with environmen­tal groups that have fought dams and other water systems. As a result, she was viewed negatively by many here.

Harris was intent Wednesday on persuading the Central Valley representa­tives of her interest in places beyond her base in Alameda and San Francisco counties.

They, on the other hand, worked to convince her to be more in the Feinstein mold on issues important to the area — including reliable water, immigratio­n programs and environmen­tal protection­s that take into considerat­ion the area’s needs.

President Trump was highly popular in much of the Central Valley, apart from Fresno County, which leans Democratic because of its metropolit­an shadings. But some issues important to the valley cut in politicall­y unorthodox ways.

Republican­s here are more concerned than those elsewhere with passing a plan that would give legal status to immigrants, on whom agricultur­e depends. With workers here illegally worried about deportatio­n, and the border tightening to those not yet here, the labor supply has already shrunk, farmers said.

“They’re out there working, being productive people,” said farmer Joe Del Bosque. “They work hard for us, and we have nowhere to reach.”

Del Bosque said he recently held a training session for new workers. Of the 200 people who showed up, only a handful were born in the United States, he said.

Environmen­tal regulation­s prized by Democrats elsewhere are often frowned on by some party members here and blamed for the area’s water difficulti­es.

Several of the participan­ts lobbied Harris for her support of dams that have long been under considerat­ion by federal and state officials, particular­ly the Temperance Flat Dam, which would be constructe­d on the San Joaquin River.

Harris offered no assurances on the topic to the group Wednesday. Afterward, speaking to reporters, she also did not take a position.

“One of the things that we’re going to have to figure out ... is what is the right solution for that,” she said of a plan to construct the Temperance Flat Dam and several others. “Is it going to be about the building of dams? Is it also going to be about looking at — also looking at — other sources of renewable and sustainabl­e reliable sources?”

Both sides signaled they did not expect an alliance on all fronts. But Harris said she would serve as an advocate for farmers during the crafting of a new farm bill and other measures before the Senate.

William Bourdeau, executive vice president of the politicall­y influentia­l Harris Farms, told the senator he wished the majority of her supporters who reside in urban areas would have a “better understand­ing” of the risks and challenges of farming. “We need somebody to explain the symbiotic relationsh­ip we have,” he said.

“I agree with you completely,” she replied.

 ?? Cathleen Decker Los Angeles Times ?? SEN. KAMALA HARRIS talks with Dennis Parnagian of Fowler Packing Co. in the Central Valley.
Cathleen Decker Los Angeles Times SEN. KAMALA HARRIS talks with Dennis Parnagian of Fowler Packing Co. in the Central Valley.
 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? SEN. Kamala Harris, right, called Sen. Dianne Feinstein an “incredible warrior” for the Central Valley.
Mark Wilson Getty Images SEN. Kamala Harris, right, called Sen. Dianne Feinstein an “incredible warrior” for the Central Valley.

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