Los Angeles Times

Aiming to fix what ails Salton Sea

Riverside County’s proposal — dubbed ‘North Lake Vision’ — creates an in-lake dam.

- By Louis Sahagun

Riverside County officials on Thursday unveiled a possible $400-million remedy for some of what ails the shrinking Salton Sea: record-high salinity levels, die-offs of fish, fewer birds and an immense “bathtub ring” of smelly playa prone to toxic dust storms.

The so-called North Lake Vision proposed by Riverside County Supervisor Manuel Perez calls for creation of an in-lake barrier, or dam, that would allow the north end of the sea to be filled with enhanced flows from the Whitewater River to create what he described as “a 4,200-acre healthy lake within a much larger not-sohealthy one.”

By way of comparison, the proposed North Lake in the desert would be roughly twice the size of Big Bear Lake, which supports several popular alpine resort communitie­s in the San Bernardino Mountains, about 138 miles to the northwest.

The plan, pending approval by the Riverside County Board of Supervisor­s, would be subsidized with taxes generated by a bond measure that could be presented to voters within a year, officials said.

Perez’s proposal grew out of frustratio­n and anger over seemingly endless disputes with the state over its inability to complete Salton Sea restoratio­n projects even as environmen­tal conditions steadily deteriorat­e at California’s largest and most troubled lake.

“I haven’t seen any meaningful action on behalf of the state to try and implement any of the plans it has proposed over the past 20 years,” Perez said. “Our proposal is an attempt to salvage what we can of Riverside County’s portion of the Salton Sea.

“While the North Lake Vision is no cure for worsening problems elsewhere in the Salton Sea,” he added, “our hope is that the state will

take a hard look at our efforts and prioritize their own projects.”

The state projects are regarded as the first phase of a proposed long-term Salton Sea restoratio­n program. They include building a series of ponds and watertrans­fer systems across about 29,000 acres mostly on the southern end of the sea in Imperial County, officials said.

In 2016, the state Legislatur­e approved $80.5 million for Salton Sea projects.

But critics point out that it remains unclear how the state plan would be funded and whether the state could be held accountabl­e if it failed to make good on its commitment­s to protecting public health and habitat at the 360-square-mile lake, which straddles Riverside and Imperial counties.

Officials said state, federal, regional, tribal and philanthro­pic agencies would continue to seek funding in their long-term effort to protect air quality and wildlife at the Salton Sea at an estimated cost of as much as $8 billion.

“If we clean up the north end of the Salton Sea, it will only grow as a unique asset in the Coachella Valley,” said Brian Nestande, deputy executive officer for Riverside County. “And it will thrive as a fantastic place to go kayaking, bird-watching and fishing, as well as hiking in stark desert terrain.”

The Riverside County Board of Supervisor­s is expected within a few months to decide whether to create an enhanced infrastruc­ture finance district to fund the North Lake proposal. If approved, county voters in that district could within a year be presented with a bond measure aimed at funding the project, officials said.

Perez acknowledg­ed that there are “still a lot of unknowns” in his proposal, including exactly who owns water rights to White Water River flows out of the San Bernardino Mountains and whether sediment at the bottom of the Salton Sea can support a huge structure.

No representa­tive of the Imperial Irrigation District was available for comment. But Andy Horne, deputy executive officer for Imperial County, expressed cautious optimism.

“There’ve been similar proposals floated in the past,” Horne said. “If they can demonstrat­e it’s a workable concept, more power to them.”

The Salton Sea was formed accidental­ly in 1905 when the Colorado River breached its banks. One of the most important wetlands along the Pacific Flyway, it supports nearly 90% of the nation’s American white pelicans and 90% of its eared grebes.

But with relatively little water flowing in, the salinity level continues to rise. It is now at about 59 parts per thousand, federal reclamatio­n authoritie­s said. By comparison, the salinity level of the Pacific Ocean is about 35 parts per thousand. That has made the lake inhospitab­le to tilapia, a primary food source for migrating birds, which has all but stopped reproducin­g because of high salinity levels. Visiting bird population­s are a fraction of what they once were.

The latest political trouble at the Salton Sea began in 2003, when the state Legislatur­e promised to slow the shrinking of the lake as part of a successful effort to persuade the Imperial Irrigation District to sell some of its water to San Diego.

The agreement allowed the Imperial Irrigation District to stop directing water into the Salton Sea at the end of 2017. Now, with even less fresh water entering the lake, concern has grown that a toxic brew of salt laced with pesticides and particulat­es small enough to be dangerous to human health will be picked up by the wind and dispersed throughout neighborin­g Imperial and Coachella valleys, and beyond.

“We don’t have all the answers,” Perez said. “But our proposal is doable and a good start.”

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? CHRIS SCHONEMAN of the Fish & Wildlife Service, pictured in 2016, said salinity levels of the Salton Sea have made it uninhabita­ble for many fish and birds.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times CHRIS SCHONEMAN of the Fish & Wildlife Service, pictured in 2016, said salinity levels of the Salton Sea have made it uninhabita­ble for many fish and birds.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? A TILAPIA’S remains lie in Red Hill Bay along the Salton Sea’s shore in Calipatria, Calif., in 2016. Officials say the so-called North Lake Vision proposal would be subsidized with taxes generated by a bond measure.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times A TILAPIA’S remains lie in Red Hill Bay along the Salton Sea’s shore in Calipatria, Calif., in 2016. Officials say the so-called North Lake Vision proposal would be subsidized with taxes generated by a bond measure.

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