Los Angeles Times

Vote no on Propositio­n 3

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California­ns will have to keep spending billions of dollars to secure the state’s water supply during an era of drought and hotter temperatur­es. But be careful. Especially when money is flowing and water isn’t, it’s easy to be seduced into spending on the wrong water projects at the wrong time and for the wrong benefits and beneficiar­ies. Propositio­n 3 would lead us into exactly that kind of trap. Vote no.

The measure would authorize an $8.877billion state bond for water projects and natural habitat restoratio­n, and to be frank, many of those projects are important components of the state’s complex water capture, storage and delivery network. Eventually they will have to be built, which means someone will have to pay for them.

But like many California water schemes, Propositio­n 3 is not merely a request for money, but an effort to force taxpayers all across the state to pay costs that ought to be borne by the private or regional interests that will benefit. That kind of cost-shifting isn’t always easy to spot in a bond measure. In this case it is.

The biggest single pot of bond money would go to shore up aqueducts that deliver water from Sierra rivers to fields and orchards on the eastern side of the San Joaquin Valley roughly between Fresno and Bakersfiel­d. As drought and environmen­tal remediatio­n have limited the supply of water for irrigation, more farmers have pumped more groundwate­r, which depletes the aquifer and causes the land to drop in elevation. That subsidence plays havoc with the canals and aqueducts, which also drop in some places, making them unable to carry as much water to the fields, which then produce much less and return even smaller or non-existent profits to farmers. More farmers then pump more groundwate­r to compensate for the loss of aqueduct water. It’s a self-destructiv­e cycle. The aqueducts need to be fixed.

But they need to be fixed by their owners, operators and beneficiar­ies, not by the public at large. They are part of the Central Valley Project, a federal irrigation program, and the federal government — and the farmers — should be spearheadi­ng the repairs and paying the bulk of the cost.

Of course nothing about water is simple. San Joaquin Valley agricultur­al interests correctly point out that their economic fate is intertwine­d with the rest of the state’s. When they do well, they produce more food and more tax revenue. We all benefit.

But farming is a private sector venture, made possible by federal investment­s. California taxpayers should spend their money on water projects that directly benefit the entire state and offer, at most, minimal amounts of regional or special interest pork.

That’s true even when the pork is for us. Propositio­n 3 includes a significan­t chunk of funding to prevent environmen­tal meltdown in the Salton Sea and for restoratio­n of the Los Angeles River, and The Times has supported previous water bonds that directed state money to such Southern California projects. But most of those bonds had strict procedures and guidelines for spending to ensure that projects had multiple benefits for multiple parties and statewide interests.

Propositio­n 3 doesn’t have those procedures or guidelines. Funding would be continuous­ly appropriat­ed, meaning, in effect, that once voters approve the bond, state agencies will make their own decisions on spending, with little review or oversight.

In June, voters approved Propositio­n 68, a $4-billion parks and water bond that was designed and put on the ballot by lawmakers. Some opponents of Propositio­n 3 argue that it’s too early to ask California­ns for more water funding. Others say such bonds should be vetted by the Legislatur­e, as Propositio­n 68 was, and not be put on the ballot by voter petition, as Propositio­n 3 was.

But the problem is not the short time since the last bond or the method of getting the new one on the ballot. The problem is what’s in it: too much spending by all California­ns for the benefit of a few, with too little oversight. This is exactly how not to do a bond. Voters should reject Propositio­n 3.

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