Los Angeles Times

A WAR OVER WATER

Environmen­tal justice has come to the fore as the coastal commission weighs a desalinati­on plant on Monterey Bay

- By Rosanna Xia

MARINA, Calif. — On a barren stretch of Monterey Bay, in a region desperate for fresh water, an oft-overlooked town has little say in whether a big water company can build a desalinati­on operation right on its shore.

Here in Marina, where one-third of the town is low income and many speak little English, industrial facilities have long burdened the landscape. This desalinati­on project would replace a century-old sand mine that has stripped shorebirds and rare butterflie­s of their home — and the community of an open space where anybody could cool off during a heat wave or enjoy a day by the sea.

Not a drop of this treated water — which would be piped to other cities, businesses and farmers in need — would even be for Marina.

“Why would anyone think they could get away with that? Why?” said Kathy Biala, a resident who was furious when she first learned of these plans. “Because we’re small. Because we have a lot of people who don’t even speak English. Because our city coffers could never stand up to the wealth of a major American corporatio­n.”

This proposal by California American Water has become one of the most complicate­d and fraught issues to come before the California Coastal Commission, whose long-awaited vote on Thursday could determine not only the contentiou­s future of wa

ter on the Monterey Peninsula — but also the role of government in undoing environmen­tal inequity.

Almost a decade in the making, the project has pitted an overtapped river against an overburden­ed city and prompted a flurry of private meetings with lobbyists, the governor’s office and numerous state officials at odds over what is most important. The outcome could set precedents on which environmen­tal priorities win out when shaping the future of the state.

A key test this week will be the coastal commission’s new power to review not only harm to the environmen­t when making decisions, but also harm to underrepre­sented communitie­s. As the nation continues to reckon with systemic injustice, many are waking up to the patterns of relegating industrial projects to certain parts of the coast while others get gentrified.

“Who’s got the garbage? Who’s got the landfill? Who’s got all of it? Marina. That’s what we’re doing to these communitie­s. You want to build something that nobody else wants? Put it in Marina,” said Sara Wan, a former chair of the commission, who is now helping Marina make its case. “If the commission­ers can’t see that now, their environmen­tal justice policy is meaningles­s.”

Water politics is rarely easy, but along Monterey Bay, it’s particular­ly fraught: The region, isolated from state and federal aqueducts, has limited water options. A few communitie­s like Marina tap their own groundwate­r, but most rely on Cal Am, an investor-owned company that has pumped the Carmel River for decades — providing some of the most expensive water in the country to cities that could not flourish without it.

But the river, where 10,000 steelhead trout once spawned, has suffered from the region’s water demands. Cal Am was pumping more than three times its legal limit and by 1995, the State Water Resources Control Board had ordered an end to the overdraft — a deadline that has since been extended to December 2021.

Only 129 steelhead were observed in 2019. During the last drought, zero.

A number of alternate supply projects have been proposed over the years, including a new dam and a desalinati­on plant at the Moss Landing power plant. Voters rejected the dam’s financing plan, and environmen­talists balked at marine life that could be harmed by sucking water from the ocean.

So Cal Am went back to the drawing board and came up with the Monterey Peninsula Water Supply Project, a smaller desalinati­on plant that would use a new slanted well technique that pulls less directly from the ocean. They picked a new site — a sand mine that is shutting down — that was already impacted by industrial use.

This downsized project would give shareholde­rs less return on investment and requires relying on a new public recycled water project to fulfill the demand gap. Cal Am also offered to provide water at a reduced rate to Castrovill­e, a nearby farming community in dire need of clean water.

“We feel like we are the Boy Scout of desal projects. We have followed all the rules … we’ve listened to stakeholde­rs, we’ve listened to regulators, we’ve listened to concerns,” said spokeswoma­n Catherine Stedman, who noted that Cal Am has spent about $100 million trying to get an alternativ­e supply project to the finish line. “No project is perfect, but we feel like we have come up with a project that most closely meets all of those interests and is feasible.”

The project has the support of steelhead conservati­onists, major farming and business groups, as well as hotels and developers in the region who for years have been unable to expand without more water. Cal Am has met privately with some of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s top officials, including Secretary of Environmen­tal Protection Jared Blumenfeld, who says it’s imperative to save the Carmel River.

The California Public Utilities Commission in 2018 also signed off on Cal Am’s plan, but Marina rejected it and has spent more than $1 million of its small operating budget to fight the project. Cal Am appealed the city’s opposition, which now puts the ball in the coastal commission’s court.

After more than a year of analysis, the commission’s staff urged their board in a 154-page report to deny the project. They pointed to the new recycled water project,

Pure Water Monterey, as a cheaper, more equitable and environmen­tally conscious way of meeting Cal Am’s needs for at least the next few decades.

Expanding this project — a joint effort by local public agencies that didn’t exist a decade ago when Cal Am first presented its options — would require less energy and infrastruc­ture.

Both projects would supply more than enough water — but desalinati­on would cost ratepayers about $1 billion more over the next 30 years, according to David Stoldt, general manager of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District, which oversees the region’s water needs.

Jonas Minton, a former deputy director of the California Department of Water Resources who led the state’s desalinati­on task force, concluded the “proposed ocean desalinati­on project is lose-lose-lose. The climate would lose. The coast would lose. And the ratepayers would lose.”

Now a water policy advisor for the Planning and Conservati­on League, Minton said he initially supported desalinati­on. But an alternativ­e that requires less greenhouse gases and no harm to the coast would be a “win-win-win,” he said.

Still hotly debated is whether enough wastewater exists to expand recycling as a reliable water supply — especially during drought years. Also in dispute is how much water the region actually needs in the long term, and whether the new slant well technology would damage local aquifers.

Others question the wisdom of building expensive infrastruc­ture that would likely need to be relocated as the sea continues to rise.

As for environmen­tal justice, Cal Am officials say they have significan­tly reduced the project’s visible footprint on Marina’s coast, and that the actual processing plant is farther inland just outside the city. They also point to their discounted rates to low-income customers and a new, muchneeded water source for Castrovill­e.

Many don’t buy this argument, which they say falsely pits one underserve­d community against another. That’s what happens when a big water company controls so many pieces of the chessboard, said Melodie Chrislock, who led a public effort to buy out Cal Am after water bills kept going up. Her bill last month was $873.

“We figured out years ago that the only solution to our water situation — our water supply shortage, the cost of water, everything — is to get rid of Cal Am,” said Chrislock, a longtime resident of Carmel and managing director of Public Water Now.

State Assemblyma­n Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley), who represents all the communitie­s and opposes the project, noted that Cal Am “has every incentive to invest and push on ratepayers the most expensive, infrastruc­ture-heavy solution possible.”

Back in Marina, Monica Tran Kim has been helping the city’s large refugee community understand what’s at stake. Kim, whose parents f led Vietnam and forged a new life fishing off Marina’s open shore, said many have been reluctant to speak up against the government and a company as politicall­y powerful as Cal Am.

“Without Marina’s beaches, my family wouldn’t have anything. These beaches fed them, kept them alive,” said Kim, who urged decision-makers to see that true justice isn’t helping some communitie­s at the expense of others.

“If we want people to live here and survive, we need to protect the resources that allow all of us to thrive.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE TOWN of Marina, Calif., on Monterey Bay has long hosted industrial activity, like the Cemex sand mine, which has sat on the coastline for a century. Now, many in the town oppose a new desalinati­on plant.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE TOWN of Marina, Calif., on Monterey Bay has long hosted industrial activity, like the Cemex sand mine, which has sat on the coastline for a century. Now, many in the town oppose a new desalinati­on plant.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? GLENN SALES fishes on a foggy morning in Marina, a town which opposes a new desalinati­on plant.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times GLENN SALES fishes on a foggy morning in Marina, a town which opposes a new desalinati­on plant.

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