Porterville Recorder

State funding for fallowed farmland could double

- By JESSE VAD SJV Water

A state program aimed at retiring and repurposin­g farmland could get $60 million — more than doubling its current funding —munder Gov. Newsom’s proposed budget.

The Multibenef­it Land Repurposin­g Program was created with $50 million from the 2021 state budget. The program helps pay for farmland to be taken out of production and repurposed to less water intensive uses.

Farmers in the San Joaquin Valley have pumped groundwate­r for crops without limits for generation­s. But groundwate­r levels are plummeting causing domestic and community wells to dry up and land to sink which has damaged roads, bridges and key regional and statewide canals.

A state law has taken effect and will curb groundwate­r usage to bring aquifers back to sustainabl­e levels by 2040. But for that to happen, some estimates are nearly one million acres of farmland in the valley will need to come out of production.

The California Department of Conservati­on oversees the repurposin­g program, meant to incentiviz­e growers to retire farmland and help transition it to other uses.

“It’s going to open up the program to more regions so they can start with the planning process,” said David Shabazian, director of the state’s Department of Conservati­on, on the proposed $60 million. “The program objective is twofold. One is to find land uses that reduce water demand but then at the same time to be responsive to the lack of water and to make sure the land isn’t simply just going fallow, that there’s another productive use of that land that helps maintain resilience in these agricultur­al areas and particular­ly for these disadvanta­ged communitie­s.”

The new proposed funding comes at a critical time as groundwate­r restrictio­ns take effect and drought grips the state for a third year in a row, Shabazian added.

The initial $50 million was a start but to retire and repurpose farmland en masse the program will need much more funding, according to advocates.

Requests for program grants exceeded available funds in the first round by 120 percent, according to a Department of Conservati­on press release.

“The program’s goal is to avoid simply fallowing agricultur­al land and to find ways to achieve positive regional environmen­tal and economic outcomes through dif

ferent uses such as habitat restoratio­n, renewable energy, dryland farming, or recreation,” said Shabazian in the press release.

So far, grant recipients include the Kaweah Delta Water Conservati­on District and Greater Kaweah Groundwate­r Sustainabi­lity Agency in Tulare County, which received $10 million together to develop a land repurposin­g program.

The Pixley Irrigation District GSA, in Tulare County, also received $10 million which will go toward land repurposin­g and protecting water resources in the Tule subbasin.

Madera County received $10 million for its own regional repurposin­g program which pays farmers incentives to retire land.

The Department of Conservati­on has also awarded $2 million to nonprofits Environmen­tal Defense Fund, EDF, and Self-help Enterprise­s to coordinate technical assistance and outreach for the repurposin­g program.

The four-year grant will fund engagement with “historical­ly underserve­d groups, such as small farmers, farmers of color, disadvanta­ged communitie­s and tribes, to ensure that they have the ability to shape the program and that projects benefit a diverse array of stakeholde­rs,” according to an EDF press release.

The program, “gives rural communitie­s and the agricultur­al sector a unique opportunit­y to reshape their landscapes in ways that help achieve groundwate­r sustainabi­lity and build resilience to climate change while creating new benefits, such as groundwate­r recharge to support agricultur­e, open space for people and habitat for wildlife,” said Ann Hayden, Associate Vice President, Climate Resilient Water Systems, Environmen­tal Defense Fund, in the press release.

The nonprofits will provide technical support for groups in the valley that don’t have capacity to manage applicatio­ns or funding alone, said Eddie Ocampo director, community sustainabi­lity at Self-help Enterprise­s.

“We’re really looking forward to the collaborat­ive effort,” said Ocampo.“the idea is to include different stakeholde­rs from the region.”

California has a record surplus of $97.5 billion, $2 billion of which is proposed for drought needs and building climateres­ilient water supplies, according to the revision. The budget still needs approval by the state Legislatur­e, which has until June 15 to pass a budget.

Jesse Vad reports for SJV Water, a nonprofit, independen­t online news publicatio­n dedicated to covering water issues in the San Joaquin Valley. Lois Henry, SJV Water’s CEO and editor, can be reached atlois.henry@ sjvwater.org. The website is sjvwater.org.

 ?? PHOTO BY LOIS HENRY/SJV WATER ?? A newly planted almond orchard stretches the horizon near Kimberlina Road and Highway 99 in Kern County.
PHOTO BY LOIS HENRY/SJV WATER A newly planted almond orchard stretches the horizon near Kimberlina Road and Highway 99 in Kern County.

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