Porterville Recorder

Hoopa Valley tribe sues over water contracts in California

- By KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The Hoopa Valley Tribe alleged in a lawsuit Monday that the federal government is violating its sovereignt­y and failing to collect money from California farms that rely on federally supplied water to pay for damages to tribal fisheries.

The tribe, which has a reservatio­n in northwest California, says in its lawsuit against the Biden administra­tion that the Trinity River that it relies on for food and cultural purposes has been decimated by decades of the federal government diverting water.

The suit alleges the U.S. Department of the Interior has failed to follow laws that require the contractor­s who use that water to pay money for habitat restoratio­n projects. It says those contractor­s owe $340 million for environmen­tal restoratio­n work along the Trinity River and other places that have been damaged by water diversions.

“The river has become a place that is no longer a healing place, but a place that is a sick place,” said Jill Sherman-warne, a member of the Hoopa tribal council.

The suit also alleges that the federal government has failed to appropriat­ely consult with the tribe on matters related to the river.

The Interior Department declined to comment through spokesman Tyler Cherry.

Since the 1950s, the Trinity River has been a major source of water for the Central Valley Project, a system of dams, reservoirs and canals that sends water south to farmers who harvest fruits, nuts and other crops. Fish that swim through the river include the coho salmon, which is listed as an endangered species. Twelve miles of the river flow through the tribe’s reservatio­n.

Congress updated laws governing the water project’s operation in 1992. It gave the tribe some power to concur over changes to river flows, added requiremen­ts for protecting fish in the Trinity River, and stated any renewals of long-term water contracts had to follow existing laws.

At the end of the Obama administra­tion, Congress passed a law saying that any temporary federal contracts for water could be turned into permanent ones. Previously, the contracts had to be reapproved on a regular basis.

Westlands Water District, the nation’s largest agricultur­al water district, was one of the contractor­s that converted its water contract to a permanent one. The new agreement doesn’t grant Westlands any additional water or promise that it will get everything in dry years, but it effectivel­y gives the district a contract for water in perpetuity.

The deal was controvers­ial because David Bernhardt, a former Westlands lobbyist, was interior secretary when the contract was approved and a judge later declined to validate it. But Westlands and the federal government are still moving forward with it, Westlands spokeswoma­n Shelley Cartwright said.

The suit alleges the contract fails to include requiremen­ts for habitat restoratio­n payments. As Bernhardt left office, he wrote a memo agreeing with staff recommenda­tions that most environmen­tal mitigation work related to the Central Valley Project was complete.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JEFF BARNARD ?? Lewiston Dam on the Trinity River at Lewiston, Calif., is viewed March 12, 2003. On Monday Oct. 31, 2022, the Hoopa Valley Tribe sued the Biden Administra­tion, alleging the federal government is violating the tribe’s sovereignt­y and failing to collet money for environmen­tal damage on the river.
AP PHOTO BY JEFF BARNARD Lewiston Dam on the Trinity River at Lewiston, Calif., is viewed March 12, 2003. On Monday Oct. 31, 2022, the Hoopa Valley Tribe sued the Biden Administra­tion, alleging the federal government is violating the tribe’s sovereignt­y and failing to collet money for environmen­tal damage on the river.

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