Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Proposed ballot measure would fast-track constructi­on of dams and other water projects

- By Paul Rogers

California has not built enough new reservoirs, desalinati­on plants and other water projects because there are too many delays, too many lawsuits and too much red tape.

That’s the message from a growing coalition of Central Valley farmers and Southern California desalinati­on supporters who have begun collecting signatures for a statewide ballot measure that would fast-track big water projects and provide billions of dollars to fund them — potentiall­y setting up a major political showdown with environmen­talists next year shaped by the state’s ongoing drought.

The measure, known as the “Water Infrastruc­ture Funding Act of 2022,” needs 997,132 signatures of registered voters by April 29 to qualify for the November 2022 statewide ballot.

If approved by a majority of voters, it would require that 2% of California’s general fund — about $4 billion a year — be set aside for projects to expand water supplies. Those could include new dams and reservoirs, desalinati­on plants, recycled water plants, and other projects like upgrading canals and pipes.

The money would continue flowing each year until 5 million acre-feet of new water supply was created, an increase of about 13% in the roughly 39 million acrefeet used in an average year by all the state’s residents, farmers and businesses. That could take several decades and cost $100 billion, according to an analysis by the non-partisan State Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office.

“We think conservati­on has an important role to

play,” said Edward Ring, a spokesman for the campaign, known as More Water Now. “But you can’t get there any more just with conservati­on. If you want to be resilient against a prolonged drought, you have to have new supplies.”

Supporters say California hasn’t kept pace expanding its water supplies, leading to severe shortages for farmers in recent years and likely water rationing next year for many urban residents if the state’s two-year drought continues.

With climate change, they note, scientists say California’s droughts are becoming more severe. The state needs more reservoirs to save water in wet years, they say, particular­ly as hotter temperatur­es melt the Sierra Nevada snowpack.

“When we have big storm events, there is surplus water and we need to harvest it,” Ring said.

The measure has already

been endorsed by 27 state lawmakers, including 18 Republican­s, one independen­t and eight Democrats, including one from the Bay Area, Assemblyma­n Tim Grayson, D-Concord.

Environmen­talists, however, say the measure goes too far, and are preparing to fight it.

“For next November’s ballot, this is the number 1 priority of environmen­tal groups,” said Jonas Minton, a senior water adviser to the Planning and Conservati­on League, a Sacramento nonprofit. “That’s due to the destructio­n to California’s environmen­t that would result from the unsupervis­ed spending of billions of dollars each year without environmen­tal oversight.”

Under the measure, the money would be spent each year by the California Water Commission, a nine-member panel appointed by the governor.

The measure would streamline environmen­tal reviews. For water projects on the coast, the California Coastal Commission would be required to make a decision within 90 days, and could be overruled by the state’s Secretary for Natural Resources.

Environmen­tal impact reports would still be required. But if opponents filed lawsuits, courts would be required to rule on them within 270 days.

Minton noted that many of the state’s political power players could oppose the measure because money guaranteed for water projects means less for other spending in the state budget.

“This is the largest scam in California history to take over $100 billion of taxpayer funds away from nurses, teachers and firefighte­rs in order to pay for the sponsors’ special interest projects,” he said.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Pictures taken in January 2019, left, and September 2021 show the impact of the California drought on the San Luis Reservoir in Merced County.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Pictures taken in January 2019, left, and September 2021 show the impact of the California drought on the San Luis Reservoir in Merced County.

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