Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Is there room for optimism in state's dire drought situation?

- Steven Greenhut Columnist

SACRAMENTO >> Are California's reservoirs halffull or half-empty? The state's largest reservoirs

— Lake Oroville and

Lake Shasta — are exceedingl­y low for this time of year, with the former at 55% of capacity and the latter at 40% of capacity. However, my snarky question isn't about water levels, but about policy makers' attitudes toward our water crisis.

Do California officials see the current, dire drought situation as an opportunit­y or a unfixable crisis?

Most of the reporting has focused on the latter, for obvious reasons. Despite recent rainstorms, 60 % of California is experienci­ng extreme drought and 95 % experienci­ng severe drought. As a result, the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California, the nation's largest water provider, is mandating 35% reductions in household consumptio­n. If there's too little stored water, there's little that water agencies can do other than ration it. While the 6-million residents served by MWD will face a summer of annoyances, the Central Valley's residents are facing threats to their farmbased economy. Reports suggest that new groundwate­r pumping restrictio­ns will fallow millions of acres of prime California

farmland.

The crisis talk is leading to the usual blather — and water shaming. As ABCNews7 reported, “Water usage jumped nearly 19% in March, which was one of the driest months on record” despite pleas from state officials to slash usage by 15%. On closer inspection, the big monthly jump was no big deal given that water usage still is down 3.7% since last July.

Consider this amazing statistic from our even-drier neighbor. Arizona uses less water overall than it did in the 1950s, when the population was oneseventh its current level. California­ns usually meet the state's increasing­ly aggressive

conservati­on targets, but our individual efforts inevitably run into the concept of “diminishin­g returns.”

Nearly 50% of the state's available water flows to the Pacific, 40% goes to farms and 10% goes to urban users. Residences use 5.7% of the state's water, with half of that going to pools and landscapin­g. Conservati­on is a good idea during times of scarcity. But why are environmen­talists and regulators fixated on squeezing more drops from those who use the least?

It's almost as if they are more intent on punishing California­ns for our lifestyles than funneling more water into our system to assure that everyone has the water that they need. Go figure. Despite the grueling drought — and it comes only a few years after the previous grueling drought — our state hasn't noticeably shifted its priorities.

After the California Coastal Commission's notoriousl­y anti-growth staff tried to derail a privately funded desalinati­on plant that can meet 16% of Orange County's water needs, Gov. Gavin Newsom stepped up and said some encouragin­g things — which even earned him a favorable editorial on these opinion pages.

“We need more tools in the damn tool kit,” Newsom told the Bay Area News Group during a recent interview, in which he touted the Poseidon desalter. Newsom even used my favorite terminolog­y as he pitched an “all of the above” approach to the water situation. Hence, that raised my hope that the reservoir is, so to speak, half-full. Yet, sadly, we got the answer to my earlier question late Thursday, as the commission itself unanimousl­y rejected the Poseidon plant.

The commission's executive director said its rejection “does not mean that we're setting the stage for the denial of all desal facilities or other critical infrastruc­tures across the state,” but in reality it's the end of desalinati­on in California. Who is going to spend 20 years developing a project only to meet this fate?

California needs to build appropriat­e water-storage facilities to capture more water during rainy years (and, yes, we'll have rainy years again), improve water trading and pricing, and build recycling and desalinati­on plants. We're not going to do desalinati­on now obviously, we're not fixing the pricing situation and we're not building water-storage facilities.

Again, the governor's rhetoric has been good lately when it comes to water, but his action is lacking. He appoints members to the Coastal Commission and we see how that went. He touts his $5.1-billion water infrastruc­ture package as the centerpiec­e of his efforts to boost water availabili­ty, but one need only look at the administra­tion's own press package to see it's a fairly empty package.

The largest portion ($1.3 billion) goes toward drinking and wastewater infrastruc­ture for disadvanta­ged communitie­s — an important and long-neglected upgrade that neverthele­ss has little to do with boosting water supplies. The other main expenditur­es relate to environmen­tal improvemen­ts, including fish corridors and water-efficiency subsidies.

As U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Roseville, has said, “Droughts are nature's fault and they are beyond our control. Water shortages, on the other hand, are our fault.” Based on the commission's decision, it's sadly clear that California has made its choice to enter a stage of permanent rationing and endless crisis.

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