Imperial Valley Press

Farm Bureau president’s message: California must capture water in wet years and expedite projects

- BY JAMIE JOHANSSON This commentary is adapted from a Jan. 20 letter from California Farm Bureau President Jamie Johansson to Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Now that the recent series of Pacific storms have abated and we are in a period of dry weather, we are reminded of the twin imperative­s to operate our water infrastruc­ture for sporadic flood threats while we store water against ever-present drought.

California’s hydrology is famously flashy. It is characteri­zed by limited and inefficien­t opportunit­ies for water capture despite major downpours. It has become increasing­ly evident that climate change will exacerbate this condition.

Recently reported estimates indicated that some 24.5 trillion gallons of water fell on California during the storm deluge, enough to fill California’s largest reservoir—Shasta Reservoir—more than 16 times over. But stunningly, the vast majority of that badly needed water has flowed directly to the Pacific Ocean, unable to help pull California out of its historic drought. At its peak, more than 1 million gallons of water flowed every second through the

Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. That is a greater rate than the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest.

While flood concerns have been the focus of national and internatio­nal reporting on the waters that have drained from California’s landscape, there has been far less discussion of lost opportunit­ies as we had to protect against flood events in the course of capturing water for future use.

California­ns are abundantly aware that our water infrastruc­ture serves us poorly in dry and wet times, and that the state’s response to flood protection and drought mitigation has been halting, unimaginat­ive and too-often gridlocked by the usual politics. While voter-approved initiative­s directing the state to modernize and upgrade our infrastruc­ture languish, editorial boards and columns in major newspapers detail California’s infrastruc­ture shortcomin­gs as real-world atmospheri­c river events outside our windows illustrate them in abundance.

Because of the chronic lack of state investment in water infrastruc­ture for the past 30 years, and because the existing infrastruc­ture was built on historical models that did not account for the modern impacts of climate change, California­ns are experienci­ng the worst of our water infrastruc­ture’s inadequaci­es on an ongoing basis. Typically, water projects suffer years of study, planning, protracted approval processes and litigation. The water strategies laid out by the administra­tion of Gov. Gavin Newsom in the Water Resiliency Portfolio could take decades to reach completion.

California can no longer afford delay—and no longer wants delay—in building the necessary water infrastruc­ture, and California cannot conserve its way out of drought. The near failure of Oroville Dam in 2017, this year’s flooding and the lack of water across the state for the two most important needs to support humanity—drinking water and agricultur­e water—show a California water system mired in crisis mode.

California Farm Bureau is encouragin­g the Newsom administra­tion to respond in kind. It can structure a response to our water infrastruc­ture crisis with appropriat­e programs to streamline permitting and approvals of water projects and track project success by showing the public the new water supplies being developed.

In October 2022, the World Health Organizati­on convened a symposium to discuss food security and nutrition. The rest of the world is focused on how to grow its agricultur­al footprint to meet the nutritiona­l needs of 6 billion more people that are expected to inhabit the planet in the coming decades. At the same time, California is forcing the fallowing of hundreds of thousands of acres of the best agricultur­al land on the planet.

This is happening through ham-fisted and short-sighted environmen­tal regulation, while California refuses to build sufficient storage, recycling, recharge and conveyance in the timeframe needed to do things such as capture water from the storms we’ve been blessed to receive.

The solution has been talked about for decades. Our inertia is the result of an ongoing failure of political will to align water policies and infrastruc­ture with California’s hydrology as it is evolving.

Farm Bureau welcomes an open dialogue with the Newsom administra­tion and water stakeholde­rs across the state to prioritize the projects that should receive the benefits of streamlini­ng to expedite developmen­t.

We encourage the administra­tion to consider regulatory reform and other policy solutions that we have long supported, including the treatment of groundwate­r recharge as a beneficial use of water to position all of California for prosperity in the 21st century.

 ?? FARM BUREAU FEDERATION PHOTO CALIFORNIA ?? Farm Bureau president Jamie Johansson.
FARM BUREAU FEDERATION PHOTO CALIFORNIA Farm Bureau president Jamie Johansson.

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