Los Angeles Times

Congressio­nal delegation still wrangling over water

- By Sarah D. Wire sarah.wire@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — California’s congressio­nal delegation continued to wrangle over how to respond to the state’s water crisis Thursday as Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) released what she called a “discussion draft” of proposed legislatio­n.

Feinstein said in a statement that the bill addresses long-term and short-term water concerns.

“In my 23 years in the Senate, this has been the most difficult bill to put together. The maxim that whiskey’s for drinking and water’s for fighting is alive and well in California,” she said.

The bill does not mandate how much water should be pumped from the Central Valley Project or the State Water Project, which move water from Northern California to farms and cities to the south. Those decisions would be left in the hands of state and federal officials.

For short-term relief, the legislatio­n includes provisions aimed at capturing water from El Niño storms. It would allow water agencies to increase pumping during winter storms, and they would no longer be required to “pay back” the increase by reducing pumping later.

For long-term needs, it authorizes $1.3 billion in funding for western states for desalinati­on, recycling and storage.

A summary of the bill and the full text are available on Feinstein’s website: www.feinstein.senate.gov/ public.

“This bill will not satisfy every water interest in the state, but we have tried mightily to listen and absorb commentary from interested parties,” Feinstein said.

She said she will meet over the weekend with environmen­tal groups, farmers and water districts and next week with House members.

When the text of the draft was released, House members were on recess and the Senate had adjourned ahead of a massive storm expected to hit Washington on Friday. Staff members for several House members said the release was a surprise.

Rep. David Valadao (RHanford), whose water plan passed the House last year, said the two sides could come together to work on a compromise if the Senate approved Feinstein’s proposal.

“There is significan­t work to be done. With millions of gallons of water flowing out into the ocean every day, throwing taxpayer dollars at this problem will not provide those suffering with the drought relief they so desperatel­y need,” he said in a statement.

Rep. Jeff Denham (RTurlock) said Feinstein’s draft is similar to legislatio­n she has proposed that the Senate refused to consider.

“It’s ridiculous, especially given that millions of gallons are flowing to the sea daily and farmers face zero allocation­s this spring. The people of the valley should not confuse motion with action,” he said.

Rep. Jerry McNerney’s spokesman said the congressma­n hadn’t seen a copy of Feinstein’s legislatio­n. The Stockton Democrat, who is working on his own water bill, said he will meet with Feinstein to discuss water policy next week.

California’s 55-member congressio­nal delegation has warred publicly and privately in recent months as they’ve tried to reconcile water policy proposals.

Valadao’s bill passed the House in June, but the White House signaled at the time that President Obama would veto it. The House bill aimed to funnel more water to San Joaquin Valley growers by reducing the amount used to support endangered fish population­s. A bill sponsored by Feinstein, which focuses on water storage, desalinati­on and other projects, hasn’t been considered by the Republican-controlled Senate.

The two sides say they were close to a compromise when, as the House and Senate rushed to finish their work before the December holidays, California Republican­s tried to insert a partly negotiated water plan into a must-pass spending bill.

Feinstein balked, accusing Republican­s of implying that she supported the plan. Democrats were furious that the language might be included without public input.

When the language wasn’t included in the bill, Republican­s sought to peg the failure on Feinstein. She responded by saying she’d file a new Senate version.

 ?? Robert Gauthier
Los Angeles Times ?? RINGS show the low water level in June at Castaic Lake, part of the State Water Project. Sen. Dianne Feinstein said a bill she introduced Thursday addresses California’s long-term and short-term water concerns.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times RINGS show the low water level in June at Castaic Lake, part of the State Water Project. Sen. Dianne Feinstein said a bill she introduced Thursday addresses California’s long-term and short-term water concerns.

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