Los Angeles Times

More water will flow to farmers’ fields

Initial allocation­s are good news in the Sacramento Valley, but the picture is less bright in other areas.

- By Bettina Boxall bettina. boxall @ latimes. com

Central Valley growers will see more federal water f lowing to their f ields this year than last, although deliveries to some parts of the state’s farm belt will remain scant.

Initial Central Valley Project allocation­s announced Friday were good news for Sacramento Valley farmers and cities, which will receive 100% of their contract supply.

But the picture is less bright in the San Joaquin Valley. The valley’s west side, home to the sprawling Westlands Water District, will receive only 5% of contract amounts. That is an improvemen­t over the last two years of zero deliveries, but it still will force growers to pump groundwate­r and buy water from other districts.

San Joaquin Valley irrigation districts with senior rights will get full deliveries, while growers on the east side will get about a third of their full supply.

The mix of allocation­s ref lects the complicate­d rules for water deliveries, which depend not just on precipitat­ion but on reservoir stor- age, water rights and environmen­tal protection­s.

West side water districts were quick to condemn their low allocation, blaming it on endangered species protection­s for imperiled native fish.

“We are furious with today’s allocation announceme­nt,” Jason Peltier, executive director of the San Luis & Delta- Mendota Water Authority, said in a statement. “At a time when water supplies have returned to normal and the major reservoirs are in flood control operations, the federal fishery agencies continue to hoard water.”

The initial allocation is always conservati­ve, and U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n officials said it could increase in the next few months if conditions improve in the Sacramento­San Joaquin Delta, the source of west side supplies.

“While we are on track for near- average precipitat­ion season this year, the ongoing and residual impacts of the multiyear drought continue,” said David Murillo, the regional director of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

Levels at Lake Shasta, the flag ship reservoir of the federal system, have climbed to above average for the date. But other reservoirs, including the one that supplies the west side, remain below normal.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? SPRINKLERS irrigate a farm f ield in the Sacramento- San Joaquin Delta. The mix of allocation­s ref lects the complicate­d rules for water deliveries.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times SPRINKLERS irrigate a farm f ield in the Sacramento- San Joaquin Delta. The mix of allocation­s ref lects the complicate­d rules for water deliveries.

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