Los Angeles Times

Cadiz desert water project faces new hurdle from state

Proposed pipeline needs a lease because it would cross a state parcel, agency says.

- By Bettina Boxall

A state commission is throwing a new hurdle in front of Cadiz Inc.’s plans to turn a remote desert valley into a lucrative water source for Southern California.

In a Sept. 20 letter to Cadiz, the State Lands Commission informed the company that its proposed water pipeline crosses a strip of state-owned land and therefore requires a state lease.

The letter is the latest twist in the long, convoluted history of the politicall­y connected company’s attempts to pump groundwate­r from its desert holdings 200 miles east of L.A. and sell it to Southern California cities.

The state action comes in the wake of moves by Presi-

dent Trump’s administra­tion to clear a major obstacle from Cadiz’s path that was erected by the Obama administra­tion.

Both the state and federal efforts revolve around the company’s plans to construct a 43-mile water pipeline in an existing railroad right-of-way that crosses mostly federal land.

In 2015, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management said Cadiz couldn’t use the right-ofway because the proposed water infrastruc­ture didn’t further a railroad purpose.

That meant the company would have to obtain U.S. permission to run the pipeline across surroundin­g public land. Cadiz has long tried to avoid that because it would trigger a lengthy federal environmen­tal review that could add to the restrictio­ns contained in the project’s 2012 approval under state environmen­tal law.

Cadiz, founded by Keith Brackpool, an investor with extensive political connection­s, fought back.

The company’s highpowere­d law firm lobbied the Interior Department. Cadiz rounded up support from 18 members of Congress, most of them Republican­s from California and the West. In March they wrote Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, asking him to reverse the BLM decision and “create thousands of much needed jobs and a desperatel­y needed new water supply in California.”

On Sept. 1, Interior’s Office of the Solicitor withdrew the 2011 opinion that underpinne­d BLM’s denial and re“We placed it with a much more liberal interpreta­tion of what railroads can allow on their federal rights-of-way.

Now Cadiz is waiting for regional BLM officials to rescind the 2015 decision.

But if BLM does that, conservati­on groups are likely to sue. And the lands commission could still stand in the way.

The issue of state-owned lands in the Cadiz area arose in 2000, during review of the company’s proposal to partner with the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California on a previous version of the groundwate­r project that MWD ultimately voted down. At that time, Cadiz said the parcel in question was privately owned but the state retained mineral rights, according to the commission.

In the Sept. 20 letter, Brian Bugsch, chief of the commission’s land management division, told Cadiz that when staff recently reanalyzed ownership in the area, it determined that the state owns the tract.

The parcel is a tiny piece of the millions of acres that Congress in 1853 granted to California for the benefit of public education. The state sold most of the so-called schools lands but still owns desert tracts controlled by the commission.

Commission spokeswoma­n Sheri Pemberton said the state never sold the 200-foot-wide strip because in 1910 California granted a railroad right-of-way over it. Now, the commission says Cadiz needs a state lease to use that portion of the rightof-way for the water pipeline.

have high confidence that the project would cross this state land,” she said.

Cadiz spokeswoma­n Courtney Degener dismissed suggestion­s that the commission’s position posed a problem.

“We don’t see anything in the state letter that impacts our ability to complete the project,” she said in an email. “The statute of limitation­s to challenge [the 2012 approval] is long past.”

Whether to issue a lease would be up to the three members of the lands commission, who include Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Newsom and Gov. Jerry Brown both urged the state Legislatur­e to pass a bill that could have blocked the Cadiz project by requiring the lands commission to certify that any groundwate­r transfer from desert basins didn’t harm natural resources on nearby federal or state lands.

That the bill never got out of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee in the Democrat-controlled Legislatur­e despite the support of two top Democrats illustrate­s Cadiz’s political clout.

When Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (DLos Angeles) went along with shelving the legislatio­n last month, Cadiz paid for robocalls to Southern California voters, thanking De León and Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens), the Appropriat­ions Committee chairman, for stopping the bill.

In June, Cadiz donated $5,000 to a De León campaign fund, according to state records. Cadiz and Brackpool, a longtime friend of former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa, have together contribute­d nearly $85,000 to Villaraigo­sa’s gubernator­ial campaign.

Villaraigo­sa supports the Cadiz project. His chief rival in next year’s race for governor is Newsom.

In Washington, the new deputy Interior secretary is David Bernhardt, a former partner at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, the lobbying and law firm that over the years has collected millions of dollars in fees, as well as Cadiz stock, representi­ng the company.

Russell Newell, Interior’s deputy director of communicat­ions, said Bernhardt recused himself from involvemen­t in the department’s recent, Cadiz-friendly opinion on railroad right-of-ways.

Also in Washington is Cadiz’s staunchest opponent, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (DCalif.). She won federal protection­s for many of the desert lands surroundin­g the Cadiz project and has repeatedly voiced concerns about the groundwate­r project’s effect on the fragile desert ecosystem.

When the Interior Department started to clear the way for Cadiz, she turned to the state. Political observers credit Feinstein — who officiated over Brown’s 2005 wedding — with getting the governor to take the unusual step of weighing in on the legislativ­e proposal.

The bill was placed in the suspense file, which means it could be revived next year.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CADIZ INC. is proposing to pump groundwate­r from its desert holdings 200 miles east of L.A. and sell it to Southland cities. Above, a Cadiz spreading basin.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CADIZ INC. is proposing to pump groundwate­r from its desert holdings 200 miles east of L.A. and sell it to Southland cities. Above, a Cadiz spreading basin.

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