Los Angeles Times

Officials delay vote on water plan again

Brown asks for one last delay on decision to aid environmen­t by boosting river flows.

- By Bettina Boxall bettina.boxall @latimes.com

Under pressure from Gov. Jerry Brown’s administra­tion, state regulators once again postponed a vote on a contentiou­s plan to force San Francisco and several big San Joaquin Valley irrigation districts to give up some of their water supplies for environmen­tal protection.

On the eve of Wednesday’s scheduled vote, Brown and the man who will succeed him next year, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, asked for a month’s delay and promised to get involved in ongoing settlement negotiatio­ns.

If adopted, the State Water Resources Control Board proposal to boost flows on three salmon-bearing rivers would amount to an unpreceden­ted step to hold districts with historic water rights accountabl­e for the environmen­tal toll of their massive diversions.

The agricultur­al districts, which staked their claims to the river flows a century or more ago, have bitterly contested the proposed restrictio­ns, calling them economical­ly devastatin­g and vowing to challenge them in court.

The water board staff spent years developing the proposed standards and the Brown administra­tion has long advocated voluntary agreements to avoid a prolonged legal battle. Talks between state officials and river users picked up after the final board proposal was released in July.

The board postponed a scheduled August vote, but with no settlement on the near horizon, appeared ready to adopt the flow requiremen­ts on Wednesday. At the last minute, Brown and Newsom wrote board Chairwoman Felicia Marcus, asking for a postponeme­nt and saying, “During this time, we pledge to actively and meaningful­ly engage to bring this vital matter to a successful closure.”

At Wednesday’s meeting, environmen­tal advocates argued that more delay would weaken the state’s hand in negotiatio­ns.

State officials and river users, on the other hand, insisted that by December they could come up with an agreement that would meet the board’s ecological objectives.

“This is it. No more time beyond the next 35 days,” said California Fish and Wildlife Director Chuck Bonham, who represents the state in the confidenti­al negotiatio­ns. “The Brown administra­tion will not seek another delay.”

Marcus said she agonized over whether to again postpone the vote, but ultimately chose to heed Brown’s call for more time. “Reluctantl­y — but with hope — I will support giving it a try. I’m firmly committed to act in December,” she said.

Board members are appointed to four-year-terms by the governor, so Wednesday’s discussion played out against the coming change in administra­tion.

The letter’s language seemed to signal that Newsom would not change course and continue to support the board in requiring greater river flows to help migrating salmon.

“It is an amazing letter,” board member Tam Doduc said, citing a paragraph in which the political leaders said any agreement would “obligate water rights holders to improve stream flows and restore habitat.”

The current board proposal would collective­ly cost water districts 300,000 acrefeet of supply — or roughly 15% of their total diversions on the Stanislaus, Tuolumne and Merced rivers. But the board has left the door open to relaxing those requiremen­ts if water users agree to other measures to improve fish conditions, such as expanding floodplain­s and restoring habitat.

San Francisco and several big irrigation districts draw so much water from the three tributarie­s of the San Joaquin River that their average flows range from 21% to 40% of what they would be without dams and diversions. At times the river beds hold as little as 10% of the natural flow.

Combined with pollution and habitat loss, the diversions have helped drive salmon runs to the brink of extinction and contribute­d to ecological problems in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, the heart of California’s water system.

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? THE MOCCASIN Reservoir stores water from the Tuolumne River for the Bay Area. Officials want to boost f lows on three salmon-bearing rivers, affecting cities and agricultur­al districts that have historic water rights.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press THE MOCCASIN Reservoir stores water from the Tuolumne River for the Bay Area. Officials want to boost f lows on three salmon-bearing rivers, affecting cities and agricultur­al districts that have historic water rights.

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