Los Angeles Times

Despite what GOP says, there is a stream of state water projects

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento

California voters approved a ballyhooed $7.5-billion bond issue eight-plus years ago thinking the state would build dams and other vital water facilities. But it hasn’t built zilch. True or false?

That’s the rap: The voters were taken. The state can’t get its act together.

Republican­s and agricultur­e interests in particular make that charge, but the complaint also is widespread throughout the state.

There’s some truth in the allegation. But it’s basically a bum rap.

No dams have been built, that’s true. But one will be and two will be expanded. And hundreds of other smaller projects have been completed.

It is true that government bureaucrac­ies at all levels move at a glacial pace. I’ve always thought that’s because agency heads are too skittish politicall­y. They’re pressured by their elected bosses not to make them look bad. So, they creep along cautiously.

Also, there’s no profit motive to spur swift government action, unlike in the private sector. But the private sector isn’t always a great example of competence either. Southwest Airlines demonstrat­ed that over the holidays and Pacific Gas & Electric Co. constantly screws up in accidental­ly igniting wildfires.

Republican­s last week blasted Democrats for alleged inaction on the 2014 bond act, Propositio­n 1, which passed by a lopsided 2-1 ratio. Hardly anyone pays attention to Republican­s anymore in Sacra

mento, but they made some good points this time, while being off base on their basic premise.

Let’s back up for some perspectiv­e.

The $7.5-billion bond was a scaled-down compromise of an earlier $11.1-billion borrowing scheme that was so larded with putrid pork that legislator­s twice pulled it from the ballot, fearful voters would gag.

Then-Gov. Jerry Brown negotiated with legislativ­e leaders to create the leaner and more digestible Propositio­n 1.

“Look at these swollen rivers,” Assembly Republican leader James Gallagher of Yuba City told me after he and GOP colleagues held a news conference near the rampaging American River in Sacramento last week. “All these waters should be captured.”

At the news conference, Gallagher contended that “the Democratic supermajor­ity and the governor have failed to make investment­s in water infrastruc­ture.”

Maybe not as much as Gallagher and the GOP would like, but the state has spent billions and intends to keep spending on water projects.

Gallagher later told me, however, “money is not the problem” for Propositio­n 1’s main dam project, Sites, a proposed off-stream reservoir in Colusa County. It would hold 1.5 million acrefeet of water pumped from the nearby Sacramento River.

“It’s been studied since Eisenhower [was president] and is stuck in permitting,” the GOP leader said. “It’s taking forever. Decades and decades. It’s a bureaucrat­ic morass.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom apparently doesn’t disagree. Last fall, he created “strike teams” to help cut through bureaucrat­ic red tape on Propositio­n 1 projects.

Sites Project Director Jerry Brown — no relation to the former governor, who lives nearby on his family’s ancestral ranch — seems satisfied with the project’s progress.

“We’re rolling along,” he told me. “By the end of 2024, we should be all squared away and able to initiate constructi­on in 2025. That will take six or seven years.”

On Wednesday, Brown estimated that if Sites were now operating, it could capture 382,000 acre-feet of stormwater through midFebruar­y.

He estimates the reservoir’s total cost at $4.5 billion — a bit higher than the $3.9 billion listed on a state website. The state has committed $875 million in Propositio­n 1 money to the project.

The rest will be paid primarily by water users, mainly farm growers. The Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California plans to buy 20% of the water. The feds also are kicking in money.

Financing water storage facilities gets complicate­d.

Under Propositio­n 1, $2.7 billion is earmarked for storage — above and below ground. But the state money can be used only for “public benefits” such as salmon protection, recreation and flood control. Water users — farmers, homeowners, businesses — pay the rest with higher monthly bills.

Six other storage projects also have qualified for Propositio­n 1 funds.

There are two dam expansions: Los Vaqueros in Contra Costa County and Pacheco in Santa Clara County. State bond money will pay for $478 million of Los Vaqueros’ nearly $800million cost. The Pacheco project will get $504 million toward its $2.5-billion tab.

Four groundwate­r projects also have been approved for Propositio­n 1 money: in Sacramento ($292 million) and Kern ($89 million) counties, along with the Antelope Valley ($128 million) and Chino Basin ($215 million).

These decisions were left up to the state Water Commission so they wouldn’t become chips in legislativ­e political bargaining.

Propositio­n 1 was designed for multiagenc­y involvemen­t, guaranteei­ng bureaucrat­ic bottleneck­s. The water storage projects are all led by local agencies, not the state. Sacramento is contributi­ng money and, with the feds, signing off — gradually — on permits.

“It’s slow going — a lot of permitting,” says Lisa Lien-Mager, spokespers­on for the state Natural Resources Agency. “It’s not like the state just writes a check.”

The rest of the Propositio­n 1 money is for myriad projects such as wastewater management, stormwater capture, recycling and groundwate­r cleanup.

Of the total bond money, $6.4 billion has been committed to projects and more than $2 billion has been spent, says Nancy Vogel, the Natural Resources Agency’s deputy secretary for water.

In all, 1,838 projects have been funded and 760 are completed.

So, it’s false that zilch has been built. But it’s true that many projects are progressin­g too slowly, even by government standards.

 ?? ?? ANGEL CAMPOS, 20, left, helps friend Mauricio Soto, 50, dispose of debris Wednesday in Planada, where no more atmospheri­c rivers are in the immediate forecast.
ANGEL CAMPOS, 20, left, helps friend Mauricio Soto, 50, dispose of debris Wednesday in Planada, where no more atmospheri­c rivers are in the immediate forecast.
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