Monterey Herald

California water rights at risk

- By Dan Walters CalMatters

When California imposed its first-ever regulation on the extraction of water from undergroun­d aquifers in 2014, it gave environmen­tal groups a landmark victory in their decadeslon­g effort to overhaul water use laws.

It was also a political setback for farmers, who are California's major water users and have depended on wells to irrigate their crops as increasing­ly frequent droughts reduce surface water in rivers and reservoirs.

However, while groundwate­r regulation ended one front in California's never-ending political and legal battles over allocation of water, it merely set the stage for an even bigger conflict over surface water rights, particular­ly those pre-dating 1914, when the state first began controllin­g diversions.

Just months after the groundwate­r regulation's enactment, with drought still gripping the state, the water rights battle was joined when the state Water Resources Control Board attempted to curtail diversions by some pre-1914 rights holders.

The board accused a small water system on the southern edge of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, Byron-Bethany Irrigation District, of ignoring its curtailmen­t order and continuing to take water from the Delta for 13 days.

“We are a test case,” ByronBetha­ny's manager, Rick Gilmore, said at the time. “I think this has become a larger issue. I think the water board wants to use this as a precedent so they can start to gain more control over senior water right users.”

An immediate confrontat­ion was averted, but the underlying conflict continued and last year the state court of appeal declared that the board lacked emergency curtailmen­t authority over senior rights holders.

Meanwhile, 2022 saw another clash involving another small water agency that ignored curtailmen­t orders on the Shasta River a few miles south of the Oregon border. The Shasta River Water Associatio­n's farmers and ranchers continued to tap the river and later paid small fines.

The court decision and the Shasta River case fired up a long-standing drive by environmen­tal groups to reduce diversions that damage wildlife habitat, contending that pre1914 rights reflect exploitive and even racist 19th century attitudes incompatib­le with climate change and 21st century societal mores.

Water rights reformers have pressed the board to aggressive­ly invoke the “public trust doctrine” of California water law and the state constituti­on's declaratio­n that water use must be reasonable.

Despite its clashes over curtailmen­t orders, the water board has been reluctant to engage in a sweeping political and legal war. It did, however, underwrite research by UC Berkeley's Center for Law, Energy and the Environmen­t on the powers needed to curtail diversions during droughts.

The resulting report, issued in April, declared that “the state needs to implement curtailmen­ts on a regular basis, not only in times of extreme crisis. Routine curtailmen­ts already happen in other western states. California cannot afford to remain an outlier.”

Not surprising­ly, three bills have been introduced in the Legislatur­e to give the water board the authority suggested in the UC Berkeley study, pitting water rights reformers against agricultur­al and municipal water agencies.

Although advocates contend that the bills would merely give the water board much-needed managerial tools, a coalition of water districts and agricultur­al groups see them as a prelude to the wholesale abrogation of their water rights. The board could gain the “potential to strip public agencies of water rights that have been used to sustain communitie­s for decades,” with decrees of “arbitrary outcomes,” they wrote in an opposition letter.

All three measures, Assembly Bill 1337, Assembly Bill

460 and Senate Bill 389, survived initial floor votes but the political battle is just beginning. Their fate could rest in Gov. Gavin Newsom's hands as powerful interests clash over a bedrock issue — who prevails when there's not enough water to meet all demands.

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