Porterville Recorder

Governor Brown seeks $437 million for flood control

- By JONATHAN J. COOPER and SOPHIA BOLLAG

SACRAMENTO — California Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday called for a boost in spending on water and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture as the waterlogge­d state grapples with an emergency dam repair, frantic levee fixes and catastroph­ic road damage caused by storms.

The Democratic governor redirected $50 million from the general fund for emergency response to flooding and asked state lawmakers to speed up $387 million in flood-control spending from a 2014 voter-approved water bond.

But his plan would address just a fraction of the $187 billion in unmet water and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture needs he identified. Brown said he didn’t have “the full answer” on how exactly the state would generate enough money to shore up infrastruc­ture but suggested tax increases would likely be needed.

“Despite what you hear from many conservati­ves, there has to be a very healthy public expenditur­e based on taxes,” Brown said.

The governor also is seeking updates on flood inundation maps and emergency action plans as well as enhanced dam inspection­s.

Northern California has received more than twice the normal amount of rain and snow this winter following five years of drought.

In letters to officials in President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, Brown asked for an expedited environmen­tal review to speed up what he characteri­zed as the state’s most urgent infrastruc­ture needs.

He identified repairs at Oroville Dam and nine other projects, including high speed rail, major highway improvemen­ts in Southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area, and demolition of the old Bay Bridge.

Brown said he hopes the state will see $12 billion over each of the next 10 years as part of Trump’s proposal to generate $1 trillion in infrastruc­ture spending.

The governor deflected blame from himself and the Department of Water Resources for failing water infrastruc­ture in the state, particular­ly the Oroville Dam, where two damaged spillways threatened massive flooding and caused an urgent evacuation.

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