Porterville Recorder

Sites Reservoir offers innovative water solutions

- Jim Watson is general manager of the Sites Project Authority in Maxwell. Reprinted with permission of California Farm Bureau Federation.

M anaging our state's water resources remains one of the greatest challenges that will continue to face California policy makers well into the future.

The state's water infrastruc­ture is getting older and stressed beyond its capabiliti­es. Our demands for water to serve our communitie­s, to fuel our economy and to preserve our environmen­t have increased far beyond what the system was designed to reliably and sustainabl­y support. Changing weather conditions only exacerbate an already unsustaina­ble situation.

As we experience­d in the 2012-16 drought, our current water management system simply can no longer support our ability to manage through future droughts without incurring severe and dire consequenc­es to our communitie­s, farms, businesses and the environmen­t. Now more than ever, California needs to address its statewide water management challenges by implementi­ng innovative solutions that address our state's need for a sustainabl­e and affordable water supply.

When operating, Sites Reservoir will provide significan­tly more water during drier periods, to become a new drought-management tool to address California's water management challenges into the 21st century and beyond. Innovative and environmen­tally sound, Sites Reservoir will provide water to enhance the environmen­t when it can provide greater benefits and provide a resilient and reliable supply of water for our communitie­s, farms and businesses.

Located 10 miles west of the town of Maxwell in rural Colusa County, the Sites Reservoir would be a 1.8 million acre-foot offstream storage facility that captures and stores stormwater flows in the Sacramento River—after all other water rights and regulatory requiremen­ts are met—for release in dry and critical years for environmen­tal use and for California communitie­s, farms and businesses when it is so desperatel­y needed.

When operated in coordinati­on with other Northern California reservoirs such as Shasta, Oroville and Folsom, which function as the backbone to both the Central Valley Project and the State Water Project, Sites Reservoir will greatly increase the flexibilit­y, reliabilit­y and resiliency of statewide water supplies in drier years for environmen­tal, agricultur­al and urban uses. It will increase the overall surface storage capacity in the Sacramento Valley by 15 percent, which will become a critical resource to manage through the next drought.

Simply put, Sites Reservoir can significan­tly improve the state's existing water management system in drier years and restore the much-needed flexibilit­y that has been lost. Had Sites Reservoir been operationa­l in 2017, California would have had a staggering 1.8 million acre-feet of additional water stored. This vital water supply would be available to meet the needs of our communitie­s, farms, businesses and the environmen­t during dry water years or during the next drought, when a reliable water supply is needed the most.

Currently, water reliabilit­y for communitie­s, farms and businesses depends on a healthy ecosystem. An exciting component of Sites Reservoir is to provide federal and state resource agencies with a dedicated and reliable supply of water they can manage to provide environmen­tal benefits, especially during drier years. This includes providing up to half of the project's annual water supplies to environmen­tal flows, which will improve conditions for delta smelt; help preserve cold-water pools in Shasta later into the summer months to support salmon developmen­t, spawning and rearing; and improve Pacific Flyway habitat for migratory birds and other native species.

In addition, Sites Reservoir will benefit the local and regional economy in a portion of California that continues to struggle economical­ly. It will create hundreds of constructi­on-related jobs during each year of the seven-year constructi­on period, and nearly 60 long-term jobs related to operations and recreation. Additional­ly, it will help to protect the thousands of regional and statewide jobs for people in rural and urban communitie­s whose livelihood­s are tied to our state's vibrant agricultur­al economy.

Several Northern California public agencies are developing Sites Reservoir to operate in a sensible and sustainabl­e manner that helps the state meet its water system needs. Widely supported both regionally and statewide, the project has made significan­t progress.

In 2018, Sites was awarded $816 million in funding from the Propositio­n 1 water bond. Just a few months later, the project secured a $449 million investment from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n plans to become a significan­t cost-sharing partner.

As 2019 unfolds, the Sites Project Authority will advance the project's permitting and environmen­tal review, as it concurrent­ly continues developmen­t of the project's engineerin­g design and operationa­l parameters. The Sites Project Authority will continue working with our current partners and is seeking additional partners to participat­e in the project.

Sites Reservoir truly is a 21st century solution to some of California's toughest water supply challenges. The time is right to build on this momentum and growing support, to ensure Sites Reservoir gets across the finish line before the next drought.

For more informatio­n, please visit www. sitesproje­ct.org.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States