San Francisco Chronicle

Odd political alliance with environmen­talists

- — Carolyn Lochhead

Some California farmers see fish as their ally — and fellow farmers as the threat.

Sacramento rice farmer John Brennan is working with fish biologist Jacob Katz of the conservati­on group California Trout to allow the Yolo Bypass, a flood relief valve west of Sacramento that was built during the Depression, to provide winter habitat not just for birds but for salmon.

The fish experiment is part of a strange political realignmen­t, hastened by drought, that has rice farmers allying with Bay Area cities that are short on water and long on environmen­talists.

Rice farmers used to be top targets of environmen­talists for using subsidized water to grow a subsidized crop. In the past few years that’s changed, however, and environmen­talists who are angry at farmers seldom mention rice in the same breath as almonds or alfalfa.

But rice farmers’ precious historic water rights in the Sacramento Valley could be vulnerable if the state decides to rethink its water laws. This year, delta farmers agreed to voluntaril­y cut their water use by 25 percent, even though the concession gave them no guarantee that the state will protect their water rights in the future. If the state takes a fresh examinatio­n of the entire system, farmers to the south whose water rights are less secure could pose a political threat.

So Brennan is looking to salmon, and people who care about them, as a new constituen­cy for rice.

“Nobody cares about rice farmers,” Brennan said, “but everybody cares about fish.”

Migrating shorebirds have flocked to winter rice fields since farmers began flooding them in the 1990s to rot the stubble they were no longer allowed to burn. These surrogate wetlands mimic shallow river floodplain­s, nurturing a complex food web.

Since 2011, Katz has been demonstrat­ing that salmon thrive there too, growing much fatter if they spend a few weeks on a floodplain instead of in a canal.

That is critical, because fish are at the crux of California’s water woes.

Efforts to help fish so far have been spectacula­rly unsuccessf­ul. In April, a fourday survey of 40 sites in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta turned up just one delta smelt, the endangered fish that farmers most blame for their water cutbacks. Sci- entists now consider the delta smelt and its longfin cousin, once among the delta’s most abundant fish, to be “functional­ly extinct.”

Two salmon runs, steelhead and sturgeon, are in similarly dire straits. “We have a whole series of fish that are declining very rapidly,” said UC Davis fish biologist Peter Moyle.

Using the Yolo Bypass to grow rice in summer and fish in winter would help salmon thrive on a shallow floodplain, Katz said. Rice farmers, in turn, would still be able to grow crops. The plan will require state and federal approval.

Underscori­ng the muscle behind the new political alliance between rice farmers and fish, Brennan’s company, Robbins Rice of Colu- sa, fallowed acreage this year and sold some of the saved water to the East Bay Municipal Utility District instead of farmers south of the delta.

The interest in birds and fish and wetlands comes from cities, Brennan said. Through rice farms, he said, people in cities could get a backup water supply and wetlands “basically at the same place.”

“EBMUD is a better political partner,” he said, “than Southern California pistachio growers.”

“Nobody cares about rice farmers, but everybody cares about fish.” John Brennan, Sacramento rice farmer

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States