San Francisco Chronicle

Governor: Defend our delta

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Gov. Gavin Newsom has signaled that he will veto the most significan­t environmen­tal protection bill to emerge from the California Legislatur­e this past session: Senate Bill 1, a measure tailored to safeguard the Sacramento­San Joaquin River Delta from water grabs if, as expected, the Trump administra­tion weakens the Endangered Species Act.

The governor who fancies himself as a leader of the resistance to Trump administra­tion policies that undermine this state’s laws and violate its values needs to reconsider his position on SB1.

His Saturday message startled and outraged the environmen­tal groups that thought they had achieved victory just hours earlier when the measure cleared both houses of the Legislatur­e.

SB1 had become known as the “Trump Insurance Bill” because it would inoculate environmen­tal, public health and worker safety protection­s from being gutted by the 45th president. It would preserve those protection­s by immediatel­y adopting into state law the regulation­s the Trump administra­tion weakened. The bill, authored by Senate leader Toni Atkins, DSan Diego, would be set to expire on Jan. 20, 2025, Trump’s last possible day in office.

The bill was considered especially critical to environmen­tal groups because of the president’s stated intention to divert more deltabound water to farmers through the federal Central Valley Project. The impact on salmon, steelhead and orcas could be devastatin­g if species protection is obliterate­d by the new policy.

The lineup of advocates and opponents is revealing. Just about all the bigname environmen­tal and fishing groups were on board, along with labor and health organizati­ons.

Opponents included the Trump administra­tion, the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California, oil companies and the agricultur­al interests including the giant Westlands Water District that has never been shy about exerting its clout with powerful politician­s.

So why did Newsom end up on the wrong side of the issue?

His message, in which he implied but did not explicitly declare an intent to veto, contained an element of doublespea­k that we hope will not become a trademark of his tenure.

Newsom said he fully supports “the principles behind Senate Bill 1: to defeat efforts by the president and Congress to undermine vital federal protection­s that protect clean air, clean water and endangered specials.”

And then he got murky. He claimed the bill does not “provide the state with any new authority to push back against the Trump administra­tion’s environmen­tal policies.” Yet, that is exactly what SB1 does. It means the federal Central Valley Project would need to comply with state environmen­tal law no matter what Trump does to species protection.

In his even odder argument — the one pushed by the opponents trying to get more delta water diversions — Newsom suggested SB1 “limits the state’s ability to rely upon the best available science to protect our environmen­t.” Nonsense. In fact, the bill expressly declares that state protection­s in response to federal rollbacks must be “based on the best scientific and other informatio­n that is reasonably available.”

While it is true that the Central Valley Project has followed state law through past administra­tions, Republican and Democratic alike, there is no guarantee that the Trump administra­tion will continue to do so — not with his intent to rewrite the Endangered Species Act, and his open contempt for fisheries protection as expressed in a 2016 campaign rally in Fresno in which he suggested farmers were being victimized by “insane” policies in which regulators were “shoving the water out to sea.”

This is not just about fish versus people. It’s about preventing a water grab. It’s noteworthy that the East Bay Municipal Utilities District is among the supporters of SB1.

The governor needs to take a fresh look at SB1 — and sign it into law.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press ??
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press

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