The Bakersfield Californian

Ugly deeds, politics and high drama swirl amid the waters of a RE-EMERGING TULARE LAKE

- LOIS HENRY SJV WATER

The drama was high on the Tulare Lake bed Saturday as flood waters pushed some landowners to resort to heavy handed and, in one instance, illegal tactics, to try and keep their farm ground dry — even at the expense of other farmers and some small communitie­s. Someone illegally cut the banks of Deer Creek in the middle of the night causing water to rush toward the tiny town of Allenswort­h.

The levee protecting Corcoran had its own protection as an armed guard patrolled the structure to keep it safe.

At the south end of the old lake bed, the J.G. Boswell Company had workers drag a piece of heavy equipment onto the banks of its Homeland Canal to prevent any cuts that would drain Poso Creek water onto Boswell land.

And a tense political battle ended Saturday afternoon with the Kings County Board of Supervisor­s voting to cut a levee on Boswell’s land to relieve building pressure from the Tule River. A call to a Boswell representa­tive on Saturday wasn’t returned.

And this is only the beginning.

“This is just a baby flood compared to what we’ll see later this spring,” predicted Jack Mitchell, head of the Deer Creek Flood Control District. That’s when the state’s historic snowpack will run off the mountains and barrel into the valley like a freight train.

RUSH TO THE LAKE BOTTOM

While residents of small towns east of Highway 99 endured damage from ferocious flooding that began March 10 under the region’s first of several atmospheri­c river storms, flood waters wreak a more slow motion kind of havoc the farther west they get.

That’s because of the old Tulare Lake, once the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississipp­i and the San Joaquin Valley’s low spot.

It was drained more than 100 years ago by what has become the powerful Boswell farming empire. And rivers that fed the lake were mostly tamed by dams including Pine Flat Dam on the Kings River, Terminus Dam which holds back the Kaweah River and Schafer Dam up on the Tule River.

In historical­ly wet years like 2023 has turned out to be, the dams can’t hold back those rivers entirely. And “uncontroll­ed” streams, meaning they aren’t dammed, pile on to the action.

Those include the Poso Creek out of Kern County, White River and Deer Creek in Tulare County and Mill Creek in Fresno County, which dumps into the Kings River.

They all have the same destinatio­n — the Tulare Lake bed.

Over the decades farmers, including Boswell, have erected a complex system of levees and canals to try and stem the flows and redirect them to flood cells or channel them north, eventually to the ocean.

But when the water is ripping, as it is now, there’s no way to “build a moat around the lake bed,” as one observer noted.

That reality hasn’t stopped some folks from trying.

A DASTARDLY CUT

Saturday started early for Deer Creek’s Jack Mitchell who headed out to check the creek’s flow at 2:30 a.m. When he’d left it Friday, the creek was flowing well and keeping in its banks, at least through his district. But Mitchell

found a sheet of water where it shouldn’t be. He immediatel­y phoned Kayode Kadara, a community leader in the small town of Allenswort­h, to let him know water was headed toward town.

His second call was to farmer Chad Gorzeman who rushed out, his bulldozer in tow, and found the breach. After a full day of work and getting a dozer stuck, the hole was mostly closed using a combinatio­n of lots and lots of dirt, some dropped in by helicopter, and several wrecked cars.

Gorzeman discovered that someone had purposely cut the banks at the Road 88 crossing. He found muddy tracks from heavy equipment leading away from the hole and toward an equipment yard in Earlimart.

“Ain’t that somethin?” said a clearly stunned Mitchell.

Police were called but Mitchell had other disasters waiting.

FLOOD CONTROL WHACK-A-MOLE

He was dismayed to find a massive “land plane,” heavy equipment used to scrape the earth, had been placed by Boswell workers on the banks of the Homeland Canal where it meets a channel that funnels Poso Creek waters into the southern portion of Tulare Lake bed.

If the equipment stays put, the Deer Creek Flood district, which also maintains portions of Poso Creek and White River, can’t cut the Homeland to let Poso water flood north.

Instead, that water will overtop the channel and spread west and east — eventually swamping Allenswort­h and Alpaugh.

“You can’t hardly believe it sometimes,” he said of the canal bank antics.

Unsuccessf­ul at getting anyone from Boswell Company to meet with him, or even answer his calls, Mitchell opted to cut the Poso channel as it approaches the lake bed onto pasture land in order to break the pressure and buy some time.

“This’ll give us maybe a few days,” he told Kadara on speaker phone as Kadara stood with a small crowd of townspeopl­e anxious for informatio­n about what was coming their way.

“But I need help,” the 83-yearold Mitchell said, sounding worn and frazzled.

THE UGLY AND THE KIND

Kadara and his wife, Denise Kadara who sits on the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, started working their phones trying for state senators, assistants to Gov. Gavin Newsom, anyone they could find at a high level to get that land plane moved off the canal.

“It’s just…I can’t understand it. It’s just so ugly to do this to people, to a whole community,” Denise Kadara said.

A few minutes later, Kayode Kadara got a call and announced to the crowd that the farmer across Highway 43 from Allenswort­h said if they had the machinery, the townspeopl­e were welcome to divert the White River onto his land.

Several men immediatel­y took off on ATVs to assess the situation and start work on the diversion.

Kayode Kadara was grateful for the kind gesture and hopeful they could make it work.

“This is a very tight community,” he said. Though they were hopeful they could stave off the flood waters, evacuation orders were issued for Allenswort­h and Alpaugh by midmorning Sunday.

WATER WILL FIND ITS WAY

Other parts of Kings County could see relief from backed up flood waters as the Kings County Board of Supervisor­s voted during another special meeting on Saturday to cut a levee on Boswell land where the Tule and south fork of the Kings rivers meet.

Boswell representa­tives had argued it was better to fill the “fringes” of the lake first, where Boswell has built massive flood cells over the years. But other farmers and residents disagreed, arguing to fill the lake from the bottom up, said Supervisor Doug Verboon.

“Let the water run downhill” was a common refrain from numerous residents at special supervisor meetings over the past week, according to meeting minutes.

Ultimately, supervisor­s agreed, ordering Levee 749 on Boswell’s land be cut at its highest point, which Boswell’s crews did by the afternoon.

Meanwhile, in Corcoran, the town’s levee on its western flank was under armed patrol, according to Joe Faulkner, the city Public Works director, who told supervisor­s at a March 15 special meeting on the floods that the guard was there to “keep it from being touched.”

Dustin Fuller, head of the Cross Creek Flood Control District, which owns the levee, said the guard is mostly just another pair of eyes to make sure everything is operating as it should.

Though the floods have been hectic, Fuller said water is being managed well.

There’s just an astounding amount of water, he said. So far, water flooding to the east of Corcoran onto land that has subsided in recent years from excessive groundwate­r pumping hasn’t reached the town. But Fuller is watching it closely.

And another storm is expected to hit later this week.

 ?? LOIS HENRY / SJV WATER ?? Crews work on a breach in the banks of Deer Creek about 3 miles north east of Allenswort­h. The banks were purposely cut by someone in the middle of the night to push flood waters in a different direction. Police are investigat­ing.
LOIS HENRY / SJV WATER Crews work on a breach in the banks of Deer Creek about 3 miles north east of Allenswort­h. The banks were purposely cut by someone in the middle of the night to push flood waters in a different direction. Police are investigat­ing.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Kayode Kadara, a leader in the Allenswort­h community, talks to residents who gathered Saturday to try and understand the flooding situation.
Kayode Kadara, a leader in the Allenswort­h community, talks to residents who gathered Saturday to try and understand the flooding situation.
 ?? LOIS HENRY / SJV WATER ?? A “land plane” or piece of heavy equipment, was placed by J.G. Boswell Company employees at the junction of Poso Creek and Boswell’s Homeland Canal to prevent anyone cutting into the canal to flood Boswell’s land to the north.
LOIS HENRY / SJV WATER A “land plane” or piece of heavy equipment, was placed by J.G. Boswell Company employees at the junction of Poso Creek and Boswell’s Homeland Canal to prevent anyone cutting into the canal to flood Boswell’s land to the north.
 ?? ?? Highway 43, which connects towns from Hanford to Bakersfiel­d, was flooded out and closed in large sections.
Highway 43, which connects towns from Hanford to Bakersfiel­d, was flooded out and closed in large sections.

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