The Mercury News

Game-changing decrees affect California water wars

- By Dan Walters CalMatters

The powerful interests who vie for shares of the state’s ever-changing water supply — dubbed “water buffaloes” — are adept at fending off political and legal assaults by their rivals, and the outcomes of their clashes are often stalemates.

That’s why it was surprising in June to see two gamechangi­ng decrees out of Washington, one from the new Biden administra­tion and another from the Supreme Court, affecting two of the state’s most prominent water interests, Southern California’s Imperial Irrigation District and the San Joaquin Valley’s Westlands Water District.

Neither attracted much media attention, but both could have long-term effects on how huge portions of the state’s water supply are managed.

The Supreme Court unanimousl­y refused to hear an appeal by Imperial Valley farmer Mike Abatti, who contended that Colorado River water flowing into the valley is owned by its farmers, not the Imperial Irrigation District.

The importance of the case is that the Imperial Irrigation District controls three-quarters of California’s allocation of Colorado River water — more than 3 million acre-feet a year — and Abatti’s loss may allow the district to expand sales of water outside its boundaries.

Imperial’s diversions have been underway for more than a century and until recently the irrigation district’s governing board was controlled by the largescale farmers it served. In recent years, however, the elected five-member board diversifie­d both ethnically and ideologica­lly and today, no farmer holds a seat and three of the five members are Latino.

Those changes brought changes of policy that no longer favored local agricultur­e and touched off Abatti’s legal challenges on water ownership that ultimately failed in the Supreme Court.

The court’s refusal to hear the case “brings closure to this dispute and clarifies certain misunderst­andings about IID’s water rights,” Imperial Irrigation District board President James Hanks said.

The farmers served by the even larger, Fresno-based Westlands Water District also took a hit last month when the Interior Department very quietly rescinded a 5-month-old memorandum that would have, in essence, canceled a $400 million debt owed by Westlands for environmen­tal restoratio­n.

The memorandum, essentiall­y declaring that the restoratio­n work was complete, had been issued on Jan. 19, one day before Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on, while Donald Trump appointee David Bernardt was still interior secretary. It was widely criticized because Bernhardt had been a longtime legal adviser to Westlands.

Once Bernhardt was gone and succeeded by Biden appointee Debra Haaland, California environmen­tal groups and Indian tribes pressed the new administra­tion to counterman­d not only the Jan. 19 restoratio­n memo but other pro-Westlands actions, including a permanent water supply contract.

On June 11, the memo was rescinded in a new memo to the regional Bureau of Reclamatio­n office, citing the earlier order’s failure to collaborat­e with the federal Fish and Wildlife Service.

The recission leaves Westlands and its farmer members still on the hook for the $400 million and also indicates that the Biden administra­tion may also cancel the water supply contract and other Trump-era actions that backed farmers in their perpetual battles with environmen­tal groups over water allocation­s.

The twin decrees arrive from Washington as California experience­s another of its periodic droughts, pushing water management back to the top of the political agenda.

Westlands and other agricultur­al water agencies south of the Sacramento­San Joaquin Delta have seen their allocation­s slashed to zero, farmers’ ability to tap undergroun­d aquifers is now subject to regulation and water policy reformers are challengin­g the hierarchy of water rights, such as the one that gives the Imperial Irrigation District so much power over Colorado River diversions.

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