Times Standard (Eureka)

Coalition to submit Potter Valley plan

- By Shomik Mukherjee smukherjee@times-standard.com @ShomikMukh­erjee on Twitter Shomik Mukherjee can be reached at 707-441-0504.

A partnershi­p of numerous Northern California agencies intends to file an initial plan on Wednesday to acquire the Potter Valley project from the Pacific Gas and Electric Co., multiple sources confirmed.

The coalition will submit a document — no more than 12 pages long — to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for its considerat­ion. If approved, the group may be able to form a partnered ownership of complex water infrastruc­ture dividing the Eel and Russian rivers.

The system diverts water to thousands of Potter Valley residents, but experts say the project — including the Scott Dam — threatens salmon population­s in the Eel River. PG&E has controlled the project for decades, but will relinquish the system as part of its ongoing bankruptcy proceeding­s.

Officials confirmed that the coalition will file its plan on Wednesday but declined to immediatel­y reveal more details of the proposal.

“This filing gives (the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC,) the broadbrush concept of what’s intended,” said Scott Greacen, conservati­on director at Friends of the Eel River, an environmen­tal group.

“FERC will then have the option of saying, ‘OK, it seems like there’s a “there” there.’ Then we’ll spend a year doing a bunch of detailed studies which will inform a relicensin­g plan,” Greacen added.

Together, the “two-basin solution” partnershi­p will look to preserve fish species in the rivers while making sure enough water continues to be diverted to Potter Valley residents.

The public will receive 45 days to submit comments on the plan before FERC makes its decision. If the body determines that the plan is infeasible, PG&E will decommissi­on the Potter Valley project, which would leave the infrastruc­ture with no clear oversight.

Rep. Jared Huffman, who facilitate­d initial discussion­s to create a “two-basin solution” for the project, said Tuesday that an outright decommissi­oning would create “all kinds of uncertaint­ies.”

“You may have some in the environmen­tal community that would think this is a great outcome — it would seem a clean path to dam removal,” Huffman said. “But there are questions of how long it would take. Some other entity could buy the dam and operate it privately. There are myriad possibilit­ies.”

Humboldt County is one of the partners in the coalition, which also includes water agencies from Sonoma and Mendocino counties, as well as environmen­tal groups like Cal Trout.

Estelle Fennell, the county’s 2nd District supervisor, said the partnershi­p has worked well so far but noted that its conceptual plan is just the first step.

“There’s still tremendous work that has to be put into it,” Fennell said Tuesday. “A lot more studies need to be done on the ecological aspects of the project as well as the economic elements of it.”

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 ?? NATHAN DEHART — UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO ?? A local coalition formed in the hopes of maintainin­g the most important aspects of the Potter Valley Project is making progress toward a two-basin solution.
NATHAN DEHART — UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO A local coalition formed in the hopes of maintainin­g the most important aspects of the Potter Valley Project is making progress toward a two-basin solution.

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