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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPlanning Comm Reports/1993/12/01 (3) ~~<_o.._"""O_ ~f~.\~, , ,. --'/- ',,-,' % ,~ ........ .'>XV' GOVERNOR PETE WILSO:--.r ENDING CALIFORNIA'S WATER WARS By Governor Pete Wilson San Diego, April 6, 1992 Thank you, it's a pleasure to be back. From atop the office towers of Downtown San Diego, you can look out across Coronado's silver strand of beach to the glistening blue water of the Pacific Ocean. Sometimes, I look out and find it hard to believe that a city that sits on the brim of an ocean basin holding 64 million square miles of water should live in fear of thirst. But historian Carey McWilliams spelled out our paradox for us years ago: California is a desert that faces the ocean. And that's why our cities, from San Diego to San Francisco, from Goleta to Visalia, must be ever-vigilant in securing water -- or be hung out to dry. Even in so-called normal times, California cities face water shortages that constrain economic development. Farmers face pressure from encroaching urbanization. And environmentalists are leading the effort to rescue dying estuaries and wetlands. But these are not normal times. protracted drought. Despite recent We don't know when it will end, and produced fear. We are in the sixth year of rains, the drought is not over. the uncertainty and hardship have The fear is perhaps greatest in our farm communities. All across California, little towns worry that competing demands and drought will fulfill the Biblical curse of old, leaving them a valley of dry bones. And there is fear for California's natural communities: once teeming populations of salmon now reduced to a few hundred in some runs; schools of Delta smelt dying out; whole rookeries of water fowl disappearing before our eyes. The drought has shown us that creative solutions are necessary. The success of our state Water Bank proves that creative solutions are possible. For the first time in California history, farmers voluntarily sold BOO,OOO-acre feet of water for thirsty cities. SArR."-'IE:--:TO. CALJFOR:-;IA 95814 C9l6) 445-28..n - 2 - But while we were busy implementing short-term solutions, the drought also has made clear the need for a long-term comprehensive water policy. And even if the drought were over, our future need for water will outstrip our current delivery system as our population climbs from 30 million"to 41 million by the year 2010. Knowing we faced this future, the three major groups of water users __ urban, agricultural, environmental too often have been at war over a long-term state water policy during the past decade. The result? They all lost . And California is the biggest loser of all. This water warfare among the three groups has produced polarization and paralysis. California has seemed unable to resolve its most basic resource issue. Even worse, while California argues, washington is only too eager to step in and determine our future for us. But finally the three major water-user groups in California are beginning to see the necessity for mutual accommodation to achieve progress for any of the three. In December, 1990, leaders from the three sectors recognizing that the California Water Wars must end. engaged in waging war. wisely joined in All three had Now they began by agreeing that each sector has legitimate needs. The participants representing the three major user groups in these joint deliberations have become known collectively as . . . "the Three Way. " They agreed that a phased approach, linked to simultaneous benefits for all, is critical for any progress. They agreeq 9n linkages between water management and initiatives to increase-water supply. And they agreed that we need an integrated package of water supply solutions, one that meets the most important needs of all three communities. Urban and agricultural leaders, to their credit, recognized environmental needs by accepting mitigation responsibility; embracing the goal of restoration; and supporting environmental guarantees as we start to develop new facilities. And environmentalists, in turn, recognized that California also needs more "buckets" and other facilities in which to store and move its water __ so we can use our water to the benefit of all. By acting as peacemakers, the leaders of Three-Way have advanced the common interest while advancing their own. - 3 - As you may have read, some very astute political advisors have told me that California is ungovernable. Their counsel to me regarding water might well be that . . . Frankly, as Governor, I should just thank the members of the Three Way, pray for rain and hope to keep this contentious issue at bay for six years. But if you know me at all, you know that lying low isn't my style. And more important, leading California and all its water-user groups to a lOng-term water solution is as much a major responsibility of my office as it was to work for the immediate response to the drought. California's long-term water solution will require the spirit of Three-Way in seeking the mutual accommodation of the needs and interests of all major user groups. And it will require an honest broker. Most of all, it will require that Californians reclaim control of our water destiny. So today I want to set forth my vision of how we can and must work together to ensure successful water management for all Californians through the year 2010, at least. These are my objectives: For the cities: Safe, reliable water supplies for domestic, municipal and industrial uses. For agriculture: Adequate long-term water supplies at a reasonable cost, with dry-year groundwater reserves where feasible. And for the environment: Restoration and protection of fish and wildlife resources and aquatic habitat; and protection of threatened and endangered species. All major water user groups must recognize that no one sector can be allowed to get ahead of the others in meeting its needs. We must move step by step. And each step must be linked to progress for every sector. A successful water strategy must also include: Greater conservation and efficiency of use, groundwater banking and management, reallocation of supplies through voluntary water marketing, new technologies and the development of storage and conveyance facilities. . The greatest new challenge in our planning comes from the universal recognition that we must protect the environment. - 4 - For example, many water projects were built at a time when we had - an imperfect understanding of their impact on nature. If we are to be good stewards of our fish and wildlife, we must begin to mitigate these impacts by providing larger stream flows, greater Delta outflow, restoration of spawning gravel and provision of fish screens and temperature control measures. California has many species with populations in serious decline, end some faced with extinction. Both existing and proposed water projects often have an impact upon protected animal and plant species. But a preventive, ecosystem approach can avoid the rigid, mechanical, piecemeal enforcement of state and federal laws. by managing whole aquatic ecosystems can we save species from reduced to critically low populations. And only being A Comprehensive Water Management Program must take these challenges into account, while sustaining agricultural, industrial and domestic needs. Unfortunately, neither Senator Johnston's nor Senator Bradley's bills recognize the need to balance the interests of all three sectors. And any program must begin by recognizing a disturbing truth: The Delta is broken. Senators Johnston and Bradley do not attempt to fix it. But fix it we must. One of the world's most fecund estuaries, the Delta is also the centerpiece of California's most intractable water problem. Because the natural flows through the Delta are at historic lows, saltwater intrusion threatens the quality of drinking water for 20 million Californians. So nowhere is there a greater need for a comprehensive program than in the Delta. Solutions must address fish and wildlife needs, efficiency and reliability of water export systems, water quality for various water uses, and the physical integrity of Delta channels and levees. . -- We've got to address all the issues. . . involve all the parties. And to reach solutions that are both timely and credible, it's critical that the decision-making process be not only comprehensive, but clearly without bias toward any particular group's interests. Rather, it should assess any proposal in terms of its ability to . achieve the whole broad range of objectives of all users for fixing the Delta. The California Environmental Quality Act and National Environmental Policy Act provide us a planning framework for a decision-making process. My Administration will as soon as possible initiate a CEQA and NEPA investigation of specific solutions to fix the Delta, with all options on the table. Again, before any proposal can be implemented, it will have to meet the needs of cities, farms and the environment. - 5 - This is not a call for pure research . .. for mere academic studies. I am setting in motion the decision-making environmental review processes required by state and federal laws. And I intend that this process be completed within an ambitious time-table of three years. To .help us define objectives to be met, as well as to evaluate criteria to be used, I will appoint an Oversight Council composed of members drawn from the urban, agricultural and environmental sectors. They will be .joined by a separate technical advisory panel. And together, they will help guide our planning and decision-making process. Any recommended long-term solution must be scientifically sound and must guarantee protection for the Bay-Delta estuary, Above all, this Oversight Council will be charged to assure by its recommendations to my Administration that the needs of no one group of users are sacrificed. But first, we're going to move on what is possible and needed now. We need to take immediate interim actions in the South Delta that will help restore the environment and improve the water supply. These will include construction of flow control barriers, enlargement of some channels, and shifting of pumping to winter months, through use of the four new pumps. And concurrently, we will link South Delta facilities to improved, interim standards for protection of fish and wildlife. After five a conclusion. frustration. years, the Bay-Delta proceedings have failed to come to I know you are disappointed, and I share your So I am also charging CAL-EPA and the State Water Resources Control Board to continue to work closely with the federal EPA in developing these interim water quality standards by year's end. Adoption of these standards for the estuary will be a sign~f~cant first step toward restoring the Delta. In addition to fixing the Delta, we need to increase our water supply by constructing more off-stream storage reservoirs, such as the existing San Luis Reservoir. Off~stream storage offers a more environmentally acceptable means for water storage than conventional dams on flowing streams. We need more of these environmentally sensitive "buckets" to store water in wet periods for use in dry periods. I support three off-stream reservoirs, consistent with the environmental permit processes, that are well along in the planning process. - 6 - They are: Los Banos Grandes -- authorized by the Legislature as an SWP facility in 1984; Los vaqueros -- proposed by Contra Costa water District; and Domenigoni -- proposed by the Metropolitan Water District. And I support efforts to develop more offstream storage here in San Diego County and other parts of the state. Each of these projects is dependent on increased diversions during high flow periods from the Delta. That's why it's essential both to achieve Celta protection and to proceed with needed Delta facilities. In addition to these conventional off-stream storage projects, we're exploring ways to use rice fields for storage to give waterfowl feeding and resting grounds in the Sacramento valley. And we're evaluating another storage concept in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta using islands as storage reservoirs and possible waterfowl habitat. We should also take prompt action on another urgent matter. It's high time for California to reclaim control of its destiny by taking control of the Central Valley Project. I am advancing the radical notion that Californians -- not Senators from Louisiana or New Jersey should be making decisions about how we use our water . Remember, the federal CVP was originally authorized under state law. I've named a negotiating team to work out a transfer plan over six months. And I am pleased to report that Secretary Lujan has shown great interest in our plan, and has assigned staff to look into it. Their first discussions with my Administration will take place later this month. Under state control, CVP operations will be operated to achieve a better balance between the needs of fish and wildlife, continued agricultural production, and the needs of a rapidly growing population. All the needs of California. Just as we've learned to harness the power of a vast reservoir, so should we also learn to harness the power of market forces. The success of our State Water Bank proves that voluntary transfQr~ -- or water marketing, as some term it -- does work, and I want to see it work on an even larger scale. But water is a vital resource . vital to the life of a poor, small town, an estuary, and to a big city of vast wealth. But it may be even more critically necessary to the rural area with its economy almost entirely dependent upon agriculture and the availability of irrigation. For that reason, even if it's possible to create a totally free water market, there are still key issues that must be resolved with great care to develop a fair and effective transfer policy. Care must be given to the impact of transfers upon groundwater resources, fish and wildlife, protection of rural communities, and the determination of which entities should have a role in the approval of transfers, and just what that role should be. - 7 - There are many pending state and federal legislative initiatives regarding water transfers. Unfortunately, some of them are guaranteed to release only a whitewater flood of lawsuits. I will support legislation that, at a minimum, meets these criteria: First: Water transfers must be voluntary. in transfers that are real, not just on paper. rights of sellers must not be impaired. And they must .result Above all, water Second: Water transfers must not harm fish and wildlife resources and their habitats. Third: We need to assure that transfers will not cause overdraft or degradation of groundwater basins. Fourth: Entities receiving transferred water should be required to show that they are making efficient use of existing water supplies, including carrying out urban Best Management Plans or Agricultural Water Efficiency Practices. Fifth and finally: Water districts and agencies that hold water rights or contracts to transferred water must have a strong role in determining what is done. The impact on the fiscal integrity of the districts and on the economy of small agricultural communities in the San Joaquin Valley can't be ignored. . . any more than can the needs of high value-added, high tech industries in the Silicon Valley. Of course, our water belongs to all the people of California. State control is more likely where transfers involve use of the state plumbing system, and where our environmental obligations could be affected. Most of all, in times of severe hardship, the state must be able to provide water to meet critical needs. But within these limits, there are strong roles for both a state-operated Water Bank to ease hardship or satisfy emergency needs. . . and for a free market. As water marketing helps to distribute water more efficiently, conservation helps to ensure that there's even more water to go around. So conservation and wise use of existing supplies must be our first priority in water management. Urban and agricultural users should share equally in the burden and the benefit of conservation.' When it comes to urban use, ~ congratulate all those who worked hard to craft the Memorandum of Understanding that the state signed with more than 100 water agencies, so we could agree to a set of Best Management Practices. Adoption of these practices will institutionalize the water-saving measures that produce major cost savings. And when it comes to agricultural uses, farmers in California can point to a long record of conservation practices, such as drip irrigation and micro-sprinklers to laser land leveling. Even more exotic conservation technologies are around the corner, again encouraged by greater efficiency and cost savings. - 8 - That's why I strongly support the current process to establish ways to develop Efficient Water Management Practices for agricultural water use. A broad-based Task Force is presently developing these practices, and I expect this group to report both on the list of practices and on a strategy for implementing them by the end of 1992. Conservation practices should become an essential standard used by the state Water Resources Control Board in issuing permits. Water recycling can also stretch our limited supply of water. Reclamation and recycling, vigorously pursued, can provide a reliable water source for agriculture, greenbelts, recreation and industrial uses. We must ensure that new developments in water-short areas make maximum use of recycled water, through the installation of dedicated distribution systems. And tha~'s why I have proposed bond revenues for public reclamation facilities. To promote the use of recycled water, I am directing the Department of Health Services and State Water Resources Control Board to work with U.S. EPA to remove obstacles to reclamation activities. But for our reclamation program to maximize the use of recycled water, it must both set strong health standards and create a streamlined process for the construction and operation of both public and private reclamation facilities. California's extensive groundwater basins, if protected and carefully managed, can play an even larger role in meeting our state's water needs. Groundwater can be used as it has been during these dry years as a reserve supply . if we recharge aquifers in normal and wet years. In fact, we are actively developing a large groundwater storage program, the Kern Water Bank, to provide dry year reserves for contract agencies of the State Water project. Cooperative arrangements can also be worked out between urban agencies and agricultural districts overlying groundwater basins, such as the agreement between the Arvin-Edison District in the San Joaquin Valley and the Metropolitan Water District. We must also face the reality that important groundwater basins are being overdrafted. To achieve maximum, sustained-yield groundwater management, there must be cooperation between state and local entities to develop long-term plans to recharge aquifers during times of moderate and heavy rains, and to tap this storage when it's required during dry years. . To this end, we will provide technical assistance and monitoring to develop information necessary to assist local bodies in managing their groundwater resources for long-term sustained safe yield. - 9 - We need to develop an action program that will restore and enhance our fish and wildlife populations. And we will do so by gaining consensus among all interested parties so that we do not satisfy one need at the expense of another. Future water projects will be designed and managed in a way that protects and enhances the environment. But action costs money, and money is as short as water. We are talking about. funding reclamation, storage and transfer facilities, as well as the needs of fish and wildlife. Our plans will rely on a combination of local, state and federal funding, including state bonds I've proposed for clean water and fish and wildlife protection, and future issues for capital improvements needed to fulfill the yield obligations of the State Water Project. Increased local storage capacity can be funded through local water district revenue bonds. As I implied at the beginning of my speech, we're in the ironic situation of thirsty castaways, adrift at sea, surrounded by water but unable to drink it. Of course, great technological progress has been made in the last 25 years in the desalting of ocean water. Nevertheless, the cost of ocean desalting is still two to four times the cost of conventional surface water development in most areas. However, desalination of brackish groundwater is cost-effective in some parts of the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. So the state will help local agencies with permits and technical assistance where desalting is cost-effective. I also want to apply our State Water Bank concept regionally. We should develop an Interstate Water Bank, a concept endorsed by the Governor of Colorado and other prominent Western leaders. Our goal should be to fully utilize the capacity of the Colorado River aqueduct, so that in any given year 1.2 million acre-feet o~ water is available to the Metropolitan Water District. Supply reliability must be assured for the agricultural water rights holders now dependent on the River. That is why we're leading the effort to develop mechanisms like the Seven Basin State Banking Program. I've laid out for you my v~s~on for a comprehensive, balanced long-term water policy. I will give the highest priority to its implementation. I have made' permanent the Water policy Task Force, composed of those members of my Administration who have advised me through the last 15 months of California's six year's of drought. To perform these duties, the Water Policy Council will rely on the staff of its members and involve other interested federal and state agencies, as appropriate. - 10 - To sum it up, we must manage our state's water resources to provide reliable water supplies for urban, industrial, agricultural and environmental uses. We must concentrate on several key elements to secure a safe and reliable water supply for all of California. How? we must fix the Delta in both the near -- and the long -- term. we must bring the CVP home, where it belongs. we must ensure a fair and viable water transfer plan. we must res~ore our fish and wildlife resources and develop conveyance and storage facilities. And we must conserve and make better use of the water we now use. Most important, we cannot allow one sector, one type of user, one special interest, to jump ahead .of the others and threaten the gains we've made in the past year. Sadly, California history is Budget Wars . . . and Water Wars unyielding passion and purpose. without winners. replete with accounts of Timber Wars, __ all nasty conflicts conducted with But too often they have been wars There is too much is at stake for us to risk losing again. Ben Franklin, emerging from the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, was asked what the framers had given America. He answered, "A Republic. . . if you can keep it." Two centuries later, after musing over the fate of desert societies since Babylon, writer Marc Reisner looked at the American West and told us it's "a great civilization, if you can keep it." We must keep California healthy, prosperous and beautiful. Only by standing together, as a community with common purpose, can we keep it. Only if joined by mutual self interest and by the wise purpose of sharing responsibility for our most precious natural resource, will we end the Water Wars and finally make California the winner. ? I aim to see us succeed, and I am confident we will. Thank you very much. I t #