Hon. Darrell Steinberg, Senator
Senate President pro Tem
State Capitol, Room 205
Sacramento, CA 94248-0001
Senator,
I have been involved for a number of years in the issues pertaining to the Delta and water for Californians. I am a Councilman for the City of Oakley and past Mayor. We encompass 12 miles of shoreline on the Delta. I have followed the progress of the Delta Vision Blue Ribbon Task Force and the Bay Delta Conservation Plan. Recently, I received a review of the situation from Professor Marc Del Piero. See below. Of all the writings on the political actions I’ve read, this is the most poignant I’ve seen. I agree with everything he says. I believe, you being an Attorney, can identify with what he is talking about.
Please read this before you promote the bills being submitted by Assemblyman Huffman and Senator Simitian.
Sincerely,
Bruce Connelley
Oakley Councilman
3231 Main Street
Oakley CA 94561
925-625-7007

Sunday, August 30, 2009 5:56:48 PM
From: MJDelPiero
To:
alf.brandt@asm.ca.gov,
Alf.Brandt@asm.ca.gov
DEAR ALF:
Thank you for talking to me the other day, and for the
opportunity to review the legislative package that is to be presented to the
Conference Committee of the state legislature. After over twenty-five years in
the public and private practice of water law, and as an adjunct professor of
Water Law at Santa Clara University since 1992, I am very worried.
These bills, sadly, are just not very good and appear to
be a thinly disguised attempt to reallocate the state's water and represent a
backdoor attack on 130 years of California water law and legal precedent. The
scary part is that it appears that no one understands or wants to publicly admit
the unintended consequences that are going to result if these bills go forward
without major clarifications.
Suffice to say that I am very, very concerned that this
will make the situation far worse in the arena of litigation, and muddy the last
thirty years of judicial decisions, which have clarified the Public Trust
Doctrine. It's not surprising that the State Water Contractors are supportive
of this scheme to enable water exporters, who are holding the most junior water
rights, to secure upstream water at the expense of the most senior water rights
holders. Incredulously, the scheme then tags the upstream water rights holders
with much of the expense for facilitating the reallocation of water and
mitigating the environmental consequences of reallocation. This will do great
damage to Sacramento Valley farmers and municipalities in the medium and long
term, and will be the full employment act for lawyers in the short term.
The package's failure to specifically, and without nuance
or ambiguity, define numerous terms like “coequal,” “balanced” or “reliable”
ensures twenty years of litigation (and millions of dollars of attorney's fees)
as attorneys and the courts battle over their meaning. None of the bills
acknowledge the fact that the State Water Board has issued rights to far more
water than actually exists. Absent an admission of that TRUTH, there will never
be a resolution to our water crisis.
Indeed, the legislation avoids the two actions that would
meaningfully address the present water crisis: a mandate that the State Water
Board aggressively begin the long overdue process of bringing water rights into
conformance and balance with the amount of water that actually exists and an
immediate repeal of the Monterey Agreement provisions that eliminated an “urban
preference” that originally ensured water for the 20 million people on the South
Coast during California's inevitable droughts. Surely, there should be a
legislative water preference for 20 million people and the public trust
resources of our state over cotton crops in Kern County.
I disagree with the Delta Vision Task Force's findings
that new governance is required in the Delta. What is needed now is a
legislative acceptance of the truth and legislative directives to reform the
system to reflect the truth. An action that is desperately needed is meaningful
enforcement of existing legal public trust and constitutional water doctrines
and laws through the existing State Water Resources Control Board, not a new
layer of bureaucracy and institutional inertia. Consequently, I urge that you
recommend to the committee chairs to reject the legislation that promotes more
water bureaucracy and wasteful spending on large water projects that will
increase legal conflict and reduce water supply reliability far into
California's future. "BEFORE ANYBODY SPENDS ANY MORE TAXPAYER DOLLARS AND BUILDS
ANOTHER PIPE OR CANAL, THEY SHOULD BE REQUIRED BY THE LEGISLATURE TO PROVE THAT
THEY HAVE REAL, WET WATER (TO WHICH THEY HAVE A REAL LEGAL ENTITLEMENT) THAT IS
AVAILABLE TO FILL THE PIPE OR CANAL."
The Central Valley Project and the State Water Project
have some of the most junior appropriative rights in California, with a face
value of approximately 130 million acre-feet. A lot of that water doesn't even
exist except in the wettest of years. By themselves, the face value of state and
federal water rights in the Delta watershed exceed average annual Central Valley
watershed runoff (29 million acre-feet) by a factor of 4.5. The California
Department of Finance originally filed for these permits back in 1927, while
other rights were filed for in the late 1930s. In terms of water appropriations,
this is quite late in California history, since some pre-1914 appropriations
date to Gold Rush days.
California has constitutional provisions prohibiting
unreasonable use and diversion of water, a comprehensive Water Code, state and
federal endangered species acts, water quality acts, environmental review acts
and a Fish and Game Code that - while imperfect - are sufficient to equitably
distribute available water and protect pelagic and salmonid fisheries. We have
regulatory and resource agencies charged with implementing and enforcing these
laws. The present crisis would have been prevented had these laws had been
complied with and enforced. These laws are sufficient to fix the problem over
time, if enforced.
Since at least 1979, it was recognized by the State Water
Resources Control Board that “To provide full mitigation of project impacts on
all fishery species now would require the virtual shutting down of the export
pumps.” See SWRCB D-1485 page 13. Since that time, the export pumping has
steadily increased to the point that the courts have recently intervened to
curtail illegal export pumping.
In 1992 and 1993, when I was on the State Board, we came
very close to adopting a Water Rights Decision (Draft Decision 1630) that would
have addressed many if not all of these desired outcomes sought for the Delta
today. I supported that draft and its policies. However, the then-administration
intervened to keep the board majority from adopting the draft decision, which
led to adoption of the Bay Delta Accord in 1994, followed by the establishment
of the CalFED process, and the Monterey Amendments to the State Water Project
contracts. These compromise actions have now clearly failed to keep the promise
of “balance” and to protect the public trust resources in the Delta. Further,
the Davis Administration made things even worse by allowing DWR to increase real
exports from the Delta since 2001 that pushed the ecosystem into collapse by
2007. The current Administration can't legislatively create water, any more than
the Wilson and Davis Administrations could, and these bills don't fix the
problem either.
Despite an abundance of rhetoric on the value of the
Bay-Delta ecosystem and "the expressed, bi-partisan, good intentions to restore
it", the bill package is embarrassingly silent on specific standards, goals, or
specific yardsticks that would measure and ensure restoration. It assigns all
responsibility to develop protective measures to a Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP)
process that is largely comprised of the representatives of interests,
individuals, and agencies that for the last two decades ignored, acquiesced, and
chaperoned the complete and practically irreversible collapse of the estuary. In
fact, BDCP is largely a conveyance project masquerading as a Habitat
Conservation Plan.
Since it is reasonable to assume that a Peripheral Canal
would be operated without sufficient respect for Delta farmers and ecosystems,
we may all expect the Canal (or other designs, such as “dual conveyance”) would
remove fresh water supplies from Delta ecosystems, further reduce the diversity
of aquatic habitats for failing species, and literally de-water the water rights
of profitable Delta farms and communities with senior water rights. This is not
conjecture; this is what will happen given the foreseeable consequences of these
proposals within the context of existing laws.
A Peripheral Canal would shift the point at which
Sacramento River water is exported to a point north of the Delta. This would
shift the impacts of export diversions directly to the Sacramento River (and
away from the San Joaquin), the last river in the Valley supporting substantial,
but vulnerable salmon and steelhead populations. I believe this poses very grave
long-term risks for salmonid fisheries that are already on the ropes. This is
well documented by both the US Fish and Wildlife Service's Anadromous Fisheries
Restoration Program and the National Marine Fisheries Service's recent
biological opinion on present operations of the State Water Project and Central
Valley Project.
A Peripheral Canal would increase the residence time of
river flows reaching the Delta not otherwise diverted into the canal. This will
do great damage to farmers and to the Sacramento Valley economy. Without greater
regulation of upstream land uses (specifically agricultural practices and
development restrictions, slower and lower water flows would increase pollutant
concentrations, water temperatures, and dissolved oxygen problems in the
Delta-all of which further compromise fish habitat, including the migration
corridors of endangered anadromous salmonid fisheries and other beneficial uses
of water. Lower freshwater flows to the Delta would increase algal blooms, and
would increase exposure of fish larvae and smolts to predators and entrainment
in reverse river channel flows heading to the export pumps.
Thank you very much for accepting these comments. As I
indicated, I do not represent any clients on this matter, I don't have " a dog
in this fight", but, as you know, I served from 1992-1999 on the SWRCB. I offer
these comments because our state faces a grave crisis that will be made worse
without significant revisions to these pieces of legislation.
This is a lot of information in a single e-mail but, as I
said, the potential for a real and potentially irreversible NEW water rights
problem will surely present itself unless more specific findings of fact, more
legal detail, and more specific standards are included into any legislation
before it is passed.
Very Best Regards to you and the Assemblyman,
Marc Del Piero