Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Hurtado's Bill Seeks More Funds to Protect South Valley From Floods
SJV-Water
By SJV Water
Published 2 hours ago on
April 7, 2025

State Sen. Melissa Hurtado (D-Bakersfield) proposes funneling $43 million toward floodplain acquisition, habitat restoration and conservation projects to reduce flooding in heavy precipitation years. (SJV Water/Lois Henry)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Legislation that aims to reduce downstream disasters by funding floodplain restoration projects in Kern, Tulare and Kings counties was introduced March 28 in the California Senate.

Lisa McEwen

SJV Water

Author Melissa Hurtado (D-Bakersfield) proposes funneling $43 million toward floodplain acquisition, habitat restoration and conservation projects:

  • $2 million for enhancement of Panorama Vista Preserve along the Kern River in Bakersfield.
  • $20 million for acquisition and restoration of floodplains along Poso Creek in Kern County.
  • $16 million for acquisition and restoration of floodplains along the North and South forks of the Kings River in Kings County.
  • $5 million for enhancement and restoration of floodplains along the upper Kaweah River in Tulare County.

The funding would come from Proposition 4, the $10 billion Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness and Clean Air Bond Act passed by voters in 2024.

Prop. 4 includes $870 million for Wildlife Conservation Board grant programs that will help the state meet biodiversity, public access and conservation goals. Hurtado is angling for these funds. The money would go to the nonprofit River Partners for use in the Tulare Basin, a region Hurtado said has not historically received its fair share of state investment.

“This is a good bill that has multiple benefits and builds consensus among all stakeholders,” said Chris Brieno, Hurtado’s press secretary. “We feel like that consensus will help us go forward successfully.”

Tulare Basin

Strong Support for Floodplain Restoration

Floodplain restoration is a tool that can be in place before waterways are overrun, putting people, property and communities at risk. That’s because these broad spaces allow water to slow down and fan out across native habitat. Floodplains also give aquifers more time to absorb floodwaters and naturally recharge.

Subsidence, land sinking from overpumping, has compounded flooding issues by damaging infrastructure and changing how water flows across the region, something that was seen during the 2023 floods in Tulare and Kings counties.

Because of that, irrigation districts, farmers, environmental groups and a wide variety of state and federal organizations support floodplain restoration, a rare feat in the contentious world of California water politics.

The Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District board voted this week to send a letter of support for the bill to the Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee. The agency manages the Kaweah River watershed.

“The flooding that struck the southern San Joaquin Valley and the Tulare Basin during the historic winter of 2023 was a stark reminder of the need for major improvements in the region’s flood management capacity,” the letter states, calling floodplain restoration a “common sense, proven and scalable solution.”

Debris is backed up behind a weir on Poso Creek in 2023. The creek overran its banks and swamped the tiny town of Pond. (Kern County Fire Department)

General Manager Shane Smith said the agency was initially tipped off to the funding opportunity from nonprofit Sequoia Riverlands Trust in Visalia. Any extra funding for flood control is helpful especially if it also enhances groundwater recharge, he said.

“Because of this, we’re in support of funding coming to the area in hopes that the appropriate agencies that do flood control and groundwater recharge can benefit,” Smith said.

Poso Creek Flooding

McFarland Mayor Saul Ayon is hopeful the legislation is enacted. For years, Poso Creek has been problematic for the city.

In 1998, Poso overran its banks east of Highway 99. Floodwaters swept through a dairy and carried manure and mud into the homes of hundreds of McFarland residents, including Ayon’s parents.

In March 2023, three months after taking office, floodwaters again forced residents to evacuate.

“I got a call at 2:30 in the morning that we were going to incur the floodwaters,” Ayon said. “The next call was from my dad who was getting evacuated. He was the first person who yelled at me. He told me to find a way to fix this problem.”

Ayon said Hurtado’s bill gets to the root of the issue.

“This is long overdue,” he said. “Floodplains are a critical buffer. Poso does not begin in McFarland, but we’ve been paying the price for a long time.”

Poso runs along the west side of the city limits on its way toward Tulare Lake. Ayon pointed out that economic development is difficult on this side of town because businesses cannot afford the insurance of operating in a flood zone.

“Residents are always worried, asking about how much snow and rain is coming. It’s their livelihood that’s being impacted.”

Ayon is testifying Tuesday in Sacramento before a Senate subcommittee, and plans to share video of past flood events that will “open a lot of people’s eyes.” View the livestream here.

McFarland residents spent hours sandbagging around their homes in anticipation of flood waters from Poso Creek in March 2023. (SJV Water/Lois Henry)

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Mega Millions Tickets Rise to $5 Each. Will That Mean More Giant Jackpots?

DON'T MISS

Hurtado’s Bill Seeks More Funds to Protect South Valley From Floods

DON'T MISS

Signs of a More Buyer-Friendly Housing Market Emerge for Spring

DON'T MISS

CA’s Homeless Shelters Aren’t for Everyone. That Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Work

DON'T MISS

Landmark $2.8B NCAA Settlement Hearing Could Transform College Sports

DON'T MISS

Is Your CA Career College or Training Program Legit? Check Its License or Violations

DON'T MISS

Alex Ovechkin Breaks Wayne Gretzky’s NHL Career Goals Record by Scoring His 895th

DON'T MISS

Doncic Scores 30 Points as Lakers Dominate NBA-Leading Thunder

DON'T MISS

Sengun’s 19 Points, 14 Rebounds Power Rockets Past Warriors

DON'T MISS

Food Poisoning While Traveling: What You Should Know

UP NEXT

Hurtado’s Bill Seeks More Funds to Protect South Valley From Floods

UP NEXT

Signs of a More Buyer-Friendly Housing Market Emerge for Spring

UP NEXT

CA’s Homeless Shelters Aren’t for Everyone. That Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Work

UP NEXT

Landmark $2.8B NCAA Settlement Hearing Could Transform College Sports

UP NEXT

Alex Ovechkin Breaks Wayne Gretzky’s NHL Career Goals Record by Scoring His 895th

UP NEXT

Doncic Scores 30 Points as Lakers Dominate NBA-Leading Thunder

UP NEXT

Sengun’s 19 Points, 14 Rebounds Power Rockets Past Warriors

UP NEXT

Food Poisoning While Traveling: What You Should Know

UP NEXT

UConn Returns to Top of Women’s Basketball, Dominates South Carolina

UP NEXT

Castellanos’ Grand Slam Helps Phillies Beat Dodgers, Take 2 of 3 From World Series Champions

CA’s Homeless Shelters Aren’t for Everyone. That Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Work

3 hours ago

Landmark $2.8B NCAA Settlement Hearing Could Transform College Sports

4 hours ago

Is Your CA Career College or Training Program Legit? Check Its License or Violations

4 hours ago

Alex Ovechkin Breaks Wayne Gretzky’s NHL Career Goals Record by Scoring His 895th

4 hours ago

Doncic Scores 30 Points as Lakers Dominate NBA-Leading Thunder

4 hours ago

Sengun’s 19 Points, 14 Rebounds Power Rockets Past Warriors

4 hours ago

Food Poisoning While Traveling: What You Should Know

4 hours ago

UConn Returns to Top of Women’s Basketball, Dominates South Carolina

4 hours ago

Castellanos’ Grand Slam Helps Phillies Beat Dodgers, Take 2 of 3 From World Series Champions

4 hours ago

Wilmer Flores Hits a Walk-Off Single and Giants Sweep Mariners

4 hours ago

Mega Millions Tickets Rise to $5 Each. Will That Mean More Giant Jackpots?

DES MOINES, Iowa — Mega Millions players will get slightly better odds and should start seeing more billion-dollar jackpots, but at a cost —...

1 minute ago

Mega Millions Price Increase
1 minute ago

Mega Millions Tickets Rise to $5 Each. Will That Mean More Giant Jackpots?

2 hours ago

Hurtado’s Bill Seeks More Funds to Protect South Valley From Floods

2 hours ago

Signs of a More Buyer-Friendly Housing Market Emerge for Spring

3 hours ago

CA’s Homeless Shelters Aren’t for Everyone. That Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Work

4 hours ago

Landmark $2.8B NCAA Settlement Hearing Could Transform College Sports

4 hours ago

Is Your CA Career College or Training Program Legit? Check Its License or Violations

4 hours ago

Alex Ovechkin Breaks Wayne Gretzky’s NHL Career Goals Record by Scoring His 895th

4 hours ago

Doncic Scores 30 Points as Lakers Dominate NBA-Leading Thunder

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend