Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Groundwater Battle Splits Farmers From a Cattleman in West Fresno County
SJV-Water
By SJV Water
Published 54 minutes ago on
June 26, 2026

Growers in west Fresno County near Coalinga are falling out over groundwater, specifically who should be entitled to how much. (Shutterstock)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Growers in a small western Fresno County region are falling out over groundwater, specifically who should be entitled to how much.

Portrait of SJV Water Reporter Lisa McEwen

By

SJV Water

And accusations have started piling up against the Pleasant Valley Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) board president, Jimmy Anderson.

Some farmers say Anderson has manipulated groundwater credits for his own benefit, creating a captive market to sell water and setting up smaller farmers for failure.

The problem, they say, is a groundwater allocation policy that Anderson instituted after he came on the board in January.

That policy gives water credits to land parcels based on historical use versus a per-acre, equal spread as is common in other GSAs. That gave large landowners, like Anderson, more credits regardless of how the land is now being used.

Anderson is a cattle rancher with a feedlot that isn’t irrigated. He also has some land planted in pistachios and has grown row crops such as garlic and wheat, which use less water than permanent crops.

Anderson Gets New Water Credits

The new policy, which he pushed through after getting on the board in January, gave Anderson an abundance of credits that he didn’t have before.

That’s true, he said. And fair.

He calls growers upset with the new allocation “greedy crybabies” who over planted permanent crops and now don’t want to face the consequences.

“The old board told me that a feed yard that’s been there since 1952 wasn’t gonna get any water, and that’s why I got on the board, to be honest with you,” Anderson told SJV Water.

“It boils down to inherent conflict of interest between people making policy decisions and their own individual situation.” — Brad Gleason

He said he was astounded that the previous board, led by former president Brad Gleason, gave him no credits for his feedlot.

“It blew me away that he said that.”

But Gleason said Anderson’s solution won’t work for the subbasin.

“It boils down to inherent conflict of interest between people making policy decisions and their own individual situation,” he said.

He argues that farmers who invested millions in wells, irrigation systems, trees and cultivation of a crop should get a bigger piece of the groundwater pie than someone with open land “who could walk into a windfall of groundwater credits” that they could sell privately.

Anderson said continuing to allow excessive pumping ignores the reality of the state’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), which is more than 10 years old.

Image of farmers sitting around tables at a meeting

Former Pleasant Valley Groundwater Sustainability Agency president Brad Gleason, right, listens to attorney Lauren Layne, top left, during a board meeting April 22, 2025. (SJV Water/Lisa McEwen/File)“Anyone who says they didn’t know SGMA was coming is either stupid or lying,” he said. “If they decided ‘I’m gonna gamble and plant 100 percent of my acreage,’ well, they are getting what they deserve.”

Instead of pointing fingers, growers upset with the allocation policy should work together to find other sources of water, he said.

“That aquifer has to be protected for many, many, many generations, not these individual landowners who are complaining right now. There are no free rides in Pleasant Valley,” Anderson said.

 To resolve the differences fairly, Gleason said he would like to see Pleasant Valley head for an adjudication process. A court decree defines who has rights and how much groundwater they can extract.

That would require a lawsuit, which has not been filed.

Will State Place the Subbasin on Probation?

This is all playing out as the state Water Resources Control Board is considering whether to place the 48,000-acre subbasin on probation, which comes with fees and greater scrutiny, for lacking an adequate groundwater plan. A new plan was reworked under Anderson’s board and submitted to the state in April.

“That aquifer has to be protected for many, many, many generations, not these individual landowners who are complaining right now. There are no free rides in Pleasant Valley.” — Jimmy Anderson

But grumbling in the subbasin has grown, including a recent letter sent to all 32 parcel owners in the basin complaining about other recently enacted policies, including a plan to charge growers $750 an acre foot for pumping more than they’re allowed.

Those policies were discussed at the board’s June 23 meeting at Harris Ranch in Coalinga.

The grower who sent the letter and asked to not to be named for fear of retribution, told SJV Water that Anderson, the largest landowner in the subbasin, is “calling all the shots” on the board.

“Nobody can tell him no. Farmers will tell you, it’s the ‘Jimmy s***t show.’”

Growers are upset about other board actions, including:

  • Lack of a basin-wide groundwater accounting platform. Growers say groundwater purchases should be routed through the GSA, with proceeds going toward land repurposing programs that pay growers to retire land, or surface water infrastructure.
  • The $750 penalty pumping fee.
  • Lack of a transparent budget that shows how penalty fees will be used.

“It’s a hard way of doing business,” said the grower who sent the letters. “Landowners are looking at selling because they can’t afford this.”

Pleasant Valley GSA Map

Map of the Pleasant Valley GSA

About the Reporter

SJV Water Reporter Lisa McEwen grew up in Tulare County. She has reported on agriculture and other issues for a wide variety of publications, including, Ag Alert, Visalia Times-Delta, the Fresno Bee and the Tulare and Kings counties farm bureau publications.

About SJV Water

SJV Water is an independent, nonprofit news site covering water in the San Joaquin Valley, www.sjvwater.org. Email us at sjvwater@sjvwater.org.

 

RELATED TOPICS:

Send this to a friend