Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California Water War Peace Treaty? Not Quite
By admin
Published 3 years ago on
April 4, 2022

Share

 

The holy grail of those involved in California’s decades-long political and legal battle over how the state’s water supply should be allocated has been some sort of master agreement.

There have been countless efforts at negotiating such a peace treaty and some premature declarations of success. However, California’s water wars have continued with skirmishes in the water bureaucracy, in the Legislature, in Congress, in the courts and even in the White House.

‘Voluntary Agreement’ Omits Some Major Players

The water war involves dozens of specific agricultural and municipal water agencies and environmental groups, each with a particular stake in the outcome — known colloquially as “water buffaloes” — and their perpetual jousting is a lucrative industry for lawyers, lobbyists and public relations operatives.

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom became the latest governor to claim progress on settling the conflict, announcing a $2.6 billion agreement between the state and some municipal and agricultural factions to reduce the amount of water taken from the Sacramento and San Joaquin river systems so that more can flow naturally and thus improve fish habitat.

“We don’t have to choose between healthy ecosystems or a healthy economy,” Newsom said in a written statement. “We can choose a path that provides for both. This is a meaningful, hard-earned step in the right direction.”

Perhaps, but we’ve heard that claim before. The “voluntary agreement,” as it’s dubbed, omits some of the water game’s biggest players, not only some San Joaquin Valley agricultural water districts but the City and County of San Francisco, which is one of the largest diverters of water via its Hetch Hetchy Dam.

It also lacks support from environmental groups, which argue it doesn’t go far enough to protect salmon and steelhead habitat in the rivers and in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

Long-Running Conflict

Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta, said “the voluntary agreement framework process violates the legal principles of environmental justice inclusion and does not serve the public trust, or the human right to water. Governor Newsom continues to serve the interests of the top 2% of agribusiness across California at the expense of Northern California tribes, Delta communities, commercial fishing interests, and communities in need of improved drinking water conditions.”

Although it’s called a “voluntary agreement,” it is scarcely that, since it was negotiated as an alternative to plans by the state Water Resources Control Board to mandate reductions in diversions from the rivers. Those plans had been on hold for several years while negotiations continued, but environmental groups would prefer the mandatory reductions, which would be larger.

Underlying the process is a long-running conflict over whether the state water board has the legal authority to reduce diversions by agricultural and municipal water agencies with senior water rights. Those that hold the rights argue that they take precedence while environmental activists contend that the state constitution’s “public trust” doctrine on water gives the board sufficient legal power to control water flows.

Peace Treaty or Temporary Cease Fire?

Without a fuller agreement, the water board could proceed with mandatory diversion reductions and that would probably trigger a legal showdown over how much authority it truly has.

There’s another major aspect to the process as well — its effect on long-standing plans to reduce direct diversions from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta by building a tunnel beneath the Delta to carry Sacramento River water to the heads of the California Aqueduct and federal canals near Tracy. Barrigan-Parrilla and other environmental activists see the new agreement as an effort to make the tunnel project more acceptable.

Peace treaty? More like a partial and perhaps temporary ceasefire.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

DON'T MISS

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

DON'T MISS

Big Lots Holds Going-Out-of-Business Sales After Deal to Save Company Fails

DON'T MISS

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

DON'T MISS

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

DON'T MISS

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

DON'T MISS

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

DON'T MISS

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

DON'T MISS

Meet Amy Allen, the Songwriter Behind the Music Stuck in Your Head

DON'T MISS

Netflix Signs US Broadcast Deal With FIFA for the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031

UP NEXT

24 for 24

UP NEXT

Did You Know Fresno County Doesn’t Have a Tax Assessor?

UP NEXT

Congress Can Give Us Clean Affordable Energy in 2025

UP NEXT

He Has Prison in His Past. Now He Hopes Law School Is in His Future

UP NEXT

Can New State Regs Resolve California’s Property Insurance Crisis?

UP NEXT

The First New Foreign Policy Challenge for Trump Just Became Clear

UP NEXT

Brian Thompson, Not Luigi Mangione, Is the Real Working-Class Hero

UP NEXT

Why CA Needs to Double-Down on Its Apprenticeship Programs

UP NEXT

UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA’s Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later

UP NEXT

California Can Fix Its School Crisis by Ditching Gimmicks

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

12 hours ago

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

14 hours ago

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

15 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

15 hours ago

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

15 hours ago

Meet Amy Allen, the Songwriter Behind the Music Stuck in Your Head

15 hours ago

Netflix Signs US Broadcast Deal With FIFA for the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031

15 hours ago

Clovis Residents Can Draw the City’s Next Election Map

15 hours ago

All Netflix Wants for Christmas Is No Streaming Problems for Its First NFL Games

15 hours ago

Tax Loopholes Cost California and Its Cities $107 Billion but Get Little Scrutiny

16 hours ago

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

NEW YORK — The Federal Reserve’s third interest rate cut of the year will likely have consequences for debt, savings, auto loans, mort...

1 minute ago

1 minute ago

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

56 minutes ago

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

12 hours ago

Big Lots Holds Going-Out-of-Business Sales After Deal to Save Company Fails

12 hours ago

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

14 hours ago

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

Rams
15 hours ago

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

15 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

15 hours ago

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

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

Search

Send this to a friend