Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California's Great Water Experiments Have Failed. It’s Time for Real Solutions.
GV-Wire-1
By gvwire
Published 2 years ago on
August 3, 2022

Share

 

As California’s prolonged drought continues, the state is at a crossroads.

Recent headlines have been dominated by devastating wildfires and a growing number of the state’s poorest communities without water.  These catastrophic conditions demand answers and solutions from our leaders.

A recent report from the Public Policy Institute of California sheds light on the fact that, despite good intentions, efforts to balance California’s needs for water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and protection of at-risk native fish species, our efforts have entirely failed.  Both water supplies and species abundance have continued to decline at rates that are unacceptable.

William Bourdeau

Opinion

For 30 years, Californians living in the southern half of the state have seen precious water resources shuttled out to the Pacific Ocean in the name of protecting schools of threatened fish species.

As the report found, “despite these changes, populations of many native species and the health of Delta ecosystems continue to decline.”

The natural – call it Californian – reaction would be to double or triple-down on these troubling policies.

However, the people living and working in towns like Teviston, Huron, East Orosi, and Mendota cannot survive additional punishment at the hands of Sacramento policymakers.

Just as importantly, Central California’s economy cannot sustain the hit.

With the cost of living continuing to climb, the San Joaquin Valley’s most vibrant sector – agriculture – cannot continue to feed our communities, state, nation, or the world, if we do not have the most basic resource necessary to grow food, water.

Researchers noted that, when droughts do arrive, politics finds a way to delay taking decisive action to preserve resources, as much of the activity around managing water resources in a drought is driven by the Governor.

Thankfully, the researchers at the PPIC, while still investigating why our 30-year water wasting experiment has failed, have identified ways to limit the depths of drought devastation.

The biggest is, perhaps, the most obvious: building water storage infrastructure and recharge facilities to capture water when it is abundant.

“During very wet years, a large volume of water is uncapturable, and insufficient capacity to store water south of the Delta becomes a limitation on export pumping,” the report reads.

“Expanding above- and below-ground storage capacity could increase Delta exports without changing current regulations. In such years, more water could also be captured and stored upstream. Managers also need to adapt how they manage water storage in the watershed in a warming climate, where the snowpack is storing less water than it has historically.”

Researchers estimated that our south-of-Delta region could store an additional 400,000 acre-feet of water annually in wet years if we built out storage capacity.

“If” is a critical word.

As a Director of the Westlands Water District and the San Luis Delta-Mendota Water Authority, I have consistently pressed for increased water storage capacity and water banking facilities to ensure that we capture the maximum amount of runoff and water resources.

Sadly, these calls are only heard in Sacramento when we are in the depths of drought rather than in a season of storms.

Even when these cries are heard, little action is taken to assist the situation.

Instead, as was the case to raise Shasta Dam, we have seen our state leaders approach efforts to expand water storage capacity with hostility, not support.

Suffice it to say, a check from Sacramento won’t turn on the taps in a town like Teviston.

That’s why preparation and building infrastructure, both during periods of drought and water abundance, are critical to preserving a thriving San Joaquin Valley as a place to work and live.

About the Author

William Bourdeau is executive vice president of Harris Farms in Coalinga and a director on the Westlands Water District and San Luis Delta-Mendota Water Authority boards.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

New Partnership Expands Access to Contraceptive Care in Fresno County

DON'T MISS

IDF Chief Rebukes Netanyahu Over Absence of Gaza Postwar Strategy

DON'T MISS

Will Becerra Run for Governor? He Tours UCSF Fresno With Costa

DON'T MISS

Israeli Defense Chief Opposes ‘Israeli Military Rule’ in Gaza

DON'T MISS

Nelly Korda Triumphs at Mizuho Americas Open

DON'T MISS

Sheriff’s Office to Break Ground on Memorial for Fallen Officers. What Will It Look Like?

DON'T MISS

Hydrogen vs. Electric Batteries: A Case For Fresno’s Transportation & Ag Future

DON'T MISS

Operation Gridlock: 32 Arrests, 59 Gun Seized, Violent Gangs Dismantled

DON'T MISS

Bulldogs Blasted by Air Force, Fall to 4th Seed for MW Tourney

DON'T MISS

What Drives California’s Budget Decisions? A Lot of Politics, Not as Much Data

UP NEXT

Netanyahu’s Misguided Gaza Strategy Threatens Israel’s Future: Fareed Zakaria

UP NEXT

Opinion: How Urban Renewal Ruined Everything

UP NEXT

How California’s New Fixed Utility Charge Got Its Sneaky Start in the Legislature

UP NEXT

Empowering Education: Join the Fight for California Kids’ Literacy

UP NEXT

Newsom’s No New Taxes Pledge Upsets California Progressives

UP NEXT

SF Unified Flirts with Insolvency. It’s Not the Only District in California.

UP NEXT

Sustainable Farms Need to Come Together, Not Cast Blame Over California Methane Program

UP NEXT

Will California Supreme Court Knock Anti-Tax Measure Off the November Ballot?

UP NEXT

A Sustainable Future for Fresno: Rethinking Our Hydrogen Strategy

UP NEXT

Politicians Keep Shifting Blame as California’s Homelessness Crisis Worsens

Israeli Defense Chief Opposes ‘Israeli Military Rule’ in Gaza

16 hours ago

Nelly Korda Triumphs at Mizuho Americas Open

16 hours ago

Sheriff’s Office to Break Ground on Memorial for Fallen Officers. What Will It Look Like?

16 hours ago

Hydrogen vs. Electric Batteries: A Case For Fresno’s Transportation & Ag Future

16 hours ago

Operation Gridlock: 32 Arrests, 59 Gun Seized, Violent Gangs Dismantled

17 hours ago

Bulldogs Blasted by Air Force, Fall to 4th Seed for MW Tourney

17 hours ago

What Drives California’s Budget Decisions? A Lot of Politics, Not as Much Data

18 hours ago

Brunson’s Broken Left Hand in Game 7 the Final Injury for Eliminated Knicks

18 hours ago

Students Stage Mass Walkout in Pro-Palestinian Protest, UC Academic Workers Authorize Strike

18 hours ago

Extremists Reign in Israel After Decades of Unchecked Violence

19 hours ago

New Partnership Expands Access to Contraceptive Care in Fresno County

UCSF School of Medicine and its regional campus UCSF Fresno and Upstream USA have announced a new collaboration to expand access to patient-...

2 hours ago

2 hours ago

New Partnership Expands Access to Contraceptive Care in Fresno County

12 hours ago

IDF Chief Rebukes Netanyahu Over Absence of Gaza Postwar Strategy

15 hours ago

Will Becerra Run for Governor? He Tours UCSF Fresno With Costa

Image of Benjamin Netanyahu on a hill looking down on a West Bank neighborhood
16 hours ago

Israeli Defense Chief Opposes ‘Israeli Military Rule’ in Gaza

16 hours ago

Nelly Korda Triumphs at Mizuho Americas Open

16 hours ago

Sheriff’s Office to Break Ground on Memorial for Fallen Officers. What Will It Look Like?

16 hours ago

Hydrogen vs. Electric Batteries: A Case For Fresno’s Transportation & Ag Future

17 hours ago

Operation Gridlock: 32 Arrests, 59 Gun Seized, Violent Gangs Dismantled

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend