Monday, March 28, 2011

News articles and links from March 28, 2011

Water, Water Everywhere – but Not for Farmers

Story

From The Bay Citizen – Friday, March 25, 2011

California is awash with water and its mountains are coated with thick layers of snow. That will mean good news this summer for households, businesses and other water users who have endured years of drought.

Coalition response...The comment by Bureau of Reclamation spokesman Pete Lucero omitted any discussion about new science pointing to causes other than the pumps that are the root of the problem in the Delta. Invasive species, predators, upstream-polluted water and poor habitat conditions in the Delta have all been shown to cause a bigger impact than the pumps. The problem is that the pumps are the only thing bureaucrats have been able to regulate so that has been their primary focus. That’s too bad. Real results could be achieved for both fish and water supply interests if regulators turned their attention to activities that actually worked.

WATER SUPPLY

IID communications upgrades keep tighter tap on water

Story

From IV Press – Saturday, March 26, 2011

Food grows where water flows and Valley farmers depend on Imperial Irrigation District to deliver vital resources in precise quantities and a timely manner.

Feinstein on water allocation: ‘Worst I’ve seen in years’

Statement

From Aquafornia – Saturday, March 26, 2011

The disconnect in federal water allocations is the worst I’ve seen in years. South-of-Delta farmers are getting only 55 percent of contractual amounts, a shocking number when the state snowpack is as high as 165 percent. That is simply unacceptable.

Sacramento River flows increasing; Feather, American rivers scaled back

Story

From Chico Enterprise-Record – Saturday, March 26, 2011

To manage the tremendous amount of water moving from the mountains to the ocean, releases from reservoirs in the state are being managed for flood control.

Daily Reservoir Storage Summary

Report

From DWR – March 27, 2011

For selected reservoirs in Northern and Southern California.

DELTA

Court Tentative Holds that DWR’s Proposed Geological Activities on Delta Properties Would Result in an Unconstitutional Taking of Private Property

Analysis

From Somach Simmons & Dunn – Friday, March 25, 2011

For nearly two years, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) has been seeking access to tens of thousands of acres of privately owned land throughout the Delta region. DWR seeks entry via the precondemnation statutes found at Code of Civil Procedure sections 1245.010 through 1245.060.

Water Crisis: the Delta, the Smelt and Us

Commentary

From City Watch – Friday, March 25, 2011
Living, working, and playing here in Venice gives us environmentalists more in common with the California Delta than it is comfortable to think about. I am no exception.

FISHERIES

Endangered Coho Return to Russian River

Blog

By Dan Bacher

From IndyBay Media – Saturday, March 26, 2011

Fishery biologists from the California Department of Fish and Game (DFG) are reporting the largest number of coho returning to spawn in Sonoma County tributaries of the Russian River in over a decade.

GROUNDWATER

Reisner Redux: Rethinking ‘Cadillac Desert’

Blog

By Michael E. Campana

From WaterWired – Sunday, March 27, 2011

The more I ruminate on Western USA water issues, the more I find myself returning to Marc Reisner’s Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water.

ENVIRONMENT

Farmers and the EPA

Letter

From Fresno Bee – Sunday, March 27, 2011

The March 24 article, "EPA official tours farms," discussed a visit to the Valley by our government's highest ranking EPA administrator. Lisa Jackson, a Cabinet-level member of the Obama administration, got a glimpse at how farmers in the Valley are doing their part to reduce air emissions and conserve precious water.

COURTS

Water hearing ends without decision

Story

From Fresno Bee – Friday, March 25, 2011

A three-day federal court hearing on a request by urban and agricultural water users to halt the April 1 implementation of a plan to protect endangered salmon migrating through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta ended Friday without a decision.

Federal court affirms delta smelt protection

Story

From Fresno Bee - Friday, March 25, 2011

From Modesto Bee – Friday, March 25, 2011

From SF Chronicle – Friday, March 25, 2011

A federal appeals court has ruled that protections for a tiny threatened fish that has cut water deliveries to California farms are constitutional.

SF court rules protection Delta smelt not unconstitutional

Story

From Sacramento Bee – Friday, March 25, 2011

A federal appeals court in San Francisco ruled this morning that protection of the endangered Delta smelt is not unconstitutional.

Court ruling favors U.S. Fish & Wildlife; smelt still protected

Story

From The Record – Saturday, March 26, 2011

Federal protection of the tiny Delta smelt, a three-inch-long fish living in the Delta, will continue.

Revisiting limits (or the lack thereof) to the federal government’s Commerce Clause authority in light of the Ninth Circuit’s delta smelt decision

Blog

By Brandon Middleton

From Pacific Legal Foundation – Sunday, March 27, 2011

A couple of thoughts on this analysis. First, although the Supreme Court in Raich did not use the precise terms "comprehensive economic regulatory scheme," case law demonstrates that the comprehensive regulatory scheme rationale for Commerce Clause regulation requires that the regulatory scheme be economic in nature.

WATER QUALITY

Point/Counterpoint: Ag water runoff debated

Story

From Salinas Californian – Friday, March 25, 2011

On March 17, the California Regional Water Quality Control Board of the Central Coast met but was unable to reach a decision on a staff proposal to regulate the quality of water leaving farms.

CONGRESS

Fixing our water problems just takes common sense

Column

By Rep. Jim Costa

From Bakersfield Californian – Saturday, March 26, 2011

If my time in Congress has taught me one thing, it is that common sense is often overlooked in Washington. Nothing illustrates this better than last week's announcement that in a time of abundant rainfall, above average snowpack in the Sierra, and flooding in our cities, some farmers in the San Joaquin Valley may only receive just a little more than half their share of California's water this year.

Rep. Nunes continues push for more water

Story

From Porterville Recorder – Friday, March 25, 2011

The plentiful rain and snow the state is getting this year is allowing Congressman Devin Nunes, R-21st District, to point out the absurdity of federal water policy and push legislation that will make more water available for Central Valley farmers.

SALTON SEA

Entities move forward in restoring sea

Story

From IV Press – Saturday, March 26, 2011

A nudge to the state to produce a Salton Sea restoration plan is gathering steam from another entity that supports the Imperial Irrigation District’s position for action now.

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