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Washington, DC – The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee today
approved a measure sponsored by U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein and
Barbara Boxer (both D-Calif.) to help ease the effects of severe drought
in the Central Valley by allowing new voluntary water transfers of
roughly 250,000 to 300,000 acre-feet of water, depending on rainfall
that year, according to the Bureau of Reclamation. The measure was
approved as part of a larger package of bills pending before the
Committee.
The Feinstein-Boxer legislation (S.1759) approved by the Committee
would grant new authority to the Bureau of Reclamation to approve water
transfers between sellers and buyers in the San Joaquin Valley. The
measure also would streamline environmental reviews for Central Valley
water transfers by ensuring that they occur on a programmatic basis,
instead of project-by-project basis as is current practice. The measure
should reduce unnecessary delays in water transfers at a time when
Central Valley farmers have been hard hit by a three-year drought.
A similar but narrower provision to temporarily authorize Central
Valley water transfers up of to 80,000 acre-feet of between Central
Valley Project divisions was included in the enacted Fiscal Year 2010
Energy & Water appropriations bill.
“Today’s Committee action brings us one step closer to moving more
water to the most hard-hit Central Valley communities. This timely and
sensible legislation will grant the Bureau of Reclamation new authority
to allow farmers to transfer up to 250,000 to 300,000 acre-feet of water
on an expedited basis, while ensuring that these transfers comply with
all federal and state law,” Senator Feinstein said. “I’d like to thank
Chairmen Bingaman and Stabenow for moving this legislation quickly
through the Committee process. It is my hope that the bill will be
considered by the full Senate as soon as possible.”
Senator Boxer said, “I am so pleased that the Energy Committee passed
this important legislation to permanently allow for more transfers in
California’s San Joaquin Valley and speed the transfer process. This is
about getting water where it is needed, when it is needed. I look
forward to working with my colleagues to make sure this much-needed bill
becomes law.”
Companion legislation has been sponsored in the House by
Representatives Costa and Cardoza (both D-Calif.).
Specifically, the measure would:
- Establish new parameters for San Joaquin Valley water
transfers that can be authorized by the Bureau of Reclamation.
Previously, the Bureau of Reclamation would not approve water
transfers if it was determined that the seller with water to sell
could have used the water (i.e., for irrigation or groundwater
storage purposes), even if the transfer had no negative impact on
the environment. The legislation would explicitly grant the Bureau
the authority to approve these types of transfers in the San Joaquin
Valley as long as they comply with all federal and state law.
- The Bureau of Reclamation estimates that this section of the
bill could yield up to 100,000 or 150,000 acre-feet of water
transfers per year.
- Direct the Interior Department to streamline the
environmental reviews for water transfers from the Sacramento Valley
to the San Joaquin Valley by ensuring that they occur on a
programmatic basis rather than on a project-by-project basis, which
is the current practice. This would allow the Bureau of
Reclamation to approve North-South water transfers more promptly and
ensure that the environment and species are protected sufficiently.
- The Bureau of Reclamation and Central Valley water users
estimate that this section of the bill could yield up to 150,000 to
200,000 acre-feet of water transfers per year.
- Direct the Bureau of Reclamation to analyze existing
transfers and prepare recommendations on whether there are other
ways to facilitate future Central Valley transfers more efficiently.
This would include transfers from north to south and from east to
west, as well as between California state and federal projects. The
Bureau will also report on the results of this legislation.
The bill is supported by a number of water users across the Central
Valley and environmental groups, including:
- Friant Water Users Authority
- San Joaquin River Exchange Contractors Authority
- Delta-Mendota Canal Authority
- Westlands Water District
- Metropolitan Water District
- Glen Colusa Irrigation District
- Northern California Water Association
- Banta-Carbona Irrigation District
- Tehama-Colusa Canal Authority
- Association of California Water Agencies
- Placer County Water Agency
- Conaway Preservation Group
- Reclamation District 2035
- San Luis Water District
- The Nature Conservancy
Contact:
Sally Spener
915-832-4175
sallyspener@ibwc.gov |