President Donald Trump waded into the Western water wars Friday, giving a boost to embattled Republican congressmen with a presidential memorandum
containing deadlines for federal regulators to finish evaluating the
environmental impacts of major water projects in California and the
Pacific Northwest.
Trump signed the memo
in Arizona with four California congressmen, including Republican Rep.
Jeff Denham, who represents the northern San Joaquin Valley and is in a
tight race with Josh Harder, a business teacher at Modesto Junior
College. Other representatives who were at the signing include
Republicans David Valadao, who represents the southern half of the
Central Valley, Devin Nunes, whose district also includes the San
Joaquin Valley, and Tom McClintock, whose district includes all or part
of 10 counties stretching from Placer in the north to Fresno in the
south.
Those lawmakers have blasted what critics are calling a “water grab”
by the California State Water Resources Control Board to re-allocate
water flowing through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to help sustain
endangered fish species and restore the Bay-Delta ecosystem. But that
would mean less water for farmers in the state’s Central Valley, who
have been sharply critical of the plan.
“This will move things along at a record clip,” Trump said at the
memo signing. “And you’ll have a lot of water," he added, speaking to
the congressmen standing by his side. "I hope you’ll enjoy the water
you’ll have.” Trump also praised the lawmakers as "tremendous people."
The administration said in a “fact sheet” that “expedited regulatory
processes will provide certainty for California farmers who need more
water to restore farmlands crippled by drought and regulation.”
Specifically, the memo directs the Fish and Wildlife Service and
National Marine Fisheries Service to complete their reviews of the
impact of flows from the Central Valley Project and the California State
Water Project by June 15. The memo also directs FWS and NMFS to
complete their reviews of the Klamath Irrigation Project by August 2019,
and their reviews of the Federal Columbia River System by 2020.
The memo also would require the Interior and Commerce departments to
work together to identify an official to coordinate the departments’
environmental reviews for each project.
Each official would then identify “regulations and procedures that
potentially burden the project and develop a proposed plan … to
appropriately suspend, revise, or rescind any regulations or procedures
that unduly burden the project beyond the degree necessary to protect
the public interest or otherwise comply with the law,” the memo said.
“From my perspective, today’s action might be the most significant action taken by a president on Western water in my lifetime,” Deputy Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt said on a call with reporters before the signing.
In a statement,
Denham, Valadao, McClintock and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy,
another Californian, hailed the president’s memo, calling it “an immense
relief for the farmers and families of the San Joaquin Valley and
communities across California.”
“Due to the actions of environmental extremists and overzealous
bureaucrats, California has been suffering from a years-long water
crisis that has wreaked havoc in Central Valley farming communities that
feed tens of millions of Americans,” they said. “Productive land has
gone fallow and farmworkers have lost their jobs. Communities across
California have also been devastated as senseless government regulations
have mandated that billions of gallons of water be flushed out to the
ocean and wasted.
“Now, with this executive action, there is a strict timetable for
rewriting the biological opinions that lie at the root of the water
crisis,” the congressmen said. “This executive action also prioritizes
building critical projects to expand water storage in our state so that
we can store more water during wet years for use in dry years.”
But Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta, said that
“the real water grab is what Congressman Denham is inflicting on the
San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary.” She said Denham “is leading the charge
to interfere with state rights to oversee and operate its water
delivery systems, by pushing President Trump for federal intervention in
the Water Quality Plan for the Bay-Delta currently before the State
Water Resources Control Board. In the process, he is splitting his own
district, forgetting what is important to his constituents in San
Joaquin County – a healthy and restored Delta.”
For more news, go to www.Agri-Pulse.com
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