This just in … Breaking Delta tunnels news: DWR reaches agreement with Contra Costa Water District re: California WaterFix; Interest group coalition asks for dismissal of Cal Water Fix petition; SJTA supports motion to disqualify Marcus and Doduc

DWR Reaches Agreement with Contra Costa Water District to Address Concerns Related to California WaterFix

From the Department of Water Resources:

NEW_DWR_LOGO_14inchThe California Department of Water Resources announced today an agreement with the Contra Costa Water District related to potential water quality impacts to its water supply in the event California WaterFix is built.

Under the agreement, when California WaterFix becomes operational, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) would deliver a portion of the district’s water supply from a new source on the Sacramento River.  In return, the Contra Costa Water District (CCWD) agrees to withdraw a pending protest over California WaterFix and not sue DWR over the project.

Although California WaterFix would be operated to meet all water quality standards established by the State Water Resources Control Board, the agreement compensates CCWD for a potential increase in salinity at its Delta water supply intakes that does not exceed state standards.

“When and where possible,” said DWR Director Mark W. Cowin, “we have modified our proposed project to avoid or minimize potential negative effects on local communities, others who depend upon the Delta for water supplies, and fish and wildlife.”

“We’re pleased to announce this agreement to resolve concerns of the Contra Costa Water District and avoid unnecessary litigation.  We’ll continue to listen to concerns, adjust the proposed project where possible, and commit to agreements to address concerns.”

CCWD General Manager Jerry Brown said, “We appreciate that the state has taken the time to sit down with CCWD to better understand our unique issues and has worked with us to resolve our water quality and supply concerns.  We are confident that this is an iron-clad insurance policy to protect our customers.  We wouldn’t have reached agreement otherwise.”

California WaterFix is a major project proposed by DWR and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation now in the environmental review stage.  It involves construction of three new intakes along the Sacramento River in the north Delta near Hood.  The purpose of California WaterFix is to reduce the reliance of California’s two biggest water projects on two existing pumping plants in the south Delta that were built 49 and 65 years ago.

These pumping plants pull south and central Delta channels in unnatural directions potentially harmful to fish.  As a result, the water projects that supply two-thirds of California’s population and a third of its farmland are often restricted from operating, even when flows into the Delta run high.  With new Sacramento River intakes connected by 40-mile-long tunnels to the existing pumping plants, California WaterFix would protect fish against reverse flows caused by pumping and give operators of the State Water Project (SWP) and Central Valley Project (CVP) more opportunities to capture and store water at times of peak flow.

Modeling shows that the operation of new intakes on the Sacramento River, as proposed by California WaterFix, could at times change water quality in the south Delta near four intakes that CCWD uses to help supply its 500,000 customers.  Those intakes are in the west Delta, at Mallard Slough near Pittsburg, and in the south Delta, at Rock Slough near Oakley and Old River and Victoria Canal near Victoria Island.  All of CCWD’s intakes are subject to variations in water quality caused by salinity intrusion, Delta hydrodynamics, and discharges into the Delta and its tributary streams.

Under the agreement announced today, DWR would provide from the Sacramento River some of the water allowed for under the CCWD’s existing water rights and contracts, including with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

The agreement describes several options for providing CCWD water via the Sacramento River:

  • Use the Sacramento River intake operated by the East Bay Municipal Utility District near Freeport, after CCWD reaches agreement with EBMUD;
  • Build a connection between the proposed California WaterFix tunnels and a CCWD pipeline where the conveyance systems would cross in the south Delta; or
  • Build a short pipeline from Clifton Court Forebay in the south Delta under Victoria Island to connect with a CCWD pipeline.

The costs of moving the water through the EBMUD facility or building an intertie would be borne by the public water districts paying the costs of California WaterFix.  These districts in the Santa Clara Valley, East Bay, San Joaquin Valley, and Southern California take delivery of water from the SWP and CVP.

Under the agreement, DWR would provide 30,000 acre-feet of water from the Sacramento River to CCWD the first year that California WaterFix is operational.  In each subsequent year, the volume of water to be delivered under the agreement would be determined by a formula tied to the ratio of water diverted from the Sacramento River through the three new intakes of California WaterFix.  The annual quantity of water to be conveyed under the agreement is expected to range between 2,000 acre-feet and 50,000 acre-feet.  For the sake of comparison, CCWD has a federal contract for 195,000 acre-feet per year.

The purpose of the agreement is to address CCWD concerns that construction of California WaterFix could damage district facilities on and near Victoria Island and that operation of the project could cause salinity, algae and other contaminants to increase at CCWD’s intakes.

Modeling of the potential water quality impacts of California WaterFix finds that the construction, operation and maintenance of the proposed conveyance facilities would not result in any significant impacts on Delta water quality for any beneficial uses.  Mitigation for California WaterFix includes some tidal restoration that could result in minimal increases in methylmercury levels at locations nearest to the restoration areas.

The agreement guarantees CCWD that a certain portion of its supply will come from an upstream intake where water is generally less salty than the district’s supply.  It also avoids litigation over potential water quality effects based on modeling results and ends a protest filed by the CCWD with the State Water Board.  The State Water Board soon will begin hearings on an application by DWR and Reclamation to add three new California WaterFix points of diversion to the water rights of the SWP and CVP.

In a February ruling on how it would conducts its hearings, the State Water Board encouraged those concerned about the potential effects of California WaterFix to strike settlements outside of the Water Board hearing process to resolve potential issues.

“We’d like to take the same practical, solution-oriented approach with other parties as we’ve taken with CCWD,” said Director Cowin.  “We look forward to more such agreements as we work to modernize our water projects in the Delta.”

A summary of the agreement can be found here: CCWD-DWR Agreement Summary

A copy of the agreement can be found here: CCWD-DWR   Agreement

Read Contra Costa Water District’s press release here: Contra Costa Water District Signs Agreement with Department of Water Resources

Interest group coalition asks for dismissal of California Water Fix petition

From the Planning & Conservation League, CSPA, Restore the Delta, C-WIN and many others:

Dear Hearing Officers and Board Hearing Staff:

We write to request that the State Water Resources Control Board dismiss the California WaterFix Change Petition. Yesterday, Petitioners requested for the second time that the proceedings be delayed because they are not ready to present their case. In particular, they are not ready to submit a complete application that describes the changes proposed, or to describe potential impacts of the Project on water rights and fish and wildlife impacts.

Water Code sections 1701.1 and 1701.2 and Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations section 794 (among other provisions) describe the contents of a complete change petition. The Hearing Officers previously acknowledged that the Petition was incomplete, but continued with the hearing process with the expectation that the Petition would be subsequently completed, first by March 1st, and then by March 30th. Now Petitioners are unable to meet the current deadline and are again asking for more time. Each time the Hearing Officers accommodate the Petitioners delay requests with more time, more Board staff and protestant time and financial resources are taken, and hundreds of people’s schedules are impacted. We believe there are much better uses of everyone’s time, such as spending the necessary time to update the Bay-Delta Water Quality Control Plan to adequately protect current beneficial uses.

Among other deficiencies, the Change Petition: (1) does not adequately describe the changes sought; (2) fails to attempt to demonstrate a reasonable likelihood that the change will not injure any other legal user of water; and (3) fails to describe the extent of impacts to fish and wildlife. As a result of these and other deficiencies, the full nature and extent of injuries to legal users of water and significant adverse impacts to fish and wildlife uses have not been identified and analyzed.

Thus, we respectfully request that the Hearing Officers dismiss the Petition until a complete petition, is submitted pursuant to Water Code section 1701.2 and Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations section 794, among other requirements.

Sincerely,
Jonas Minton
Planning and Conservation League

Bill Jennings
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance

Colin Bailey
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water

Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla
Restore the Delta

Conner Everts
Environmental Water Caucus

Osha Meserve
Local Agencies of the North Delta

Tim Stroshane
Restore the Delta

E. Robert Wright
Friends of the River

Carolee Krieger
California Water Impact Network

Kyle Jones
Sierra Club California

Read a copy of the letter here:  Coalition Request to Dismiss Petition

San Joaquin Tributaries Authority joins call to disqualify Chair Felicia Marcus and Tam Doduc from California Water Fix proceedings

From the San Joaquin Tributaries Authority:

The San Joaquin Tributaries Authority supports the motion of the San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority (SLDMA) seeking disqualification of Hearing Officers Felicia Marcus and Tam Doduc.  In addition, the SJTA has been contemplating, for some time, the possibility of filing its own motion seeking the recusal of Chair Marcus on grounds other than those identified by the SLDMWA in it’s own motion for disqualification.

The primary basis for such a motion by the SJTA would be that Chair Marcus’ prior tenure as Western Director of the [Natural] Resources Defense Council (NRDC), from November 2008 through May of 2012, could create an appearance of bias an impartiality in the proceedings related to the California Water Fix change petitions.  During the time that Chair Marcus served as the Western Director of the NRDC, the organization regularly advocated for higher flows in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River/San Francisco Bay Delta Estuary, and explicitly registered support with the legislature for such a position with respect to the 2009 Delta Reform Act, the very law requiring the inclusion of “appropriate Delta flow criteria” in an approval of the Water Fix change petitions.  The SJTA believes that the pronouncements by the co-hearing officers on the issue of appropriate Delta flow criteria in the recent pre-hearing ruling of February 11, 2016 might lend significant support to such a motion.

In addition, the SJTA requests a stay of the Water Fix proceedings until the State WAter Resources Control Board resolves this important issue.  The SJTA believes that the proper resolution of this issue prior to commencement of the proceedings will conserve the time and resources of the Board, the petitioners, and all parties involved.  If a court ultimately determines that the Co-Hearing Officers should have recused themselves and did not, the Board’s decision could be set aside by the Superior Court. …

This issue then raises several concerns.  If the two haring officers recuse themselves, then the three remaining members of the Board will need to vote unanimously in order to approve the change petition. …

The SJTA previously requested in its opening brief that the entire Board hear the petition, as the Waer Fix project is the most important water right proceeding in the State in the last 30 years.  This may not occur.  The Board should explore alternatives that will preserve the petitioners’ and participants’ rights to a fair hearing, eliminate any hint of tainted proceedings, and ensure expeditious resolution of this matter.  The SJTA suggest that it may be prudent and sensible, at this point, to refer this matter to an administrative law judge.

Whether or not the Co-Hearing Officers recuse themselves, the Board should, at a minimum, stay the proceedings so that this important issue can be resoled by recusal, denial of recusal, or by Writ of Mandate to the Superior Court.

Very truly yours,

Tim O’Laughlin

Continue reading here:  SJTA Letter to State Board

——————————————–

Sign up for daily email service and you’ll always be one of the first to know!

  • Sign up for daily emails and get all the Notebook’s aggregated and original water news content delivered to your email box by 9AM. Breaking news alerts like this one, too. Sign me up!

keeping watchMaven’s Notebook
constantly watching over the world of California water