
As I predicted on election night, the President Donald Trump and Governor Jerry Brown administrations have apparently made a deal to fast-track Brown’s legacy project, the Delta Tunnels, considered by opponents to be the most environmentally destructive public works project in California history.
The Trump administration on June 26 released a no-jeopardy finding on the biological assessment to build the tunnels, claiming that the California WaterFix will not jeopardize threatened or endangered species or adversely modify their critical habitat, drawing harsh criticism from independent scientists, fishing groups, conservation organizations and other Delta advocates.
On a teleconference call for reporters, state and federal officials hailed the release of the controversial document as a milestone in the Brown administration’s campaign to build the giant twin tunnels under the Delta.
The fish and water agency officials on the call included Paul Souza, Pacific Southwest Regional Director for US FWS; Barry Thom, West Coast Regional Administrator for NOAA Fisheries; David Murillo, Regional Director for Bureau of Reclamation Mid-Pacific Region; and Michelle Banonis, Assistant Chief Deputy Director at the California Department of Water Resources.
"Our assessment of Water Fix is now final," said Souza. “It was reviewed in detail by a panel of independent scientists, and represents the culmination of a tremendous effort by our own scientists. I really want to acknowledge all of the work that our team put into this effort. We have concluded that Water Fix will not jeopardize threatened or endangered species or adversely modify their critical habitat."
Souza said NOAA Fisheries has documented some impacts from construction and has worked with the DWR and Reclamation to develop a plan to restore habitat, to minimize and mitigate those impacts.
“Today does mark a milestone in the completion of our biological opinions, but it’s important to recognize that opinions really are technical assessments of projects themselves, and the actual decision to move forward with California Water Fix will be made at some future time by the state of California and the Bureau of Reclamation,” Souza concluded.
Showing the growing collaboration between the Brown and Trump administrations on water and other environmental issues,