
A coalition of 27 organizations, including Indian Tribes, fishing groups, and environmental organizations, sent a letter to Jim Watson of the Sites Project Authority on March 17 indicating their concerns about the detrimental impacts that water diversions from the controversial Sites Reservoir Project pose to salmon and water quality.
The project is backed by Rep. John Garamendi, D-Walnut Creek, who introduced the Sites Reservoir Project Act to provide federal support for the construction of Sites Reservoir and related water infrastructure in Colusa and Glenn Counties. Congressman Doug LaMalfa, R-CA, is the bill’s original cosponsor.
“Construction of Sites Reservoir would bring California closer to achieving a drought-resilient water system. Our state needs to make forward-looking investments to meet its future water supply needs, and Sites will benefit farmers, precious ecosystems, and our communities,” said Congressman Garamendi. “I am proud to sponsor the bipartisan Sites Reservoir Project Act, building upon the nearly $1.2 billion in public funding for the project secured to date.”
Likewise, Congressman Doug LaMalfa said: “Water storage projects, such as Sites Reservoir, are absolutely critical to securing the future of our state’s water supply. It’s important that we have the infrastructure to save more water during wet years so we can prepare for the dry ones California sees all too often. Sites is the most effective project in the state, providing more storage per dollar invested than any other proposed project. I’m proud of this bipartisan effort and will continue to fight to ensure this much-needed project moves forward.”
The Sites project, a proposed off-stream storage reservoir near Maxwell, would store water pumped from the Sacramento River and the Trinity River, a major tributary to the Klamath River that is also diverted to the Sacramento via a tunnel through the Trinity Mountains between Trinity Reservoir and Whiskeytown Reservoir.
Garamendi said Sites Reservoir would provide 1.8 million acre-feet of off-stream water storage capacity for California and “help local communities prepare for