
SACRAMENTO – While Jerry Brown has been a genius at manipulating the media to portray him as a green governor and the state as the nation’s green leader, the regulators have in fact been captured by the regulated in California. This is particularly true when it comes to water and environmental policies.
In the latest example of regulatory capture, employment records obtained from a recent Public Records Act request reveal that Karla Nemeth, Governor Jerry Brown’s controversial choice to head the Department of Water Resources (DWR), may have a conflict of interest that compromises her ability to objectively lead an agency tasked with managing the state’s massive water infrastructure on behalf of all Californians, according to a news release from Assemblymember Jim Frazier (D-Discovery Bay).
The documents suggest Nemeth was being paid by DWR and the Natural Resources Agency earlier in the decade while an employee of the Metropolitan Water District of California of Southern California (MWD) to shape water policy in favor of building the controversial tunnels project that threatens to destroy the Delta’s ecosystems. MWD has been the leading proponent for building the tunnels, according to Frazier.
As co-chair of the Legislature’s Delta Caucus and as a member and past chair of the Assembly Accountability & Administrative Review Committee, I am deeply concerned that the newly appointed director may have received compensation from MWD to work on promoting the Bay Delta Conservation Plan while also working for the Natural Resources Agency and DWR, said Assemblymember Frazier, who represents the 11th District, encompassing much of the Delta region.
For nearly a decade, Ms. Nemeth’s career focus has been on the past variants of the disastrous tunnel plans. This raises a huge red flag about her ability to prioritize the more pressing aspects of her role at DWR outside of her tunnel vision.
Management of an agency tasked with protecting and maintaining the state’s vast water resources, storage and delivery infrastructure is too important to be controlled by a director whose sole focus and career has been about ramming the catastrophic tunnels through the regulatory process on behalf of the governor and MWD, Frazier added. Delta residents deserve better. It does not serve California.