
As the Winnemem Wintu Tribe proceeded on their historic 300-mile long Run4Salmon from Vallejo to the McCloud River, Governor Jerry Brown called for the expediting of a river flow agreement in order to build his Delta Tunnels to export more water to corporate agribusiness interests and Southern California water agencies.
In his September 19, 2016 letter to Chair Felicia Marcus of the State Water Resources Control Board, Governor Brown urged the Board and California Natural Resources Agency officials to fast-track a comprehensive agreement on environmental flows in both the San Joaquin and Sacramento River Basins.
State Water Board staff recently released a draft proposal to update minimum flow standards for the Lower San Joaquin River to the Delta, wrote Brown. This is only one part of the information needed. To provide a complete picture of the needs in the Delta, I urge the Board to move quickly to complete the remainder of their analysis on the Sacramento River Basin.
Delay may be too costly, said Brown. The need to improve our aquatic ecosystems is urgent. Many communities are paralyzed and fearful of a lengthy and unpredictable regulatory process. Voluntary agreements in which water rights holders improve stream flows and restore habitat could offer a faster, less contentious and more durable outcome.
Brown said he had directed departments in the Natural Resources Agency to explore the potential for this comprehensive agreement and to report back to him by the end of October with their assessment and a schedule that enables California to start improving water quality in the Delta and its tributaries beginning in 2017.
In a statement, Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta, criticized the Governor’s call to fast-track the flow agreements as disingenuous at best.
While Restore the Delta has pushed for a comprehensive update to the Delta water quality plan for both the San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers before moving forward with any further processes for permitting the Delta Tunnels, Governor Brown’s request to the State Water Resources Control Board to now fast track flow agreements is disingenuous at best, said Barrigan-Parrilla. The water needed to fill the tunnels will have to come from the watersheds of both rivers upstream of the Delta.