
Governor Gavin Newsom today reappointed three of Governor Jerry Brown's most controversial, least popular and most environmentally questionable appointees - Karla Nemeth, Cindy Messer and Chuck Bonham - after in February refusing to reappoint Brown's best appointee, Felicia Marcus, as Chair of the State Water Resources Control Board.
He reappointed these three officials in spite of growing opposition to their reappointment by fishermen, conservationists and environmental justice advocates. He reappointed Nemeth as Department of Water Resources Director, Messer as DWR Chief Deputy Director and Bonham as California Department of Fish and Wildlife Director.
The Governor's Office stated, "Governor Gavin Newsom today announced several appointments, including the reappointment of several of the state’s top water policy officials at the California Department of Water Resources and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which are critical to build the Administration’s water resilience portfolio in the coming months, as directed by the Governor’s executive order, and to advance Voluntary Agreements regarding water management for the Sacramento and San Joaquin river systems."
Fishermen, Tribal leaders, conservationists and environmental justice advocates must wake up and see what Newsom is really doing. I have been the voice in the wilderness on Newsom's questionable appointments and actions to date - and other people must pull the blinders off their eyes and acknowledge that Newsom is just a slicker version of Governor Jerry Brown.
Under Newson, Nemeth, Messer and Bonham, the environmentally destructive Delta Tunnel is still on the table as part of Newsom's "water portfolio." It is only the twin tunnels that the Governor has abandoned.
Newsom is promoting the "voluntary agreements" on the San Joaquin River that will result in much less water than the increased flows that would be provided for salmon, steelhead and other fish by the State Water Resources Control Board's decision in December 2018.
And the Delta smelt continues to move closer and closer to extinction, with zero smelt reported in the CDFW's fall 2018 midwater trawl survey.