Jump-started water pumps could be slowed down again

By: GIG CONAUGHTON - Staff Writer | Thursday, June 21, 2007 1:51 AM PDT

An environmental group has mounted a new legal challenge over an endangered fish that could once again slow the massive Northern California water pumps that deliver two-thirds of Southern California's water.

The latest legal challenge, which comes just as the state started to ramp the pumping stations back up after a May 31 shutdown, could hurt all Californians, because regional water officials have already started dipping into backup water storage.

Any lengthy slowdown of the pumps would mean taking more water out of storage, which, if combined with another dry year in California, could lead to mandatory water cuts for some farmers.

Officials from the Natural Resources Defense Council said Wednesday that they have petitioned U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Wanger to issue a temporary restraining order that could slow the massive State Water Project pumps back to a trickle in order to protect an endangered fish, the delta smelt. Wanger is scheduled to hear the petition Friday.

Water officials around the state, meanwhile, said they were stunned when the state abruptly shut down the pumps May 31 because they were killing delta smelt, the two- to three-inch fish that lives only in Northern California's Sacramento-San Joaquin bay delta. The delta is the fragile heart of California's State Water Project.

Regional and local officials had mixed reactions Wednesday to the news of the latest attempt to slow down the pumps.

Officials from Southern California's main water supplier, the Los Angeles-based Metropolitan Water District, said again that any lengthy shutdown or slowdown of the State Water Project pumps would hurt regional supplies. But 18-month backup supplies were nearly full, officials said, adding that they would wait until Friday's potential ruling to comment further.

San Diego County agriculture officials said Wednesday that there was a growing sense of resignation among local fruit tree and avocado growers, who would be the first to suffer mandatory water cuts if they were ordered this summer or in 2008.

Some growers, particularly San Diego County's $300 million avocado and citrus industry, buy "interruptible" agriculture water at much cheaper rates, with the condition that they would take 30 percent cuts before anyone else if water rationing became necessary.

Eric Larson, executive director of the San Diego County Farm Bureau, said local agriculture officials on Tuesday night got word of the latest legal challenge and possible pump slowdown.

Although there has been no mention of any mandatory water cuts by Metropolitan, Larson said that tree growers -- citrus and avocado -- were wary.

The bay delta's legal and regulatory problems have only worsened a bleak California water picture. Southern California is in the midst of a severe single-year drought. The Colorado River -- which, along with the State Water Project, is Southern California's main source of imported water -- is in its eighth year of drought. And, before the pump shutdown, the State Water Project had suffered a bleak winter snow pack that cut supplies to 60 percent.

Larson said even if the latest challenge doesn't push the system to the brink, growers feel that another dry year in Northern California could do it in 2008.

He said most growers would probably deal with any water cuts by taking 30 percent of their trees out of production, rather than by trying to stretch 30 percent less water over 100 percent of their groves.

"There's a mood of resignation," Larson said. "Imagine if your boss walks in and says your income is going to be slashed by 30 percent, but your house payment is going to stay the same, and your car payment is going to stay the same."

Kate Poole, an attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said Wednesday that the group filed its lawsuit to slow down the bay-delta pumps because state operators -- in their desire to ramp the pumps back up and jump-start water deliveries -- have ignored biologists' recommendations to slow down because smelt were still being killed.

State officials shut down the pumps May 31, hoping the endangered fish would migrate away from the pumps to another portion of the bay delta.

The state restarted limited pumping June 10 and have slowly ramped back up to near-normal speed.

Metropolitan General Manager Jeff Kightlinger said when the pumps were shut down last month that Metropolitan had enough stored water to last the region 18 months or so. Metropolitan delivers water to nearly 18 million Southern Californians in six counties, including San Diego.

But Kightlinger also said that if the shutdown lasted longer than 10 to 12 days, Southern California could lose some of its summer water allotment because there would not be enough days left in the year left to deliver the entire supply. And, he said, if the shutdown lasted a month, Metropolitan could look at cutting water supplies -- starting with growers.

Congress members from California are pushing for governmental solutions to the delta pumping problems.

U.S. Rep. Brian Bilbray, R-Solana Beach -- who signed a congressional delegation letter last week urging Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and federal officials to restart the bay-delta pumps -- said the new potential slowdown should cause a cry for change.

Schwarzenegger and state legislators have started lobbying to resurrect the idea of a peripheral canal that was rejected by Northern California voters in the 1980s.

"This is exactly why so many of us were saying the peripheral canal was the way to go in 1982," Bilbray said. "We're talking about 50 percent of our water in San Diego. This is no little issue."

The canal would be built around the fragile bay delta to continue delivering Northern California rainfall and snow melt to Southern California, without damaging the bay delta or its inhabitants.

-- Contact staff writer Gig Conaughton at (760) 739-6696 or gconaughton@nctimes.com.

6 comment(s)[-]Go to Top

Stupid legislature wrote on Jun 21, 2007 2:32 AM:They pass hundreds of bills they should not pass, but projects that are extremely important gets no action. The canal around the bay-delta is extremly important. The millions of people in southern Califoria having adequate water is more important than those fish. But the fish can be protected anyway if the canal is built. Also the whole bay-delta all the way to Sacramento and Stockton is not very much above sea level. If the ocean were to rise a few feet and there was an earthquake on the several major earthquake faults offshore the bay-delta could be flooded with saly water. SO BUILD THE CANAL AND DO IT NOW!

Pat wrote on Jun 21, 2007 6:38 AM:One only has to look at the damage done to Mono lake (Inyo county) due to the pumping to see how important it is to stop the pumping and allow the land to recover from decades of abuse by LA water hogs.

Jeff wrote on Jun 21, 2007 8:55 AM:Obviously, people are important, and I want water for drinking and agriculture, but I think it's just plain evil to continue to wipe out animals that God put on this Earth just so we can have golf courses, enormous decorative fountains, sprinklers that come on during the rain or in the middle of hot days, people hosing off their sidewalks during drought conditions, unused swimming pools without covers losing millions of gallons of water to evaporation each year, water purifiers that waste 2 gallons of water for each gallon that they purify, overhead irrigation being used where drip irrigation will suffice, unfixed dripping faucets and leaking pipes, and and all of the other uncaring and wasteful ways that we use water. We can't go on using water in our business-as-usual fashion and then turn our backs when someone points out that we are destroying, or at least foolishly damaging this world over which God gave us dominion. For as long as we have this dominion, we should attempt to show the Creator that we tried to do the right thing for all people and all living things. If a species time is up, it's up -- but a species' time should not be up because we don't care to trouble ourselves to learn how to operate within the parameters of reality. The reality is this -- we can quit wasting as much water as we waste. If we do, things will be better, even if not perfect, for everyone.

GFN wrote on Jun 21, 2007 10:02 AM:Stupid legislature is correct, however, the State is kind of in a bind. It has a structural deficit of over $5 billion a year and has obligated itself to over $100 billion of debt in the last few years. Stupid local governments have allowed home building in flood plains and in areas where levees are not adequate enough to protect the homes if any problems occur; and there are obviously too many people for the amount of water the State has, or could generate, if any problems occur...as they have. Throughout History, "Greedy man" exceeds his limits and creates problems that cause hardships on the environment and/or on his lifestyle; it has ALWAYS been this way and there is no reason to expect anything different today. The final result; suffering by someone and/or something happens and it appears our suffering is about to be significantly upgraded, and could become catastrophic if a water shortage occurs...even a short-term one. Not much changes, does it greedy man?

Upside Down Thinking wrote on Jun 21, 2007 1:30 PM:It never ceases to amaze that San Diego Pols like Bilbray seem to believe all their problems are solved if they can only build a bigger, faster even more devastating way to drain NorCal in order to continue to devastate SoCal deserts/coasts with millions and millions TOO MANY people, development, freeways, pavement, cars, trash, domestic animals. It is a disgusting way to go, folks. Good Luck!

Hairy wrote on Jun 21, 2007 7:51 PM:Ha Ha! and shakes his head at the foolishness all around!

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