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Election 2010


Sep 03, 2010
An Update On La Nina
much drier, warmer-than-normal weather in the Southwest ... more

Sep 02, 2010
Irrigation Decisions Often Influenced By Outside Factors
irrigation decisions - when and how much water to apply to a crop - are largely influenced by factors outside of the control of the farmer. ... more

Sep 02, 2010
ACWA Bill Goes To Governor
SB 1284 (Ducheny), sponsored by ACWA, addresses high penalties for water agencies and others for failing to report there was no wastewater discharge ... more
Top Story

Kill the Fall Run Salmon, Argue Corporate Attorneys

Feb 04, 2010

Agribusiness in court to seize Sacramento water from fish and fishermen

Yesterday (Feb. 2), Westlands Water District - California's largest and most politically powerful agribusiness group - asked a federal judge to block a federal salmon restoration plan that protects salmon and other fish in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

Earthjustice attorneys, who won a court order in 2008 putting the restoration plan in place, were there to defend it. Westland's move could put the survival of the river's salmon - and California and Oregon's multi-billion dollar commercial and recreational salmon fishing industry - on the line. The judge will announce his decision next
week.

Westlands wants to end restrictions on the operation of huge delta water pumps and canals from February through
May, when baby salmon migrate from the Sacramento River to the ocean.

The pumps move massive volumes of fresh water from the Delta to farms and cities to the south, and the restrictions cut water user supplies by roughly 5 to 7 percent. These modest pumping restrictions may increase baby salmon survival by at least 50 percent.

Past pumping during the baby salmon migration is known to have killed large numbers of threatened salmon as well as non- threatened, commercially valuable fall-run chinook salmon. Sacramento River fall-run chinook, commonly known as king salmon, form the backbone of Oregon and California's salmon fishing industry.

Unfortunately, before the current salmon restoration plan was put in place, runaway pumping led to the catastrophic collapse of the Sacramento's once mighty king salmon run, two years of closed fishing in two states, hundreds of
millions in lost income, and tens of thousands of lost jobs.

But yesterday, Westland's showed that they couldn't care less if the Sacramento's salmon runs disappear, along with the thousands of fishing families who depend upon them. According to the Fresno Bee, attorneys for Westlands argued in part that the pumping restrictions should be thrown out because they protect far more fall-run salmon than the much smaller numbers of threatened salmon.

Unfortunately Westlands, southern California water speculators, and their Congressional representatives have refused to acknowledge the economic damage done to Oregon and California's multi-billion dollar sport and commercial salmon fishery caused by the excessive water withdrawals from the Delta. Though they also tried yesterday to belittle clear evidence that Delta water withdrawals have exceeded the ecological carrying capacity of the Delta, let's hope that the judge disagrees.
 

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Sep 04, 2010
State Should Help Clean Up Sacramento
the costs of fixing this (which were said to be $10 a month on a typical bill just a few weeks ago) may be small in relation to the benefits ... more

Sep 04, 2010
Sacramento Needs To Suck It Up
Be glad that you have a large customer base to spread out the cost ... more

Sep 03, 2010
Green Backlash
What is clear in California is that partisan ideologies and cultish environmentalism have replaced prudent science ... more
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