[env-trinity] Federal Judge Says: Let the San Joaquin Flow

Daniel Bacher danielbacher at hotmail.com
Wed Sep 1 09:12:22 PDT 2004


Federal Judge Says: Let The San Joaquin Flow!

by Dan Bacher

After 15 years of litigation, fish advocates and environmental groups won a 
huge legal victory on August 27 when a federal court judge ruled that the 
Bureau of Reclamation illegally dried up the San Joaquin River when Friant 
Dam was built in the 1940’s.

The ruling means that the bureau will have to release water from Friant Dam 
near Fresno for the first time in 55 years, according to the NRDC (Natural 
Resources Defense Council), the lead plaintiff in a broad coalition of 
fishing and environmental groups.

“There can be no genuine dispute that many miles of the San Joaquin River 
are now entirely dry, except during extremely wet periods, and that the 
historic fish populations have been destroyed,” said Judge Lawrence Karlton 
of the Eastern Federal District Court in his opinion.

Writing of the dam’s damaging effects, the judge noted, “In the words of the 
Department of Interior, Friant Dam’s operations have been a ‘disaster’ for 
Chinook salmon.”

“This is a tremendous victory for the people of California,” said Barry 
Nelson, senior policy analyst of NRDC. “The Bureau operated the Friant 
Project in violation of California law for 55 years. The court says that the 
solution is to restore the historical salmon fishery of the San Joaquin. It 
is a very, very strong ruling.”

The 13 other plaintiffs in the suit are Trout Unlimited, California Striped 
Bass Association, National Audubon Society, Stanislaus Audubon Society, 
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, United Anglers of California, 
CalTrout, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations, Sierra Club, 
Bay Institute, San Joaquin Raptor Rescue Center, Friends of the River, and 
Nor-Cal Fishing Guides and Sportsmen’s Association.

Jim Crenshaw, President of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, 
said that this decision may well be one of the greatest victories for fish 
in the state's history.

“For more than a decade, our coalition has fought the federal government 
over the destruction of San Joaquin River due to the way the Bureau of 
Reclamation operated Friant Dam,” he stated. “The federal bureaucracy 
destroyed one of the greatest rivers in the state and one of the state’s 
most important salmon fisheries. This historic decision vindicates our 
efforts and sends a long overdue message to our government that destroying 
rivers and fisheries is not legal, is not in the best public interest and 
will not be condoned.”

Commercial fishing groups were also jubilant about the decision. ““This has 
been a long time coming, but Judge Karlton has finally righted this wrong,” 
said Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of 
Fishermen's Associations.

The Bureau of Reclamation was not able to comment on the decision at press 
time. “The Department of Justice is in the process of reviewing the decision 
and deciding whether or not to appeal the case,” said Jeff McCracken, 
spokesman for the Bureau.

The 41-page ruling is extremely well written, documenting the vibrant spring 
and fall salmon runs that ascended the San Joaquin before the dam was built. 
The Friant Project was constructed in a time of manic dam building 
throughout the state when environmental awareness was very low. Only a local 
sportsmen’s club and a brave Unitarian minister publicly opposed the 
project.

The river’s spring run, estimated at several hundred thousand fish, was one 
of the largest chinook runs anywhere on the Pacific Coast. The historical 
fall run is conservatively estimated to have numbered 50,000 to 100,000 
fish, according to Karlton.

“So many salmon migrated up the San Joaquin River during the spawning season 
that some people who lived near the present site of Friant Dam compared the 
noise to a waterfall,” said Karlton. “Some residents even said that they 
were kept awake nights by the myriad salmon heard nightly splashing over the 
sand bars in the River.”

The San Joaquin River is the second longest river in the state. It is the 
southernmost chinook salmon fishery on the Pacific coast and historically 
sustained a significant percentage of the ocean salmon fishery. Steelhead 
also ascended the river and its tributaries before Friant and other dams 
were built.

NRDC led the coalition of conservation and fishing groups in suing the 
bureau over its operation of the dam and the renewal of water contracts for 
the Friant Water Users Authority, which represents irrigation districts on 
the east side of the San Joaquin Valley.

The suit charged the bureau with violating Section 5937 of the California 
Fish and Game Code, which requires that “the owner of any dam shall allow 
sufficient water to pass over, around or through the dam, to keep in good 
condition any fish that may be planted or exist below the dam.” The lawsuit 
was first filed in 1988, making it one of California’s longest running water 
disputes.

“Restoring the river will benefit everyone,” said NRDC senior attorney Hal 
Candee. “It will benefit downstream farmers who will get cleaner, more 
reliable irrigation water. It will benefit the 20 million people in the Bay 
Area and Southern California who rely on the delta for clean drinking water. 
And restoring the river’s once thriving salmon fishery will help bring back 
more fishing jobs to our state.”

Restoring the San Joaquin could be one of the largest environmental 
restoration projects in California history. The plaintiffs say it can be 
done without harming valley farmers. In fact, restoring the river will 
benefit downstream farmers in the Delta near Stockton who have suffered from 
low flows and poor water quality.

“The plight of the San Joaquin River is a national disgrace that must be 
remedied,” said Dante Nomellini of the Central Delta Water Agency, an 
irrigation district that supported the suit with an amicus brief. “This 
decision is a good first step.”

This legal victory promises to bring a long-dead river back to life. The 
coalition formed to achieve this victory shows the crucial need for 
environmental groups and fishing organizations to work together on fishery 
restoration efforts. Hopefully, the Bureau will not appeal this decision and 
will finally obey the law and let the river flow!





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