[env-trinity] Take Action Now to Stop Jerry Brown's Delta Tunnels

Dan Bacher danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Fri Sep 4 09:45:29 PDT 2015



Go to the Restore the Delta website to submit a public comment, sign  
their petition to send an automatic letter or create your own using  
their letter template:http://restorethedelta.org/take-action-oppose-the-delta-tunnels/

11889613_1015324726983956...

Take Action Now to Stop Jerry Brown's Delta Tunnels

by Dan Bacher

If you want to save the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the  
largest estuary on the West Coast of the Americas, and Pacific Coast  
fisheries, it's time to take action against Governor Jerry Brown's  
Delta Tunnels Plan.

The pork barrel project, if constructed, would hasten the extinction  
of Central Valley steelhead, Sacramento River Chinook salmon, Delta  
and longfin smelt, green sturgeon and other fish species, as well as  
imperil salmon and steelhead populations on the Trinity and Klamath  
rivers.

The last round of public comments on the California Water Fix,  
formerly called the Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP, ends in just 65  
days, October 30.

That's why it is essential that you submit a public comment to go on  
record opposing the Delta tunnels/CA WaterFix/BDCP. This will be your  
last chance to submit a public comment -- federal agencies may attempt  
to permit this plan as early as 2016!

Go to the Restore the Delta website to submit a public comment, sign  
their petition to send an automatic letter or create your own using  
their letter template: http://restorethedelta.org/take-action-oppose-the-delta-tunnels/

"Let's get our neighbors, friends and family members to submit as many  
public comments as we can opposing the tunnels," according to an  
action alert from Restore the Delta (RTD). "Together, Californians can  
stop this insane project. We have done it before and we can do it  
again!"

Caleen Sisk, Chief and Spiritual Leader of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe,  
emphasized what is at stake if the tunnels are built.

"I believe that the Delta should stay the same for future generations  
of salmon and people," said Chief Sisk. "The tunnels will kill the  
Delta by diverting all the Sacramento River, the tunnels are being  
build large enough to divert the entire river. This will be a  
irreversible water tragedy affecting our air and food sources and  
clean waters!"

According to RTD, "The impact on wildlife and plant species in the  
Delta that depend on freshwater include the Delta smelt, chinook  
salmon, steelhead, San Joaquin kit fox, and tricolored blackbird,  
protected species already on the brink that will face decimation due  
to a diminishing food-web."

On the ocean, the ESA-listed South Pacific Puget Sound Orca Whales  
depend on migrating Central Valley salmon that will be harmed by less  
water flowing through the Delta.

The tunnels plan also appears to ignore Section 7 of the Endangered  
Species Act, which prohibits federal agency actions that are likely to  
jeopardize the continued existence of any endangered species or that  
“result in the destruction or adverse modification of [critical]  
habitat of [listed] species.”

The problem is that the Brown administration refuses to consider any  
other options to the tunnels to solve our ecosystem and water supply  
problems, such as the Environmental Water Caucus' responsible exports  
plan that sets an annual cap on Delta water exports of 3 million acre- 
feet.

RTD said our tax and ratepayer dollars would be much better spent on:

• More aggressive water efficiency program statewide that would apply  
to both urban and agricultural users.

• Funding water recycling and groundwater recharging projects  
statewide that would be billions of dollars less expensive for rate  
payers than constructing a new version of the Peripheral Canal or  
major new surface storage dams. Meanwhile, these projects move  
communities towards water sustainability.

• Retiring thousands of acres of impaired and pollution generating  
farmlands in the southern San Joaquin Valley and using those lands for  
more sustainable and profitable uses, such as solar energy generation.

• Improving Delta levees in order to address potential earthquake,  
flooding, and future sea level rise concerns at a cost between $2 to  
$4 billion and is orders of-magnitude less expensive than major  
conveyance projects that are currently being contemplated.

• Increasing freshwater flows through the Delta to reduce pollutants  
so ecosystems and wildlife can be restored.

• Installing modern, state-of-the-art fish screens at the south Delta  
pumps to reduce the "salvage" of Central Valley steelhead, Sacramento  
River Chinook salmon, Sacrament splittail, Delta and longfin smelt,  
striped bass, threadfin shad, American shad and a host of other fish  
species.

The Delta smelt, an indicator species that demonstrates the health of  
the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, reached a new record low  
population level in 2014, according to the California Department of  
Fish and Wildlife's fall midwater trawl survey released this January.  
Department staff found a total of only eight smelt at a total of 100  
sites sampled each month from September through December. Since then,  
the Delta surveys have revealed the continuing march of Delta fish  
species to the edge of extinction. (https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentId=92840 
)

The surveys were initiated in 1967, the same year the State Water  
Project began exporting water from the Delta. The surveys show that  
population indices of Delta smelt, striped bass, longfin smelt,  
threadfin shad, American shad and Sacramento splittail have declined  
97.80%, 99.70%, 99.98%, 97.80%, 91.90%, and 98.50%, respectively,  
between 1967 and 2014, according to Bill Jennings, Executive Director  
of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance (CSPA).

Fortunately, people throughout California strongly oppose Jerry  
Brown's salmon-killing tunnels. Outside the plush Los Angeles  
headquarters of agribusiness tycoon Stewart Resnick on August 19, 25  
protesters chanted, "Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Corporate Greed has got to go"  
and “Mayor Garcetti, have some will. Don’t let Resnick raise our bills.”

The protesters, including Los Angeles ratepayers, community leaders  
and representatives of water watchdog groups, demanded that Los  
Angeles Mayor Garcetti protect LA water ratepayers from funding the  
massive Delta tunnels project promoted by Governor Jerry Brown to  
export more water to corporate agribusiness interests and oil  
companies on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley. To read the full  
story, go to: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/24/18776566.php.

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