[env-trinity] Water Deeply: AB 2480 to officially designate critical watersheds for CA's water infrastructure

Sari Sommarstrom sari at sisqtel.net
Tue Jul 19 14:14:30 PDT 2016


Trinity River watershed is included.

 <https://www.newsdeeply.com/> News Deeply
<https://www.newsdeeply.com/water> water Deeply
https://www.newsdeeply.com/water/articles/2016/06/23/bill-to-aid-water-suppl
y-by-restoring-watersheds

A bill in the California Legislature aims to improve water supplies by
restoring key watersheds in the Sierra Nevada and Cascade ranges. Critics
say that's an important step, but the bill needs to go further.


Written byMatt Weiser

Published ons Jun. 23, 2016

Read time Approx. 5 minutes

Scott Grant of Palo Alto, Calif., fly-fishes below the backdrop of volcanic
Mount Lassen in 1995. This region is the focus of a bill in the state
Legislature that aims to improve the health of California forests in order
to improve water supply. Bob Galbraith, AP

It has been estimated that more than 60 percent of California's freshwater
comes from mountain storm runoff and snowmelt. Yet these mountain watersheds
have never been officially recognized for their role in delivering and
filtering this enormous share of the state's vital water supply.

That may change soon. A bill in the state Legislature,
<http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520
160AB2480> AB 2480 (authored by Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica), would
officially recognize five critical Sierra Nevada and Cascade watersheds as
important pieces of the state's water infrastructure. It would enshrine in
state policy the importance of restoring forests, meadows and streams in
these watersheds, and make such projects eligible for state water-project
grant funding.

The bill was approved in the Assembly on June 2. Next up is a
<http://sntr.senate.ca.gov/agenda> hearing on June 28 in the Senate Natural
Resources and Water Committee.

"It's never been acknowledged before that watersheds are this important,"
said Laurie Wayburn, president of  <https://www.pacificforest.org/> Pacific
Forest Trust, a nonprofit that works to preserve privately owned forest
lands and a sponsor of the bill. "Fundamentally, we have not been looking at
our source watersheds for what they are, which is integral infrastructure
for our water system."

It has been recognized for several decades that
<http://www.sierranevada.ca.gov/our-work/state-of-the-sierra> Sierra forests
are in trouble. A century of fire suppression has left forests overcrowded
with trees. Many of those trees are approximately the same age, an unnatural
condition resulting from clearcut logging practices. Greater forest density
not only poses more fire risk, but it also means more water consumption by
trees.

The overgrown forests have encroached on the Sierra's meadows, harming their
function as natural sponges that absorb and filter storm runoff. Many
meadows have also been degraded by livestock grazing. As a result, rainfall
and snowmelt run off too quickly, resulting in erosion, diminished water
quality and reduced groundwater recharge.

Because of these and other factors, runoff from the Upper Feather River
Watershed, according to
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rixrR_jRCwJ8AmLMnKnFYrlVfb-4Iy1-H8AnPKC
a4zQ/edit?usp=sharing> one estimate, has been reduced by 400,000 acre-feet
(493 million cubic meters) annually. That's more than 10 percent of the
capacity of Lake Oroville downstream, and enough water to serve nearly 1
million households for a year.

The Feather River is one of five watersheds that would get special attention
under AB 2480 because it feeds the state's two largest reservoirs: Shasta
and Oroville. Others are the Trinity, Pitt, McCloud and Sacramento rivers.
In total, said Wayburn, these watersheds encompass some 7 million acres (2.8
million hectares), about 62 percent of which is publicly owned, mainly by
the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management.

"There's a real synergy where we can do good things for forests, and also do
really vital things for watershed function," Wayburn said.

 

Juan Flores stands in the middle of a charred forest as he chops down trees
in Manton, Calif. in 2012, that were burned by the Ponderosa Fire. Many of
California's forests are overgrown with trees, which has increased fire risk
and water consumption. (Jose Sanchez, AP)

The bill states that projects in these watersheds may be eligible for state
funding if they engage in vegetation management, meadow restoration, road
removal and repair, and stream channel restoration.

It also states that purchasing conservation easements to preserve private
forest lands may be eligible for state funding to prevent "conversion and
degradation" of these lands.

The bill has officially been supported by several conservation groups,
including Audubon California, the California League of Conservation Voters,
Defenders of Wildlife, Trust for Public Land and the Mono Lake Committee.

Others have expressed concern about the bill, although they have not yet
announced any formal opposition.

Among them is Jonathan Kusel, executive director of the
<http://sierrainstitute.us/> Sierra Institute for Community and Environment,
which is based in the Feather River watershed. The bill's emphasis on
conservation easements causes him to worry that landowners will be paid to
manage their forests for water supplies to the exclusion of other issues,
such as wildlife habitat, greenhouse gas emissions and forest health.

He would like to see the bill include prescriptions for forest management
that would boost overall ecosystem health.

"Trying to manage just for water is as stupid as trying to manage for any
other single output," Kusel said. "We simply are not going to solve the
problem and, in fact, we might do worse if what we do is only utilize
conservation easements."

Katherine Evatt, president of the  <http://www.foothillconservancy.org/>
Foothill Conservancy, shares this concern. She also noted that the bill
states projects may be eligible for funding if they show "a demonstrated
likelihood of increasing conditions for water and snow attraction, retention
and release." This, she said, is a pretty weak test.

For example, some studies have suggested the Sierra could deliver more water
if forested areas were cleared to create open space. The reasoning is that
these areas would accumulate snowpack that would otherwise evaporate from
the tree canopy. But the science on this is not robust, and it doesn't take
into consideration other effects on the ecosystem. Clearcuts also cause snow
to melt too fast, because they are exposed to the sun, thereby generating
more erosion. They also disturb wildlife habitat.

"We don't think the state should fund these projects until there is more
evidence they can be done in an ecologically sound way," she said.

John Buckley, executive director of the  <http://www.cserc.org/> Central
Sierra Environmental Resource Center, said the bill should be broadened to
allow state funding of other Sierra watersheds, besides those that feed the
Shasta and Oroville reservoirs. Several other rivers also serve millions of
Californians and their watersheds could be considered equally important,
including the Mokelumne, Tuolumne and Stanislaus rivers.

Buckley also noted the legislation does not earmark any specific funding
amounts for watershed projects, nor does it change any state policies to
reform how forests are managed.

"Although there is a very positive intent made clear in the bill for source
watersheds to be better managed, the actual wording simply makes it a state
policy that source watersheds should be 'considered' for financing to do
positive maintenance and repair," he said.

Wayburn said she is open to refinements in the bill as it moves forward. But
she also defended it as written. In particular, she said the focus on
conservation easements is appropriate, and the details will follow practices
now common in the state for such easements, which require an emphasis on
preserving social and environmental benefits.

"The goals are pretty clear in the bill that it's to enhance and to maintain
watersheds," she said. "You're not looking at trying to support otherwise
commercial activities."

The move to begin protecting Sierra watersheds got a boost last year when
the Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA) released an important
<http://www.acwa.com/Headwaters> policy document. It recognizes the
importance of mountain headwaters to the state, and calls for focused
restoration efforts. The report is significant, because ACWA represents
hundreds of water agencies that deliver 90 percent of California's urban and
agricultural water supplies.

Critics of AB 2480 are pleased to see the bill take this recognition a step
further. But they'd like to see it do a bit more.

"It is perhaps one small mini-step for the California Assembly to recognize
forests and watersheds as important components of the state's overall water
supply system," Buckley said. "However, most 4th and 5th graders already
learn that in elementary school. What is urgently needed . is significant
mandated funding to actually achieve the desired source watershed
enhancement."

About the Author

Matt Weiser

Matt Weiser is a contributing editor at Water Deeply. Contact him at
<mailto:matt at newsdeeply.org> matt at newsdeeply.org or via Twitter at
<https://twitter.com/matt_weiser> @matt_weiser. 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www2.dcn.org/pipermail/env-trinity/attachments/20160719/0d1a4b98/attachment.html>


More information about the env-trinity mailing list