
California Governor Jerry Brown yesterday made a last-minute appeal to the Metropolitan Water District Board of Directors to vote for the full Delta Tunnels project today, April 10, at their highly-anticipated meeting in Los Angeles.
In a letter to the Board, Brown said, "Tomorrow you have a historic decision to make about the future of California and the basic security of our water supply."
After praising the agency's "perseverance" over the last decade, he urged them not to back away from voting to finance the full project now.
"Staging its construction may seem plausible, but it will actually risk serious delay in permitting and jeopardize the entire project. Overall costs would, of course, rise. That is why I urge the Board to support the full project - without delay."
"Your perseverance during the last decade has led California to this moment. Please don't back away now," Brown concluded.
At a final vote on the proposed Delta Tunnels in Los Angeles on Tuesday, April 10, ratepayers, taxpayer advocates, faith leaders, unions and environmentalists will call on Metropolitan Water District officials to oppose increased funding for the multi-billion-dollar project.
They say the funding will raise water bills and property taxes without delivering any water or economic benefits to Southern California residents.
They will also demand that Mayor Garcetti, who opposed the $4.5 billion commitment in October 2017, take a stand against any phased or one-tunnel plan, which would still increase costs by at least $1 billion, and refuse to allow MWD to force the costs on L.A. residents.
"MWD will vote on whether to increase funding by at least $1 billion to $5.2 billion for a phased tunnel plan, or to underwrite $10.8 billion to advance the twin tunnels," said Brenna Norton of Food & Water Watch.