
Ever since California voters overwhelmingly rejected the peripheral canal in November 1982, the state and federal governments and regional water agencies have developed a number of schemes to fund this unpopular water diversion plan without a vote of the taxpayers.
In the latest scheme, documents released under the California Public Records Act reveal that the Zone 7 Water Agency of Alameda County has been using property taxes to pay for Delta Tunnels planning costs before even one shovel of dirt has been turned, according to a statement from Restore the Delta.
The Delta Tunnels plan, developed under the Delta Vision and Bay Delta Conservation Plan processes and now under the California Water Fix, is the latest version of the peripheral canal backed by Governor Jerry Brown in his first two administrations.
If there's one thing that Jerry Brown and Delta Tunnels advocates do not like, it's openness and transparency in government, as seen in these documents. That's why Livermore area property owners have been paying for Delta Tunnels planning efforts without their consent and without their knowledge.
Fees for the tunnels, designed to ship northern California water to Southern California water agencies and corporate agribusiness interests on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley, were supposed to come from water ratepayers, not property taxes.
California Department of Water Resources, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, Santa Clara Valley Water District, and Zone 7 officials have said for years in public that the tunnels would cost just five dollars a month for urban water users. Yet these taxes were buried deep in agency records in at least two water districts.
The public is unaware that their property taxes are being used to pay for the planning of a project that will have negative impacts on the San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary, said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta. Property taxpayers in Zone 7 never had a vote on the matter, and the district has not discussed this funding in any broad manner to facilitate public understanding.
This June, a public records request exposed a similar Delta Tunnels funding scheme by the Santa Clara Valley Water District, resulting in public outcry over funding the Delta Tunnels with property taxes.