
February 15, Federal District Court Judge Lawrence J. O’Neill in Fresno issued an order supporting many of the claims made by AquAlliance and their co-plaintiff partners in a landmark lawsuit challenging water transfers from rice farmers in the Sacramento Valley to growers in the San Joaquin Valley.
AquAlliance filed the litigation in May 2015 against the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and San Luis Delta Mendota Water Authority over their inadequate disclosure, avoidance of impacts, and mitigation of major water transfers from the Sacramento Valley through the Delta to the San Joaquin Valley.
AquAlliance’s co-plaintiff, represented by Aqua Terra Aeris, is the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, led by Executive Director Bill Jennings. Additional co-plaintiffs in the litigation include the Central Delta Water Agency, Local Agencies of the North Delta, and South Delta Water Agency that are represented by the Soluri Meserve law firm.
AquAlliance is elated that the court found in favor of many of their legal arguments that seek to protect the communities, environment, and groundwater dependent farmers in the Sacramento Valley as well as Delta farmers and fish, said AquAlliance Executive Director Barbara Vlamis. This ruling exposes the danger posed by the 10-Year Water Transfer Program’s water-grab that would benefit agricultural interests with junior water rights growing permanent crops in a desert.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and San Luis Delta Mendota Water Authority approved a program that could send up to 600,000 acre-feet of Sacramento Valley water south of the Delta each year. To look at that amount of water in perspective, 600,000 acre-feet each year for 10 years is equivalent to what a city of 100,000 people would use in 200 years, according to Vlamis.
When combined with additional state approved transfers, the total could be over 800,000 acre-feet each year, she said. If history is any guide, half of the