
Big Ag will keep trying to add rider to bills
In a victory for salmon and the Delta, a Conference Committee rejected Congressman Kevin McCarthy's attempt to add H.R. 1769, Representative David Valadao’s rider approving the Westlands Water District settlement on toxic irrigation drainage, to the NDAA.
A Conference Committee is a temporary panel composed of House and Senate conferees formed to reconcile differences in legislation that has passed both chambers. They are usually convened to resolve differences on major and controversial legislation.
The San Luis Drainage Resolution Act rider was not included in the final bill, thanks to political pressure on Senate and House Democrats by the Hoopa Valley Tribe, fishing groups, and environmental organizations.
However, Westlands and San Joaquin Valley Representatives said they intend to keep adding the rider to legislation in the weeks ahead until they have passed the bill, according to Restore the Delta. Westlands officials intend to pass the controversial legislation before the court-mandated deadline of Jan. 15, 2018.
"We are looking for any vehicle possible to get the drainage settlement enacted this year," Deputy General Manager Johnny Amaral told E&E News.
“We're looking at different legislative vehicles to move the settlement agreement forward," Rep. Jim Costa (D-Calif.), a supporter of the deal, told E&E News. "This may not happen in the next week or two, but I am hopeful we can find some vehicle."
The settlement resulted from a $1 billion lawsuit filed by attorney David Bernhardt and others with the federal U.S. Court of Federal Claims in 2012 during the Obama administration. Bernhardt was appointed by President Donald Trump as Deputy Secretary of Interior earlier this year, and fishing and environmental groups and Tribes opposed his confirmation because of his major conflicts of interest.
The bill would facilitate a controversial litigation settlement agreement between the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and Westlands Water District. It would allow the federal government to walk away from its responsibility to drain agricultural lands in California’s Central Valley of toxic salts and selenium without any safeguards that ensure drain water would be.