
On August 6, the California Department of Water Resources under Governor Gavin Newsom filed a validation complaint in Sacramento County Superior Court to be positioned to sell bonds for the design, planning, and construction of the controversial Delta Conveyance Project (Delta Tunnel) under the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
This was done even though no project plan or environmental impact report has been released to the public for review, according to Restore the Delta.
Opponents of the tunnel, including recreational anglers, Tribal leaders, commercial fishermen, family farmers, Delta business owners, Southern California water ratepayers, and many elected officials, say the project would drive Delta and long fin smelt, winter and spring run Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead and other imperiled fish species closer to extinction and result in the destruction of the San Francisco Bay Delta and West Coast fisheries. In addition, the plan poses a big threat to the salmon and steelhead populations on the Klamath/Trinity River system and the Tribes that have fished for them for many thousands of years.
Tunnel opponents also believe the Newsom administration is taking advantage of the COVID-19 Pandemic to rush through the project without proper environmental review and while ignoring the overwhelming public opposition to the massive public works project.
“This is a validation action brought under California Code of Civil Procedure Section 860 and Government Code Section 17700,” the complaint states. “The Department seeks the Court’s judgment confirming the validity of a proposed revenue bond financing the Department has authorized as the mechanism to finance the cost and expense of the environmental review, planning, engineering and design, and if and when appropriate,