
In spite of a multitude of lawsuits against the Delta Tunnels and the California Department of Water Resources withdrawing the project’s "certification of consistency" with the Delta Plan developed by the Delta Stewardship Council, the California WaterFix proposal continues to plod forward.
A press release from Jacobs, posted to PRNewswire on January 22, reports that it has been named the engineering design manager for the California WaterFix by the Delta Conveyance Design and Construction Authority.
Jacobs has been selected by the Delta Conveyance Design and Construction Authority for engineering design management services related to the California WaterFix program. Estimated at $17 billion in 2017, WaterFix is California's largest water conveyance project, designed to bolster the reliability of the state's water supplies, while protecting and enhancing the San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary, a vital environmental asset.
The California WaterFix program, slated to begin in early 2019, will upgrade outdated and unreliable water infrastructure that is more than 50 years old and dependent on levees that put clean water supply at risk from earthquakes and sea-level rise.
WaterFix is one of the highest profile infrastructure projects in the nation, essential to secure clean water supplies for 27 million people, area businesses and three million acres of agricultural land, said Jacobs COO and President of Buildings, Infrastructure and Advanced Facilities Bob Pragada. Building on our long-term relationship with California water agencies, DCA will tap into our extensive water infrastructure and engineering design experience to begin modernization of California's water delivery system.
Jacobs' initial $93 million contract with DCA will support the preliminary and final engineering design phase of the 15-year program. Major infrastructure components include three water diversion int.