
SACRAMENTO— In the latest lawsuit to contest federal water policies, three environmental groups on May 20 sued the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation over the granting of permanent federal water contracts to water users supplied by the Central Valley Project (CVP).
The lawsuit, brought by the Center for Biological Diversity, Restore the Delta, and Planning and Conservation League, challenges the Trump administration’s moves to make permanent 14 existing short-term Central Valley Project contracts and ongoing work to convert dozens of others to permanent contracts.
The Central Valley Project (CVP), one of the world’s largest water storage and delivery systems, includes 20 reservoirs, about 500 miles of canals and aqueducts, and two pumping plants. The CVP exports massive quantities of water from the Delta to San Joaquin Valley agribusiness interests, including growers in the massive Westlands Water District.
In a press release, the groups said the CVP has caused widespread environmental damage by reducing freshwater flows in the San Francisco Bay-Delta, blocking salmon migration, and killing wildlife with toxic runoff from irrigated farmland.
The groups filed the suit in federal district court for the Eastern District of California.
Such diversions reduce freshwater flows through the Delta causing and worsening harmful algal blooms (HABs) which threaten the public health of those drinking, fishing in, or swimming in, Delta waters, or inhaling the air near Delta waters, the complaint states.
“Reclamation has converted Central Valley Project water delivery contracts to permanent contracts,” said Bob Wright, attorney for the groups. “And, they are doing