
This article published here in October of 2010 covers the bizarre experience of four of us who tried to attend a secret meeting of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan, the predecessor to the California WaterFix plan to build the Delta Tunnels, in Sacramento on September 30, 2010.
It’s over 8 years since I wrote this piece, but in spite of the multitude of protests and lawsuits by fishermen, Tribal leaders, Delta residents, environmental justice advocates, family farmers, elected officials and Northern California cities and zombies, this project continues to limp forward like a hard-to-kill zombie.
Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger restarted the latest incarnation of the Peripheral Canal, decisively defeated by the voters in November 1982. In 2007, Democratic Governor Jerry Brown embraced Schwarzenegger’s version of the project when he entered his third term in 2011, transforming it to the California Water Fix’s twin tunnels project in 2014. Democratic Governor-Elect Gavin Newsom says he will continue the project, although he would prefer a single tunnel rather than two tunnels. Here's the piece:
How many Delta residents does it take to stop a secret Bay Delta Conservation Plan meeting?
The 50 participants in a secret meeting deciding the fate of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta on September 30 chose to leave rather than to allow four Delta advocates to listen to the proceedings.
Bill Jennings, chairman/executive director of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance (CSPA); Jim Crenshaw, president of CSPA; Bret Baker, a Delta pear farmer, biologist and Restore the Delta board member; and I disrupted the meeting of Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP) to protest the closed process.
We arrived at the meeting of “principals” of the BDCP at the Farm Bureau office in Sacramento just as the meeting was getting started. You could feel the tension and sense the surprise by the federal and state agency officials, water agency leaders, corporate agribusiness officials and others gathered there as we walked into the back of the room.