
Save California's Salmon staff - Mahlija Florendo, Regina Chichizola and Morning Star Gali - and Malcolm, Regina's son, at the State Water Resources Control Board meeting in Sacramento on December 12. Photo by Dan Bacher.
After a marathon hearing at the Cal EPA building in Sacramento, the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) voted 4 to 1 on December 12 to set a 40% flow standard for three tributaries that flow into the lower San Joaquin River — the Stanislaus, Tuolumne and Merced rivers - and a revision of the salinity standard for the South Delta.
The board also voted to create a space for a proposal regarding voluntary agreements outlined in the meeting by Department of Water Resources Director Karla Nemeth and Department of Fish and Wildlife Director Charlton H. Bonham.
The $1.7 billion plan, proposing $800 million from the water users and $900 million from the State, was not available to the public at the time of the meeting, but outlined in the presentation by Nemeth and Bonham.
A vast majority of water users and government agencies are committed to voluntary agreements because they provide a quicker, more durable solution that will improve flows and restore habitat while avoiding lengthy litigation, said Nemeth and Bonham in a joint statement. We appreciate that the State Water Resources Control Board’s action creates space for work to continue on agreements that can deliver real benefits for the environment while protecting all beneficial uses of water.
In spite of the opposition to the flow standard by agribusiness groups and the Department of Interior, State Water Board Chair Felicia Marcus said before the vote, I think the time to act is now.
Californians want a healthy environment, healthy agriculture, and healthy communities, not one at the undue expense of the others, said Marcus after the meeting. Doing that requires that the water wars yield to collective efforts to help fish and wildlife through voluntary action, which the plan seeks to reward.
Many environmental and fishing groups had pushed for the adoption of a 60 percent flow standard.