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Battle Lines Drawn Between Perata and Schwarzenegger on Water Bills in California Special Session

frankrusso-small.jpg By Frank D. Russo

This afternoon the Governor announced that he was proposing $9 billion in "comprehensive water infrastructure' spending plan and that it would be contained in two bills--authored by Assembly Republican Leader Michael Villines and Republican Senator Dave Cogdill. Before receiving the Governor's press release, the talk of the town was about a $5 to 6 billion dollar set of bonds.

Neither of these bills announced by the Governor are in print, and there is no indication of whether they are general obligation bonds or revenue bonds. There is no description of them on either the Assembly or Senate Republican sites or that of the Governor's authors.

Senator Perata has the only bill in print in the special session on water--SB 1 XX (also denominated SB2X 1) which he introduced last Friday and which we've already described in some detail in an article on Sunday.

He also has a bill, SB 1002, passed in the regular session that is on the Governor's desk and ready for his signature or veto.

Here are the releases from Perata and the Governor as they contain the latest information as to where we are in the special session on water:

Perata Statement on Governor’s Water Proposal for the Special Session

Senate President pro Tem Don Perata (D-Oakland) released the following statement on the water proposal introduced by the Governor for the legislative special session today:

I applaud the Governor for engaging in the state’s quickly deteriorating water delivery system. I only wish he had provided more direction earlier in the year when the Senate struggled to get a bond bill to his desk, in anticipation of the federal court’s ruling.

Instead, now we have a gun muzzle at our temple; unless we take swift action for immediate relief, the court will effectively cut water as much as 60 percent to millions of California consumers and thousands of businesses.

While we hasten together to write legislation capable of winning two-thirds support in the legislature, there is something the governor can do immediately to respond to need. He can sign SB 1002 which allocates $600 million in voter approved bond money for water investments designed to meet the court’s objections.

These funds are awaiting use by water agencies throughout the state. If he vetoes this bill, it is hard to imagine how he can make a case to voters that we need MORE money, when we haven’t spent what we have. Every water agency endorses and awaits the implementation of SB1002.

I look forward to working with the Governor on a bond bill that makes a sizable investment in the immediate term.

Gov. Schwarzenegger Submits Comprehensive $9 Billion Water Infrastructure Proposal for Legislative Special Session

Governor Schwarzenegger announced a $9 billion comprehensive water infrastructure proposal to be introduced in the legislative special session that he called in response to California's water crisis. The plan invests $600 million from Propositions 50, 84 and 1E to immediately relieve pressure on the Delta from environmental challenges and to respond to a recent federal court ruling that will reduce water deliveries to Southern California. It also includes $5.6 billion in water storage, nearly $2 billion in Delta restoration (in addition to the above-mentioned $600 million), $1 billion in grants for conservation and regional water projects and $500 million for specific water restoration projects. Written in two bills authored by Assembly Republican Leader Michael Villines (R- Fresno) and Senator Dave Cogdill (R - Modesto), the proposal represents a combination of ideas previously detailed in proposals by the Governor and legislative leaders.

"Our water crisis has gotten worse with the dry conditions and the recent federal court action that is going to have a devastating impact on the state's economy and the 25 million Californians who depend on Delta water. We need a comprehensive fix," said Governor Schwarzenegger. "That is why we are introducing two bills to solve California's water crisis in both the short and long-term. I look forward to working and negotiating with my partners in the Legislature so we can approve a comprehensive upgrade to California's water infrastructure."

Details of the $9 billion comprehensive water infrastructure proposal include:
• $600 million from Propositions 50, 84 and 1E to immediately relieve pressure on the Delta from environmental concerns
• $5.6 billion in above and below ground water storage
o $5.1 billion in surface storage
o $500 million in groundwater storage
o Identifies three locations for surface storage (Sites, Temperance Flat Reservoir and Los Vaqueros Expansion Project.)
o Specific criteria to assure public benefits and environmental benefits

• $1.9 billion for Delta Restoration and water supply reliability
o $1.4 billion for habitat restoration
o $500 million in early actions to address environmental concerns in the Delta

• $500 million in grants for specified watersheds throughout the state, including the San Joaquin River, Klamath River, Los Angeles River and others

In January, building on his Strategic Growth Plan from last year, the Governor introduced a comprehensive plan to invest in additional surface and groundwater storage to meet the needs of population growth and manage the effects of climate change on California's hydrology and water delivery systems. The plan will help communities protect against flooding, and capture water from storms and snowmelt run-off to supply cities, farmers and business with water during drought conditions.

The Governor's comprehensive plan also includes significant funding toward restoration of the ailing Delta and would lead to the development of a new conveyance system. Twenty five million Californians rely on the Delta for clean, safe water. It also irrigates hundreds of thousands of acres of Central Valley farmland and it is the backbone of California's $32 billion agricultural industry.

Last year, the Governor directed the Delta Vision Blue Ribbon Task Force to develop a Delta management plan. The task force will present its findings and recommendations by January 1, 2008 and its Strategic Plan by October 31, 2008. The Bay Delta Conservation Plan is also underway, being developed with broad participation from water agencies, environmental organizations and local representatives.

Posted on September 18, 2007

Comments

I am reading article after article in debate over the topic of building new dams, specifically Temperance Flat dam. Ongoing arguments over the fact that it would result in disaster - similar to Katrina.

Did it ever occur to anyone that it was DESIGNED to be a disaster? Once you see the fraud and destruction behind this, doesn't it become obvious? At this point, how else would the evidence behind the so-called "need" of this dam be covered up? 50+/- yrs of felony altering and re-routing water in order to come this far. Destruction of city(s), lives, homes, businesses. A nightmare that has been going on right under everyone's noses. (www.myspace.com/marlalk)

Greed. Development. Entailing barbaric crimes against innocent residents in order to vacate property to access sewer/water lines. Removal of various property; expansion of others - no permits or inspections; massive building and health code violations. Plat/parcel maps altered to cover up evidence; newcomers remain oblivious.

Temperance dam is already a disaster - next, is the wipe out! How do you convince the public that this dam is needed - hire a powerful movie star. Who better than Mr. America, himself?!?

Posted by: Marla at January 6, 2008 01:32 PM

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