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California’s drought regulators lose big case. What it means for state’s power to police water
The Sacramento Bee ^ | 9-13-2022 | Dale Kasler, Ryan Sabalow

Posted on 09/13/2022 11:23:27 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com

California’s drought regulators have lost a major lawsuit that could undermine their legal authority to stop farms and cities from pulling water from rivers and streams.

With California in its third punishing year of a historic drought, an appeals court ruled Monday that the State Water Resources Control Board lacks the power to interfere with so-called “senior” water rights holders and curtail their diversions of water from rivers.

The case stems from orders imposed by the state board in 2015, during the previous drought, when it halted farms and cities throughout the Central Valley from taking water from the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.

A group of farm-irrigation districts centered in and around the Delta itself — the freshwater estuary that feeds vast farmlands and serves as the hub of California’s complex water-delivery network — brought the lawsuit challenging the state board’s actions. What the ruling means for this drought

Less clear is whether the ruling, by the 6th Appellate District Court, affects the state board’s ability to govern water supplies during the current drought.

“It’s certainly a defeat for the state board,” said Brian Gray, a water-rights expert at the Public Policy Institute of California.

But Gray said the court’s ruling did suggest that the board could exercise its authority over senior rights holders by using emergency powers granted by the governor.

Earlier this year the board ordered roughly 4,500 farms, cities and other entities to stop taking water out of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, the 1,100-square-mile watershed that provides about two-thirds of California’s population with drinking water. The board’s orders this year have included senior rights holders such as the city of San Francisco and the Modesto and Turlock irrigation districts, all of which pull water from the Tuolumne River.

The board, in a statement responding to the court’s decision, said the ruling doesn’t affect the agency’s “ongoing drought response actions, including curtailments of senior water rights.” The board said it used its emergency authority to issue its curtailment orders earlier this year, and the court’s decision doesn’t eliminate that authority.

Nonetheless, the board was clearly irked by the ruling and the potential threat to its authority.

“Water scarcity is one of the most important challenges facing Californians. Ensuring that water districts and others divert and use water consistent with the state’s water right priority system is critical to protecting public health and the delivery system for farms, communities and the environment,” the state board said. The ruling “shields the most senior water rights holders ... from certain enforcement actions.”

Senior rights holders are in the minority but include some of the largest water users in California, including the city of San Francisco. Why some Californians have senior water rights

California’s water rights system is notoriously complicated but essentially boils down to how early a farm, city or other landowner claimed a water right.

The earlier someone claimed a right, the higher they are in the pecking order. Because the state board will first halt diversions from “junior” rights holders, having senior rights buffets a user from some of the agency’s curtailment orders.

The key date is 1914, when the California Water Commission Act took effect and the precursor to the state water board was established. Anyone holding rights that were claimed before 1914 is considered a senior rights holder.

The water board’s decision during the last drought to go after those with senior water rights was an important step to ensure there was enough water in the state’s rivers to protect near-extinct species of fish and to ensure the rivers don’t run dry, said Doug Obegi, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

He said that while the ruling does leave the water board with authority to use its emergency powers, it’s clear that California lawmakers need to step up to give the state’s water cops the tools they need to make sure everyone is playing by the same rules.

“It is a call for the Legislature to strengthen and clarify the board’s authority,” he said. “So that we ensure that no one is above the law.”

Jennifer Harder, a water-rights expert at the University of the Pacific’s McGeorge School of Law, said, “The outcome is disappointing. The opinion unnecessarily interprets the Board’s authorities narrowly, which hampers statewide progress toward a sensible system that would benefit all water users .... In our drought-prone state it is self-defeating not to equip the Water Board with better tools than it has.”

The court ruling doesn’t cover the state board’s authority over two of the most significant water users in the state: the federal government’s Central Valley Project and the State Water Project, the system of dams and canals that bring water to much of the Central Valley, the Bay Area and urban Southern California.

Both projects were built well after the key 1914 date.

The ruling represents a victory for nine irrigation districts centered around the Delta — home to vineyards, tomatoes and other crops grown in one of California’s most productive agricultural areas.

A conglomeration of dozens of islands and tracts formed by the intersection of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, the Delta is also a burgeoning population center. Besides serving farmers, Byron Bethany Irrigation District, which led the legal crusade against the state’s curtailment orders, also provides water to Mountain House, a community of 21,000 developed in the past 20 years by CalPERS, the big state pension fund.

Officials with Byron Bethany weren’t immediately available for comment Tuesday, but hold itself out as a fighter for water rights. “Byron-Bethany Irrigation District believes it is of the utmost importance to protect its pre-1914, senior water rights – a foundation for reliable water deliveries, for agriculture in California and ultimately, a secure food supply,” the district said in a statement to The Sacramento Bee last week.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: california; water
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1 posted on 09/13/2022 11:23:27 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Who are the flood Tsars?


2 posted on 09/13/2022 11:47:00 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

almonds are more important than people (sarc)


3 posted on 09/13/2022 11:58:09 PM PDT by RockyTx
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
“It’s certainly a defeat for the state board,” said Brian Gray, a water-rights expert at the Public Policy Institute of California.

Good. They’ve already screwed up CA’s water management enough.

4 posted on 09/14/2022 12:11:26 AM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith…)
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To: RockyTx

I hate almonds unless it’s in an Almond Joy


5 posted on 09/14/2022 12:16:55 AM PDT by digger48
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

As if we still have the rule of law.


6 posted on 09/14/2022 1:12:11 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum ( We need to “build back better” on the bones and ashes of those forcing us to “Build Back Better.")
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Next this one needs to stopped
US and Mexico water from Lake Mead Minute 319. 52,000 acre-feet (17 million gallons) of water dumped into the oceans and "wetlands" per year that don't exists.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorado_River#Minute_319
7 posted on 09/14/2022 1:35:02 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric Cartman voice* 'I love you, guys')
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To: metmom; Carry_Okie

No kidding.


8 posted on 09/14/2022 3:30:15 AM PDT by sauropod (Unbelief has nothing to say. Chance favors the prepared mind.)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

When 10% of your 40 million population came from Mexico over the last two decades and when California has not built enough new reservoirs, desalination plants and other water projects in recent decades because there are too many delays, too many lawsuits and too much red tape, what did the leaders think was going to happen?


9 posted on 09/14/2022 3:31:22 AM PDT by Lockbox (politicians, they all seemed like game show hosts to me.... Sting)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

As long as the swimming pools are kept full and no Israeli desalinization plants are built.


10 posted on 09/14/2022 3:54:08 AM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: Lockbox

True that. And don’t forget the insanity of millions of Americans moving to a desert, then complaining about a shortage of water.


11 posted on 09/14/2022 3:54:19 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

California’s plan was always to just steal somebody else’s water. Instead of actually coming up with a new supply, they figured they would fight it in the courts instead.

This will be the same play they use for electricity too.


12 posted on 09/14/2022 5:41:18 AM PDT by dgbrown
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To: Tell It Right

That also..


13 posted on 09/14/2022 6:19:51 AM PDT by Lockbox (politicians, they all seemed like game show hosts to me.... Sting)
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To: dgbrown

It took fifty years of argument before the Hetch Hetchy Dam was completed on the Tuolomne River in the nineteen twenties. It has been the source of San Francisco’s water supply, and the Greenies now want it destroyed.


14 posted on 09/14/2022 6:48:02 AM PDT by Bookshelf
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

California still not sure what to do with all the blue stuff the west of them.


15 posted on 09/14/2022 8:31:11 AM PDT by Vaduz ( )
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

The key problem with the California Water Resouces Control Board is the makeup of the Board. It is not composed - with equal voting rights on board decsicions - of all key stakeholders. Instead it is composed merely of governor appointed persons representing themselves and their own, ofen acivist, ideas.

A major reform of that body would be all board members would represent some state water usage constituency, and all decisions would be by consensus not majority vote; and fish in the ocean are not a key constituency. Activists should have no direct formal role in the board, and be merely able to adress the board in hearings, but no differently and with no greater weight than individual citizens.


16 posted on 09/14/2022 9:43:57 AM PDT by Wuli (uires )
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To: Wuli; All

The key problem with the California Water Resouces Control Board is the makeup of the Board. It is not composed - with equal voting rights on board decisions - of all key stakeholders. Instead it is composed merely of governor appointed persons representing themselves and their own, often activist, ideas.

A major reform of that body would be all board members would represent some state water usage constituency, and all decisions would be by consensus not majority vote; and fish in the ocean are not a key constituency. Activists should have no direct formal role in the board, and be merely able to address the board in hearings, but no differently and with no greater weight than individual citizens.

THANK YOU! I deeply appreciate the knowledge you shared with your comment.


17 posted on 09/14/2022 9:57:06 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com (Pray for God's intervention to stop Putin's invasion, )
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
While you UMCRev accentuated the core of this I can't see a solution to this unique multi-state/multi-country problem without the same sort of cooperation between same states, federal government and adjoining country. Mexico needs some of that water it's gotten forever while California seems to be saying it's demand justifies need. I think it's obvious their current situation with available water is insufficient and unsustainable and can't understand why their politicians keep beating a fast-dying horse when the profits of desalination tech would have made them beyond wealthy overall while benefiting everyone all over the planet.

This situation where there's finally viable desalinization available reeks of some favored privileged screwing the not for pure profit over the betterment of mankind. And me being a hardcore capitalist. Think about a few thinking many million of us sacrificed is a small price to pay for their little clique surviving. Once they get into the Billion Club they are NOT like us anymore and they keep their bought and financed politicians on a short leash away from We The People's best interests. Hence we keep losing lately on every important fight where citizen's rights and common sense on sustaining us all are critical. It's not like those selfish asshats have a viable terraformed world to run to - we're all stuck on this one right now.

No, I know there's no climate crisis nor other made-up crap that motivates leftists and their weak-minded followers. Our crisis is too many who do when we need our nation back.

18 posted on 09/14/2022 12:49:50 PM PDT by MikelTackNailer (It's not ornaments I want to see decorating the tree. Mine dance on air a short while.)
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To: MikelTackNailer; fieldmarshaldj; AuntB; Chode; wardaddy
I tend to run faster than thoughts while writing too much. I'm saying we need a multi-state (not federal) cooperation with Mexico to work out a fair allocation of water management from existing sources while new technology on desalination has finally advanced to be viable - it just needs the large facilities only large groups or governments can provide to work at this point while further efficiency looks viable.

If we can make desalination inexpensive and viable everywhere we will have gotten nearly halfway to a true utopian ideal where human beings don't have to combat over critical resources.

Who's not with me looking at Putin and Zelensky saying "What what? Get over yourselves, sit down do a deal and don't drag the world in it." But we Americans have a lot of light-dodging neo-con industrial-defense industry tools influencing too many politicians with too many promises of future lobbying employments and off-shore treasure chests.

Let us take our country back while we still can no matter what these new-style SS Nazis threaten or do. That's a lot to ask of we oldsters but it's our nation at stake. They crossed over the boundaries of law and Constitution hunting down and harassing "Trumpites", confiscating telephones and running roughshod through the rightful President's home seeking evidence of their own sins he wisely doesn't keep there.

Now there's an insurance policy against being Arkancided I hadn't considered before. Rock on Mr. President and God bless.

19 posted on 09/14/2022 6:16:58 PM PDT by MikelTackNailer (It's not ornaments I want to see decorating the tree. Mine dance on air a short while.)
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To: MikelTackNailer

there’s five of them in Israel...


20 posted on 09/14/2022 7:45:48 PM PDT by Chode (there is no fall back position, there's no rally point, there is no LZ... we're on our own. #FJB)
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