March 11, 2010 5:46 PM WASHINGTON, D.C. –
The Subcommittee on Water and Power held an oversight
hearing today on the FY 2011 Administration Budget
Request for the Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation). The
attached remarks are by Representative Tom McClintock:
I’d like to express my concern
from the outset that the Bureau of Reclamation is
quickly becoming the Bureau of Water Shortage and Dam
Destruction. The budget before us today is
symbolic of that transformation.
The Bureau of Reclamation was established
to “make the desert bloom.” Today, it provides water to
31 million consumers, irrigates 10 million acres of
farmland and provides enough clean, cheap and abundant
hydroelectricity to power 3.5 million homes. It would
take roughly 67 million barrels of heating oil or 21
million tons of coal to produce an equal amount of
power.
Despite these successes, the agency’s
mission is being undermined by constant environmental
litigation, a shift toward outrageously expensive urban
water recycling programs and what can only be described
as “analysis paralysis” when it comes to meeting the
next generation’s water needs through new dams,
aqueducts and reservoirs.
In my home state of California we have
watched as the San Joaquin Valley has been transformed
back into desert by the diversion of over 200 billion
gallons of water for the enjoyment of the delta smelt.
The Northern Sierra snowpack is now at
124 percent of normal, and yet the Administration has
announced that it will guarantee only five percent of
the west valley’s water entitlement, with promises to
increase it to all of 40 percent – maybe – in the
future.
Farmers in the Klamath Valley in
California and Oregon are now threatened with another
complete shut-off of water for the amusement of the
sucker fish.
While additional hydroelectric dams and
reservoirs have been placed on a slow-track to nowhere,
the fast-track has been reserved for dam destruction.
At a time when Californians pay the
highest electricity prices in the continental United
States, and officials can’t guarantee enough electricity
to keep our air conditioners running this summer, the
administration is moving to fast-track the willful
destruction of four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath
River that are producing enough electricity for more
than 150,000 homes.
The agency has asked for $5 million to
begin the process to remove the dams, but continues to
drag its feet on studying new water storage or
hydroelectric generation.
I fear that this agency is becoming a
pawn of the environmental Left and its crusade to crush
the economy of rural America through the Endangered
Species Act.
To make matters worse, we are told that
ESA reform is not on the table despite the economic
devastation that it is producing throughout rural
America.
When we propose a new generation of fish
hatcheries to assure abundant populations of salmon, for
example, we’re simply ignored. So we impose billions of
dollars of new costs on our economy in the name of
protecting a few hundred thousand salmon – when, for the
cost of just $13 million we could produce 170 million
salmon each year – which is the inflation-adjusted cost
and production output of the single Macaulay Fish
Hatchery in Juneau.
This ideological fixation of the Left on
creating and rationing shortages has to stop. We have it
fully within our power to produce abundance in every
field overseen by this sub-committee: abundant fish
populations, cheap and abundant water; cheap, clean and
abundant electricity; which in turn guarantees a
thriving economy. That we fail to do so is a matter of
choice and not of fate.
We need to put people back into the
equation.
I hope that the testimony today will look
beyond the same failed policy of managing shortages and
instead lay out a bold vision of a new generation of
hydroelectric dams, aqueducts, hatcheries and
transmission lines to provide a brighter and more
prosperous future for the next generation.
I have become accustomed to such hopes
being dashed in this sub-committee, but as they say,
hope springs eternal, and elections spring up every two
years. These now chronic electricity and water shortages
are not due to acts of God, but rather to acts of
Government, and we have this consolation: that acts of
government are always within our power to change.