-- One sigh of relief for
By Liz Bowen, Pioneer Press Assistant Editor,
Pioneer
Press,
Wednesday,
Vol 32, No. 49
Page A1, column 1
As a result, agricultural groups and rural counties breathed a collective sigh of relief.
Both state Senator Sam Aanestad and Assemblyman Doug LaMalfa were “thrilled” by the governor’s veto.
In the vote at the senate level, Aanestad voted against SB-820, which was opposed by virtually every farming and agricultural group in the state. Most rural counties and the council of rural counties also voiced opposition.
David Reed, from LaMalfa’s office, said that the bill would have placed an incredible onerous burden on family farmers, who would have had to put meters on their wells and then report the usage to the state.
“In fact it represented a threat to the very water rights that folks in the north possess,” said Reed, “which we must safeguard relentlessly.”
In
On
For SB-820, the Governor Schwarzenegger said the bill was “a very comprehensive measure that attempted to address a host of water rights issues that included surface water along with the groundwater.”
Apparently, the author Senator Sheila Kuehl, a
Democrat from
“By mandating extraction reports without
analysis of recharge, groundwater quality, basin composition and other issues
essential to understanding the health of the groundwater basin, this bill
creates a significant burden on property owners,” said Governor
Schwarzenegger.
The Pioneer
Press at the very top of the State of