
NEWS
RELEASE
San
Luis & Delta Mendota Water Authority
PO Box
2157
Los Banos
,
CA
93635
Release
Immediate
Date:
Aug. 31, 2007
Contact:
Dan Nelson (209) 826-9696
FARMERS
LOSE WATER TO FISH
San Joaquin
Valley
farmers receiving water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta will see
their 2008 supplies cut by as much as 50 percent or a reduction in
deliveries by as much as 500,000 acre-feet, one of the largest single
court-ordered reductions in
California
water history. Federal District Court Judge Oliver Wanger in
Fresno
announced the decision today after several days of testimony to
determine how best to operate the pumps supplying the water and at the
same time protect the delta smelt, a 2-4 inch long fish with a dwindling
population.
“We knew the judge was going to take away some of our water but we were
holding out hope that he would have given more time to the scientists to
continue working toward a science-based solution,” said Dan Nelson,
executive director of the San Luis & Delta Mendota Water Authority.
The authority is a group of 32 water districts that supplies water to
farmers covering more than 2 million acres.
“Every farmer in the 3 million acres receiving water through the Delta
pumps and 25 million residents in the Bay and
Los
Angeles
are at immediate risk resulting from less water flowing to their farms,
homes and businesses next year,” Nelson added.
“Even though the judge’s ruling applies only to next year, it is still
devastating news for our farmers,” Nelson said. “Thousands of
acres of orchard and vine crops that represent a long-term investment by
farmers are in jeopardy. What happens if a farmer is not able to
secure a water source to irrigate his crops? It is possible that
these crops could dry up and die.”
Annual water requirements for permanent crops, including almonds, grapes,
pistachios and others in the CVP south of Delta farming region total
500,000 acre-feet or more. The court-mandated reduction in CVP
deliveries to farmers means less water for other crops such as lettuce,
tomatoes and many other fruit and vegetable crops. Those
crops could potentially be fallowed to meet the water needs of permanent
crops. A similar scenario would be felt in the entire south of
delta CVP service area.
Nelson explained that the effects of taking water away from the farmers
will also be felt in the rural communities throughout the San Joaquin
Valley west side.
“Unemployment will go up if farming is cut back because of a lack of
water,” he said.
A U.S. Census Bureau study released this week listed
Fresno
,
Tulare
,
Kings, Kern,
Merced
and
Madera
counties with the highest percentage of residents living below the
poverty line in
California
last year of all state counties.
“It’s ironic and tragic that on the heels of this study that these
water cutbacks are taking place,” insisted Nelson. “These
rural communities rely on their local farms for their financial
survival. Any cut in the irrigation supply to these farms will
continue to damage these communities and they simply can’t afford
it.”
The hearing began last week in response to an earlier court ruling that
the operation of the pumps do not comply with the federal Environmental
Species Act and threatens the existence of the delta smelt. A
group of environmental organizations filed the earlier suit and ask for
a reduction in 2008 deliveries to as low as zero percent. Other
plans submitted by State and federal agencies that oversee the pumping
operations had suggested deliveries from 5 to 55 percent of contracts.
“In the end,
California
’s
rural communities lose, farmers lose and the delta smelt loses because
science pointing to the real problems affecting the smelt populations is
being ignored,” claimed B.J. Miller, a consulting engineer who has
studied the Delta for years.
“The judge’s decision is disappointing because scientists are telling
us that the pumps only account for 5-15 percent of the causes that are
affecting the smelt population,” Nelson added. “Other factors
representing a greater effect on the smelt numbers are loss of food
supplies and the introduction of foreign plant and fish species that
have dramatically altered the environment.”
Over 3 million acres of farmland served by the federal Central Valley
Project and State Water Project is affected by the decision. Large
portions of the nation’s fruits and vegetables are grown and harvested
from that acreage.
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