$4.5 million for
Trinity River
By SALLY MORRIS
The Trinity Journal
April 22, 2009
Federal stimulus money to be invested in
water projects across the country includes a $4.5 million
boost for the Trinity River Restoration Program to use on
projects designed to improve fish habitat.
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar
announced last week that the Department of Interior will
invest $1 billion, under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009, in America's water infrastructure
to create or save jobs and get the economy moving again.
Of the $1 billion that Interior's Bureau
of Reclamation is investing in water projects, $260 million
will go to projects in California to expand water supplies,
repair aging water infrastructure, restore damaged
ecosystems and mitigate the effects of the drought the state
is currently experiencing. An additional $135 million is
available in grants for water reuse and recycling projects.
"In the midst of one of the deepest
economic crises in our history, Californians have been
saddled with a drought that is putting tens of thousands of
people out of work and devastating entire communities,"
Salazar said last week in a Sacramento press conference with
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and state congressional leaders.
He noted that President Barrack Obama's
economic recovery plan "will not only create jobs on basic
water infrastructure projects, but will help address both
the short- and long-term water supply challenges the Golden
State is facing. From boosting water supplies and improving
conservation to improving safety at our dams, these
shovel-ready projects will make a real and immediate
difference in the lives of farmers, businesses, Native
American Tribes and communities across California."
The stimulus money will be used to fund
more than 30 Bureau of Reclamation water infrastructure
projects in California, including $4.5 million for
restoration projects on the Trinity River. Another $4
million is slated for sedimentation studies on the Klamath
River to be used for future management decisionmaking.
Other projects funded in the north state
include construction of a screened pumping plant at the Red
Bluff Diversion Dam on the Sacramento River to protect fish
populations while delivering water to agricultural users
downstream; construction to address dam safety concerns at
Folsom Dam near Sacramento; a $26 million fishery
restoration project on Battle Creek; and a $20 million
project on the Contra Costa Canal to protect water supplies
for downstream users and build fish screens to restore
endangered fish populations in the Sacramento Delta and San
Francisco Bay.
Executive Director of the Trinity River
Restoration Program Mike Hamman said the $4.5 million in
stimulus money for the Trinity River will be used to fund
four construction projects on the upper section of river
below Lewiston Dam.
The projects are located in the vicinities
of the Lowden Ranch area, Reading Creek, Wheel Gulch and
Trinity House Gulch. The work to be accomplished over the
next two years involves creating side channels, expanding
gravel bars and re-vegetation of certain areas designed to
improve fish-rearing habitat.
The restoration program typically has an
annual budget of approximately $10.5 million of which about
40 percent is allocated to construction projects numbering
two or three in a given year "so the stimulus money really
accelerates what we'll be able to do," Hamman said. Without
the stimulus money, Hamman said it would be two or three
years at least before the identified projects could be
undertaken.
Needed projects were identified through
the original studies for the Department of Interior's
Trinity River Record of Decision in 2000. The Trinity
Management Council of partner agencies and stakeholders
provides overall policy direction and management assistance
for the program that also involves input from a citizens'
advisory group called the Trinity Adaptive Management
Working Group.
|
Posted By Byron
Leydecker (4/26/2009 6:24 PM EDT): |
|
| The Trinity Management Council
consists only of federal, state, tribal and county
representatives, many of which benefit financially
from Restoration Program funding. The Trinity
Adaptive Management Working Group consists of
stakeholders, that is irrigator, power, sport
fishing, rafting guiding, and wildlife interests,
along with Trinity County residents and others. |
|
Posted By Byron
Leydecker (4/26/2009 6:31 PM EDT): |
|
| My apologies…I posted the first
comment before it was finished. On an equal advisory
level with the Trinity Adaptive Management Working
Group are the Independent Review Panels. It also
includes a Science Advisory Board which presumably
evaluates the scientific validity and effectiveness
of Restoration Program projects. Independent Review
Panels are established on a case by case basis to
evaluate specific projects. |