Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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A healthier
Salton Sea, $2.5 billion
Dam could
create smaller, healthy sea
$2.3 billion cost: The plan would save habitats and produce economic benefits, supporters say.
Riverside
Press Enterprise - 5/25/03
By Bettye
Wells Miller, staff writer
After five years and $20 million spent studying the Salton Sea, federal officials and supporters of the desert lake may have found common ground on a plan to save it. A healthier but smaller Salton Sea could emerge under a proposal that is gaining momentum, despite the estimated $2.3 billion cost.
Backers say the
plan to create an ocean-like lake and terraced ponds
offers the best hope for restoring the sea, a major
stopover for millions of migratory birds. It also
could boost economic development along the north
shore and make drinking water available for a
million families.
"I would like to save the whole sea," said Norm Niver, a 30-year resident of Salton City on the sea's southwestern shore. "But I'm a realist. This is wonderful as an option."
The Salton Sea,
California's largest lake, is 25 percent saltier
than the ocean and getting saltier. Formed in 1905
when the Colorado River overflowed a canal, it now
is sustained by farm runoff. The lake is home to
more than 400 species of birds and fish, some of
which are threatened or endangered.
Saving the sea, which is plagued not only by excess salt but by bird and fish die-offs, has been the focus of much debate. The sea's future figured prominently last year in the collapse of a deal to transfer billions of gallons of water from Imperial Valley farmers to urban residents. The deal was necessary to continue California's access to surplus Colorado River water but faltered because of, among other things, concern that curtailing irrigation would contribute to the sea's slow demise.
"This has the
potential to save part of the sea and allow the
water transfers to move forward," said Andy Horne,
president of the Salton Sea Authority and a member
of the Imperial Irrigation District board of
directors.
"The realization that it's difficult, if not impossible, to finalize water transfers and save the entire sea has encouraged people to give this a hard look," he said.
The plan
endorsed by the Salton Sea Authority in April builds
on a previous proposal by U.S. Filter. In the new
plan, a dam would be built at the sea's midpoint to
create an ocean-like lake in the north basin. An
outlet would allow salty water to leave the closed
lake and be replaced with fresher farm runoff, said
Tom Kirk, executive director of the joint-powers
authority that manages the sea.
A desalination plant would treat up to 500,000 acre-feet of farm runoff annually before it reaches the sea. The desalted water would be sold back to Imperial Valley farmers, freeing Colorado River water for urban users. The southern half of the current lake would become terraced ponds, creating extensive shallow-water habitat. Open space interspersed among the ponds would be covered with a salt cap to reduce dust. The changes would produce a net gain of 15,000 acres of bird habitat, said Ken Althiser, senior geographic information systems analyst for the Redlands Institute, which is part of the Salton Sea Database Program at the University of Redlands. "I think we have a chance to meet all the needs of the area," he said. "We can maintain bird resources, fish, recreation values and get water out of it."
The plan
anticipates the transfer of billions of gallons of
water from Imperial Valley farms to urban users,
Kirk said. "We're trying to reuse water as much as
possible because we're going to have less of it."
The sale of desalted water could generate half of the money needed to fund the project, he said. Between $1.3 billion and $1.5 billion would be required from the state and federal governments, he said. State Sen. Michael Machado, D-Linden, has introduced legislation that would put a $5 billion water bond, including $1 billion for Salton Sea, on the ballot next year.
The biggest
question mark, Kirk said, is whether the lake floor
can support a large dike or dam. Bedrock is about
5,000 feet below. There also are questions about the
dam's ability to survive earthquakes. Engineering
bids will be sought soon.
The dam can be built, said Chris Amrhein, professor of soil and water chemistry at UC Riverside and an adviser to the Salton Sea Authority. The biggest hurdle will be cost, he said.
Communities
along the sea's shores would also benefit from the
plan, Amrhein said.
"You would be making high-quality, waterfront real estate" along the north shore, he said. "This is the political dream, that this could be more than a stopping-over place for waterfowl. This proposal essentially allows that. It could become quite nice." #
Thirsty for water dollars
Salton Sea
restoration plan faces tough competition for
uncertain pool of money
Riverside
Press Enterprise - 5/25/03
By Bettye
Wells Miller, staff writer
At day's end, the blazing sun
slips behind the Santa Rosa Mountains and bathes the
hills in a palette of pastels. White pelicans on the
shore turn shades of pink.
It's the best time of day at the
Salton Sea, says Norm Niver, who has loved the salty
lake since he moved there 30 years ago.
The lake's future is uncertain,
however, caught between farmers and city-dwellers
fighting over the water that feeds it, and
politicians trying to decide whether the sea is
worth saving, and at what cost.
The Salton Sea Authority, which oversees the lake, has spent $20 million over five years studying the sea and evaluating options. Last month, the agency endorsed a $2.3 billion plan to save half the lake, turn the rest into wetlands, and provide drinking water for up to 4 million Southern Californians.
The transformation will need state
and federal funding.
That puts Niver's cherished sea in
competition with the $8.5 billion California Federal
Bay-Delta Project -- CalFed -- touted as the
solution to California's long-term water needs and
to restoring a devastated ecosystem in the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Those who study California's water
issues worry there won't be enough federal money to
go around.
"It's almost a guarantee there's a competition for dollars," said Mike Spear, deputy secretary of the California Resources Agency. The state has been disappointed at how little of CalFed the federal government has funded, he added.
The government agreed to pay about
$2.3 billion but has contributed less than $300
million, according to a state analysis. In that
climate, some officials wonder how the Salton Sea
will fare. It's years behind CalFed in planning,
isn't nearly as vital to the state's water supply,
and lies in a distant and barren corner of
California.
It's been tough to get support
from the U.S. Department of Interior for any
California water project, said Barry Nelson, senior
policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense
Council.
"When it comes to the federal
government, I think it is clear that the Salton Sea
and Bay-Delta are competing over crumbs," he said.
Time is not on the side of the
Salton Sea.
Rising salinity levels threaten
the survival of fish and millions of migratory
birds. Fish and bird die-offs are legendary.
The sea is one of the largest
stopovers in North America for migratory water birds
and is home to several endangered species, said
Daniel Cooper, director of bird conservation for
Audubon California.
In a state that has lost more than
90 percent of its wetlands, the sea and its
surrounding habitat become more vital for migratory
birds "hardwired" by thousands of years of habit to
stop there, he said.
"They've evolved with these
wetlands," Cooper said.
A deal to transfer billions of
gallons of Colorado River water from Imperial Valley
farmers to residents in San Diego County and the
Coachella Valley would greatly reduce agricultural
runoff, the lifeblood of the sea.
The transfer is part of a plan to
reduce the state's use of river water. California
has taken more than its share for years because
other states have not needed all of theirs. Rapid
growth in those states and the worst drought in
history along the river mean that California must
give up the surplus.
But the Imperial Irrigation
District balked at the transfer deal in December, in
part because of liability concerns over damage to
the sea. In response, the Bush administration cut
off California's access to extra river water that
would serve about 5 million people.
Rep. Mary Bono, the sea's most
vocal advocate in Congress, said she is frustrated
that the Interior Department and Congress haven't
been more supportive of the Salton Sea and
California's water needs.
"It's ironic for a state that's
such an important force in driving our (national)
economy that we have to fight so hard," Bono, R-Palm
Springs, said in a telephone interview.
Without a restoration plan, the sea will shrink, killing fish and birds and exposing miles of dry lakebed in an area notorious for blasting windstorms, Bono said. Air quality in the Coachella and Imperial valleys would be at risk. "In 15 or 20 years, there will be an ecological disaster and a public health disaster," said Michael Cohen, senior associate of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment and Security in Oakland.
Cohen said he is worried that the
sea will be ignored.
In 1998, Congress gave the
Interior Department until 2000 to devise plans to
save the Salton Sea. But no concrete plan exists.
"The federal government was
supposed to have stepped up to the plate three years
ago," Cohen said. "California politically is not a
major incentive for the current administration."
Julia Levin, state policy director
for Audubon California, said California loses out on
some funding because of limits on what each state
can receive, regardless of population.
Even so, she said, "it appears
that the Bush administratiaon is thumbing its nose
at California."
A majority of California's 35 million residents live in the semi-arid south, depending on water from the northern half of the state and the Colorado River.
Decades of overpumping and
pollution in the scenic Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
depleted fisheries, contaminated drinking water and
jeopardized water supplies, environmentalists and
policy-makers say.
"It's a damaged system," said
Nelson of the Natural Resources Defense Council.
"Southern California relies on the Bay-Delta for a
significant amount of water. As it becomes less
healthy, it becomes a less-reliable water supply."
About one-third of the Inland area's water comes from the Bay-Delta, about one-third from the Colorado River and about one-third from local groundwater.
Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Corona, who
supports both CalFed and the Salton Sea, said the
loss of surplus Colorado River water in January
makes solving California's water issues essential.
"As we become less dependent on
the Colorado River, we become more dependent on
Northern California," Calvert said. "CalFed is
critical for California."
So far, it's the state that has
stepped up to the plate.
CalFed officials said the state
has contributed $1.218 billion to the CalFed project
over the past three years, mostly from bond
measures, while the federal government, despite its
agreement to contribute $2.3 billion, has spent
about $175 million during that period.
In a conference call with
reporters earlier this month, Interior Secretary
Gale Norton announced a new effort to help Western
states address water needs. But she did not explain
why CalFed has received so little of the promised
federal funding.
"They're willing to give a little technical assistance and rhetorical support for water reform in the West," said Thomas Graff, an attorney for Environmental Defense, a national advocacy group. "Money? Forget it." California's federal delegation is trying to pry money out of Washington.
Senators Dianne Feinstein and
Barbara Boxer introduced a bill on Wednesday
authorizing $880 million in fiscal years 2004-2007
to protect and restore the Bay-Delta area.
Funding CalFed is critical for a state that is projected to grow to 50 million residents in 20 years but depends on a water-delivery system built when California had 16 million residents, Feinstein said in a statement. "If there is one lesson to learn from California's damaging energy crisis, it is that the time to address a crisis is not while it is happening, but beforehand."
Californians could be asked to
reach into their pockets to help the Salton Sea. At
least one bond measure to fund more California water
projects is likely to appear on a ballot next year.
Sen. Michael Machado, D-Linden, is pushing a measure that would allocate $1 billion for the Salton Sea as a way to remove a major hurdle in reaching agreement on the Colorado River deal. It also would allocate $500 million for CalFed and $3.5 billion for various local and regional projects. An $8 billion measure by Sen. Joe Canciamilla, D-Martinez, would fund CalFed and other projects.
Still, federal aid is essential
for those projects, said Steve Hall, executive
director of the Association of California Water
Agencies.
"The federal government has a
responsibility and role to play in CalFed and the
Salton Sea," he said. "It's not a fair or wise
choice to tell California, 'You're going to get so
much federal money. You choose CalFed or the Salton
Sea.' . . . We are a huge part of the economic
engine of this country."
As for funding hopes for the
Salton Sea, the sale of water from a proposed
desalination plant could help pay for the
restoration, said Tom Kirk, executive director of
the Salton Sea Authority.
"If it helps pay for itself and is
providing water for the coast," Kirk said, "I think
it has a better chance for people in Sacramento and
D.C. to pay attention." # An illustration for this article is at: http://www.pe.com/imagesdaily/2003/05-25/graphic-bigsalton.html
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