THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 19, 2018
October
19, 2018
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
THE
SECRETARY OF COMMERCE
THE
SECRETARY OF ENERGY
THE
SECRETARY OF THE ARMY
THE CHAIR
OF THE COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Subject:
Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of
Water in the West
By the
authority vested in me as President by the
Constitution and the laws of the United States
of America, I hereby direct the following:
Section 1. Policy. During
the 20th Century, the Federal Government
invested enormous resources in water
infrastructure throughout the western
United States to reduce flood risks to
communities; to provide reliable water supplies
for farms, families, businesses, and fish and
wildlife; and to generate dependable
hydropower. Decades of uncoordinated, piecemeal
regulatory actions have diminished the ability
of our Federal infrastructure, however, to
deliver water and power in an efficient,
cost‑effective way.
Unless addressed, fragmented regulation of water
infrastructure will continue to produce
inefficiencies, unnecessary burdens, and
conflict among the Federal Government, States,
tribes, and local public agencies that deliver
water to their citizenry. To meet these
challenges, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Secretary of Commerce should, to the extent
permitted by law, work together to minimize
unnecessary regulatory burdens and foster more
efficient decision-making so that water projects
are better able to meet the demands of their
authorized purposes.
Sec. 2. Streamlining Western
Water Infrastructure Regulatory Processes and
Removing Unnecessary Burdens. To address
water infrastructure challenges in the western
United States, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Secretary of Commerce shall undertake the
following actions:
(a) Within 30 days of the date of this
memorandum, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Secretary of Commerce shall:
(i)
identify major water infrastructure projects
in California for which the Department of the
Interior and the Department of Commerce have
joint responsibility under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (Public Law 93-205) or
individual responsibilities under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) (Public
Law 91-190); and
(ii) for
each such project, work together to facilitate
the designation of one official to coordinate
the agencies'
ESA and NEPA compliance responsibilities.
Within the 30-day time period provided by this
subsection, the designated official shall also
identify regulations and procedures that
potentially burden the project and develop a
proposed plan, for consideration by the
Secretaries, to appropriately suspend, revise,
or rescind any regulations or procedures that
unduly burden the project beyond the degree
necessary to protect the public interest or
otherwise comply with the law. For purposes of
this memorandum, "burden" means to unnecessarily
obstruct, delay, curtail, impede, or otherwise
impose significant costs on the permitting,
utilization, transmission, delivery, or supply
of water resources and infrastructure.
(b) Within 40 days of the date of this
memorandum, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Secretary of Commerce shall develop a
timeline for completing applicable environmental
compliance requirements for projects identified
under section 2(a)(i) of this memorandum.
Environmental compliance requirements shall be
completed as expeditiously as possible, and in
accordance with applicable law.
(c) To the maximum extent practicable and
consistent with applicable law, including the
authorities granted to the Secretary of the
Interior and the Secretary of Commerce under the
Water
Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act (Public
Law 114-322):
(i) The Secretary of the Interior
and the Secretary of Commerce shall ensure that
the ongoing review of the long-term coordinated
operations of the Central Valley Project and the
California State Water Project is completed and
an updated Plan of Operations and Record of
Decision is issued.
(ii) The Secretary of the Interior
shall issue final biological assessments for the
long-term coordinated operations of the Central
Valley Project and the California State Water
Project not later than January 31, 2019.
(iii) The Secretary of the Interior
and the Secretary of Commerce shall ensure the
issuance of their respective final biological
opinions for the long-term coordinated
operations of the Central Valley Project and the
California State Water Project within 135 days
of the deadline provided in section 2(c)(ii) of
this memorandum. To the extent practicable and
consistent with law, these shall be joint
opinions.
(iv) The Secretary of the Interior
and the Secretary of Commerce shall complete the
joint consultation presently underway for the
Klamath Irrigation Project by August 2019.
(d) The Secretary of the Interior and the
Secretary of Commerce shall provide monthly
updates to the Chair of the Council on
Environmental Quality and other components of
the Executive Office of the President, as
appropriate, regarding progress in meeting the
established timelines.
Sec. 3. Improve Forecasts of
Water Availability. To facilitate greater
use of forecast-based management and use of
authorities and capabilities provided by the
Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation Act
of 2017 (Public Law 115-25) and other applicable
laws, the Secretary of the Interior and the
Secretary of Commerce shall convene water
experts and resource managers to develop an
action plan to improve the information and
modeling capabilities related to water
availability and water infrastructure projects.
The action plan shall be completed by
January 2019 and submitted to the Chair of the
Council on Environmental Quality.
Sec. 4. Improving Use of
Technology to Increase Water Reliability.
To the maximum extent practicable, and pursuant
to the Reclamation Wastewater and Groundwater
Study and Facilities Act (Public Law 102-575,
title XVI), the Water Desalination Act of 1996
(Public Law 104-298), and other applicable laws,
the Secretary of the Interior shall direct
appropriate bureaus to promote the expanded use
of technology for improving the accuracy and
reliability of water and power deliveries. This
promotion of expanded use should include:
(a) investment in technology and
reduction of regulatory burdens to enable
broader scale deployment of desalination
technology;
(b) investment in technology and
reduction of regulatory burdens to enable
broader scale use of recycled water; and
(c) investment in programs that promote
and encourage innovation, research, and
development of technology that improve water
management, using best available science through
real-time monitoring of wildlife and water
deliveries.
Sec. 5. Consideration of Locally
Developed Plans in Hydroelectric Projects
Licensing. To the extent the Secretary of
the Interior and the Secretary of Commerce
participate in Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission licensing activities for
hydroelectric projects, and to the extent
permitted by law, the Secretaries shall give
appropriate consideration to any relevant
information available to them in locally
developed plans, where consistent with the best
available information.
Sec. 6. Streamlining Regulatory
Processes and Removing Unnecessary Burdens on
the Columbia River Basin Water Infrastructure.
In order to address water and hydropower
operations challenges in the Columbia River
Basin, the Secretary of the Interior, the
Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of Energy,
and the Assistant Secretary of the Army for
Civil Works under the direction of the Secretary
of the Army, shall develop a schedule to
complete the Columbia River System Operations
Environmental Impact Statement and the
associated Biological Opinion due by 2020. The
schedule shall be submitted to the Chair of the
Council on Environmental Quality within 60 days
of the date of this memorandum.
Sec. 7.
General Provisions.
(a) Nothing in this memorandum shall be
construed to impair or otherwise affect:
(i) the authority granted by law to
an executive department or agency, or the head
thereof; or
(ii) the functions of the Director
of the Office of Management and Budget relating
to budgetary, administrative, or legislative
proposals.
(b) This memorandum shall be implemented
consistent with applicable law and subject to
the availability of appropriations.
(c) This memorandum is not intended to,
and does not, create any right or benefit,
substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or
in equity by any party against the
United States, its departments, agencies, or
entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or
any other person.
(d) The Secretary of the Interior is
hereby authorized and directed to publish this
memorandum in the
Federal Register. |