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Judge Orders State to Shut Down Pumps to Save Delta
Smelt, Salmon Dan Bacher Thursday Apr 5th, 2007 5:54 PM
Alameda Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch ruled that the California Department
of Water Resources must obtain a "take permit" from the Department of Fish and
Game for any endangered Delta smelt, spring run chinook salmon and winter run
chinook salmon that it kills in the water export pumps of the California Delta.
In a monumental victory for anglers and conservationists, a judge on March 22
ordered the State Department of Water Resources to shut down the state's water
export pumps in the South Delta in order to save endangered salmon and Delta
smelt. Alameda Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch, in a strongly worded opinion, ordered the State
Resources Agency to cease and desist from further operation of the
Delta pumps until and unless they obtain from the DFG an incidental
take permit for winter run chinook salmon, spring
run chinook salmon, and Delta smelt in compliance
with the California Endangered Species Act (CESA). Fishing and
environmental groups applauded the decision since it has come at a time when
San Francisco Bay-Delta fisheries are in severe crisis. The Delta smelt
population, a once plentiful forage fish for larger species, has declined to
the lowest levels on record over the past five years at a time at a time when
state and federal exports have risen to record levels. Three other
open water species - longfin smelt, juvenile
striped bass and threadfin shad - have also crashed, along with the zooplankton
that they feed upon. The POD (Pelagic Organism Decline) team, a group of
federal and state scientists that has been studying the decline for the past
several years, has pinpointed water export changes, toxic chemicals and
invasive species as the three major factors in the decline.
We're delighted and surprised with the decision, said Bill
Jennings, executive director of Watershed Protectors, a project of the
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance. (CSPA)
The judge agreed with us that the Fish and Game Code clearly states that
you have to get a permit if you're going to kill endangered species in the
Delta pumps. It opens the door to the restoration of the
Delta, although we still have a long way to go, explained Jennings.
We don't seriously believe that the pumps will be totally shut off, but
we may see a ramping down of export levels to those before the recent pelagic
organism decline began. The decision resulted from a lawsuit
filed by CSPA in November 2006 as a last ditch attempt to stop the continuing
decline of Delta fish populations. The state and federal governments have
failed to do anything substantial about stopping the fish decline caused by
increased water exports. The State Resource Agency has been
breaking the law for years, said Jennings. We had to file the lawsuit to
hold the DFG and DWR accountable for the killing of endangered fish in the
pumps. The SWP provides some or all of the drinking water to 24
million people in California, including the cities of Los Angeles and San
Diego. In fact, around 30 to 40 percent of southern California drinking water
supplies come from the Delta. The water also irrigates 775,000 acres of
cropland in the San Joaquin Valley, according to Sue Sims, Department of Water
Resourcesspokesperson. The judge allowed 60 days for the agency to
develop a plan to comply with CESA's mandatory incidental take permit
requirements. Roesch also gave the DWR 15 days to
provide any additional information to the court that would impact the permit
process, but the parties to the lawsuit agreed to extend the deadline from
April 6 to April 11. In his decision, Roesch chided the Resources
Agency for being less than forthcoming in providing input and information for
reaching his decision. This decision has been made without any
input from the DFG as to its perceptions of whether the documents put forth as
DFG's authorization for the incidental take were or were not intended as
such, said Roesch. The Court regrets that an important case such as
this must be decided without all the possible available relevant
information. The ruling systematically dismantled the
"argument" of DWR that a patchwork quilt of five agreements between
state and federal agencies was the same as an incidental permit, arguing that
none of these agreements granted a take permit. The five agreements
cited were the 1986 Four Pumps Agreement, the 1990 Four Pumps Framework
Agreement, the 1994 CALFED Framework Agreement, the 1999 CALFED Accord and the
1995 Article VII Agreement. Roesch said that the best that can be
said for the five documents is that they accept that fish will be killed
in the Harvey O. Banks Pumping Plant operations and that the parties agree that
mitigation measures will be taken. While the documents certainly demonstrate
the fact that DWR was and has been attentive to the issue of the incidental
take caused by the pumping plant operation, it cannot be said the documents
state any agreements by the DFG authorizing the take of any species of fish,
endangered or not. On page 8, the judge also blasted the
Resource Agency's argument that CESA prohibits a person from taking
an endangered species and because DWR is not a person, the law does
not bind it. It would be nonsense to create an exception to
Fish and Game Code Section 2980 (CESA) by passage of 2081 (a) (an incidental
take permit) if 2080 did not apply to public agencies, said Roesch.
Officials with the Department of Water Resources were very upset with the
ruling - and concerned that the judge hadn't considered the Bay Delta Habitat
Conservation Plan (BDHCP) now being developed in collaboration with an array of
state agencies. We're perplexed with the court's ruling in this
case, said Lester Snow, director of DWR. We find the prospect of
curtailing pumping to be unacceptable in terms of the economic consequences to
the state. We are committed to developing a cutting edge
conservation package for the Delta, and have been for some time. We're also
working with federal agencies on development of a new biological opinion. We
certainly will suggest that the judge reconsider his draft decision and put it
in terms that are more logical and acceptable to developing a conservation
program for the Delta," he explained. Ryan Broddrick, DFG Director,
claimed that 60 days was not enough time to develop a plan to save Delta fish.
"We want to find solutions for the delta that have long-term
sustainability," Broddrick said, as quoted by reporter Glen Martin in the S.F
Chronicle on March 24. "The (60-day) time frame offered is not sufficient."
During a hearing of the State Senate Natural Resources Committee on
March 28, Senator Mike Machado and other Senators grilled Broddrick about his
failure to get the take permit. "The reality is you didn't take the
step to try to enforce the law, said Machado. Correct,"
Broddrick answered him. Fishing and conservation groups have been
very critical of the Bay Delta Habitat Conservation Plan, the recently
inaugurated Delta Vision process by the Governor and other supposedly
consensus processes designed to solving the Delta's
problems. The Bay Delta plan will take many years,
emphasized Jennings. If we wait for completion of this plan, we'll see
species dropping into the abyss of oblivion. This plan can't be considered in
lieu of statutory requirements to obtain a take permit, as ordered by the
judge. This plan is highly problematic because agencies and
water contractors have agreed upon no surprises and no net
loss of water supplies as pre-conditions for participation in the BDHCP
process. Although the water agencies and contractors may agree
to do some fish and habitat mitigation, the agreement will in effect immunize
them from contributing to future mitigation, argued Jennings.
The California Endangered Species Act is more stringent than the federal
Endangered Species Act in its provisions for mitigation. CESA requires that all
losses be fully mitigated - either take must be avoided or the taken species
must be replaced. DFG and DWR have engaged in a dance of denial
in avoiding the CESA, said Jennings, since they aren't prepared to
mitigate for the loss of species listed under CESA. Michael
Lozeau, the attorney representing the alliance, emphasized that the agency will
have to mitigate fish losses by reducing pumping, improving habitat and other
measures. They have to replace every single Delta smelt, winter run
chinook or spring run chinook that is taken in the Delta pumping
facilities, Lozeau said. The need for mitigation becomes very
urgent when you consider that the Delta smelt population is so depleted that
the fish now barely register on the statistical charts of scientists surveying
population levels. DWR really has no idea how many Delta smelt
they are killing, since they aren't even able to measure the fish in their
critical juvenile larval life stage, said Jennings. There are so
few Delta smelt left that you can probably name each one that's left.
Jennings quipped, The Resources Agency's 'patchwork quilt' of
agreements is now in tatters. Barbara Parrilla, coordinator of
Restore the Delta, was also greatly encouraged by the judge's decision.
We think that water agencies complying with the law is the essential
first step to restoring the California Delta, she stated. She
also said she wants to see state water agencies begin developing regional
self-sufficiency programs for water delivery, conveyance, and use. By
creating regional conservation and reclamation programs, excessive water
exports from the California Delta can be reduced permanently, she
explained. We have also begun questioning whether it is wise to
rely on a water conveyance system that spans hundreds of miles across the
state. Restore the Delta does not believe that shipping water from north to
south is a wise way to protect the water supply from a natural or manmade
disaster for all Californians, said Parrilla. This successful
court decision points to a larger problem - the fact that the DFG and DWR are
both included under the same agency, the California Resources Agency. Jennings
said that this court decision demonstrates the need to have the DFG made
independent of the Resources Agency so it can fulfill its mandate to preserve
and protect the state's fish, wildlife and environmental resources.
The question we must ask ourselves is whether or not our fisheries can
survive the DFG remaining within the Resources Agency, added Jennings.
When the fox and the chicken house guards are working together like the
DWR and DFG are, who's guarding the chickens? I greatly applaud
the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, Bill Jennings and Attorney
Michael Lozeau for having the courage and resolve to take the State of
California to court for breaking its own law, the California Endangered Species
Act. The judge clearly and unambiguously agreed with them that the Department
of Water Resources can't kill endangered salmon and smelt without a take
permit. For more information, contact: Bill Jennings, Chairman,
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance Watershed Enforcers, 3536 Rainier
Avenue, Stockton, CA 95204, t: 209-464-5067, c: 209-938-9053, f: 209-464-1028,
e: deltakeep@aol.com. http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/04/05/18389813.php
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