Is Drought Real, or Manufactured by Politicians?

   
  
  Local Guest Commentary:
  By Russell Waymire
  
  Is California really in a natural drought, or is it a politically manufactured 
  water shortage? Granted, the south half of California this year has turned into 
  an extremely dry year, but 2013 should not have turned into the water crisis 
  disaster it has become.
  
  Why? Because in December 2012 the liberal interpretation and abusive enforcement 
  of the Endangered Species Act caused the release of almost a million acre feet 
  of our water to the ocean, water that should have been stored behind dams for 
  urban and Central Valley water users this year. Besides that, the Jim Costa-Diane 
  Feinstein San Joaquin River Settlement diverted 170,000 acre feet of Friant 
  water away from Valley farms and cities for a fish flow experiment.
  
  Politicians in Washington and Sacramento have lost sight of reality. They either 
  know nothing of past water shortages in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern 
  California or they see the water crisis as a political opportunity for urban 
  areas to prosper at the expense of rural areas. The truth is, urban California 
  will not prosper as rural California runs out of water.
  
  Both the CVP Friant and Westside federal water projects and the State Water 
  Project were built decades ago because Central Valley wells and jobs were drying 
  up. Politicians are now allowing our water wells and jobs to again dry up because 
  water from these projects is not being delivered.
  Some politicians obviously care more about party loyalty then they do about 
  rural farmworkers, farmers and ranchers. The environmental regulators appointed 
  by the politicians are destroying private property rights and removing water 
  rights at an alarming rate.
  
  The failure to understand our past water history will lead us to relive those 
  desperate Dust Bowl times when water wells dry up both on the Eastside, Westside 
  and now the middle of the Valley. Jobs and water wells are drying up all over 
  the Valley. 
  
  Gov. Brown, U.S. senators Diane Feinstein and Barbara Boxer and Congressman 
  Jim Costa have misrepresented the interests of the San Joaquin Valley time and 
  again and are responsible for this water crisis. There is little doubt when 
  you look at the implementation results of the Jim Costa-Diane Feinstein San 
  Joaquin River Friant Dam & Friant Water Settlement Law, the CVPIA Central 
  Valley Project Improvement Act ( CVPIA ) and enforcement of Endangered Species 
  Act laws.
  
  These politicians evidently place a higher value on baitfish like the delta 
  smelt, rats, bugs and weeds than they do farmworkers, farmers and saving our 
  jobs. If you agree that people are more important than party lines, bugs and 
  baitfish, then don't vote for politicians who have failed to solve the water 
  crisis by passing legislation to amend their bad laws mentioned above.
  
  It is Congress and the U.S. Senate that passed these poorly written laws, and 
  until Congress and the U.S. Senate change these rigid, unbalanced laws, our 
  agricultural communities will see more jobs dry up for farmworkers, food processors, 
  transportation companies while our local communities also wither.
  Politicians are promoting the Delta twin tunnels as a panacea. If they are ever 
  constructed, with an estimated completion date of 2035, it will be too little 
  and too late for us. In the short term, the Endangered Species Act, the Central 
  Valley Project Improvement Act and the San Joaquin River Settlement need to 
  be set aside or amended now so changes can be made to the Sacramento-San Joaquin 
  Delta to increase the fresh water flow of water through the Delta from north 
  to south to stop the devastating reverse flow of the San Joaquin River that 
  entraps salmon and other fish where predator fish feast. This remedy will provide 
  an immediate short-term affordable solution with increased water volume into 
  the San Joaquin River Delta that will also dilute the pollutants currently concentrating 
  there.
  
  Our water supply is far too important to national security and our Valley to 
  trust politicians who allow the nonwater deliveries to continue. Failure to 
  make these changes will allow the devastation to the Central Valley, our state, 
  our economy and the Delta water system we depend on to continue. Is your job 
  or a neighbor's or a relative's job at risk of drying up?
  
  Waymire has farmed walnuts, pistachios and row crops in Kings, Kern and Madera 
  counties and was named the Agriculturist of the Year for Kings County in 2009.