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View Full Version : CSPA, C-WIN files suit against DWR, BURec. and SWRCB



Mike McKenzie
12-01-2008, 07:29 PM
For Immediate Release: Monday, 1 December 2008.

Contact Information:

Carolee Krieger, Executive Director and Board President, California Water Impact Network, (805) 969-0824,
caroleeekrieger [at] cox.net
Bill Jennings, Chairman, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, (209) 464-5067, (209) 938-9053 (cell),
deltakeep [at] aol.com
Michael Jackson, Counsel, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, and Board Member, California Water
Impact Network, (530) 283-0712, mjatty [at] sbcglobal.net

For a copy of the complaint filed in Sacramento Superior Court, see http://www.c-win.org or http://www.calsport.org.

C-WIN, CSPA File Suit to End Wasteful Delta Diversions,
Protect Public Trust Resources

Calling it “the biggest lawsuit about the biggest ecological and legal catastrophe in California
today,” the California Water Impact Network (C-WIN) and the California Sportfishing Protection
Alliance (CSPA) filed suit in Sacramento Superior Court Friday, November 28, 2008, to protect Delta
public trust resources—including endangered migratory fisheries of salmon and open water fish
species—and to end wasteful and unreasonable diversions of water from the Delta by big state and
federal water projects.

The suit also asks the court to halt irrigation of several hundred thousand acres of selenium-contaminated
lands on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley, the drainage from which pollutes
wetlands, the San Joaquin River, and the Delta.

“California has regulated its waters like the feds have regulated Wall Street and the result has
been a collapse of fisheries and aquatic ecosystems,” said CSPA Chairman and Director Bill
Jennings. “Given bureaucratic paralysis, we have little alternative but to turn to the courts to prevent
the extinction of our historic fisheries.”

The suit names as defendants the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), the
United States Bureau of Reclamation (USBR), and the State Water Resources Control Board
(SWRCB).

Specifically, the seven-count lawsuit charges that the huge export pumps near Tracy in the
south Delta kill thousands upon thousands of smelt and small salmon fry every year, at different
times of year, and are the main threats to public trust resources in the Delta. DWR and USBR,
operators of the two largest water storage, pumping, and canal systems in California, violate
numerous federal and state water quality and fish protection laws, the state’s public trust
responsibility, water rights orders, and the terms of their appropriative water rights permits through
excessive pumping—all illegally allowed by the SWRCB, the state’s water regulator, and the third
defendant charged in the suit.

“The State Water Board hasn’t applied one significant measure to protect fisheries in over a
decade and the Governor’s Delta Vision and Bay-Delta Conversation Program processes are little
more than smokescreens to justify the status quo,” added Jennings.

“It took lots of people all over California to protect the public trust resources and protect the
rivers of northern California as it did at Mono Lake,” said Carolee Krieger, executive director and
board president of C-WIN. “We must stop the carnage in the Delta now.”

After construction and operation of the federal Central Valley Project and the California State
Water Project, runs of migratory salmon went extinct below Friant Dam on the San Joaquin River
near Fresno in the early 1950s. The Delta smelt, an open water fish native to the Delta estuary, has
almost gone extinct, and desperate biologists may try to cultivate an artificial smelt refuge.

“Our state government has utterly failed to enforce the public trust and obey the constitution,”
said Krieger. “In our suit, we petition the court to force the State Water Resources Control Board to
enforce the letter and spirit of the water laws and the State constitution.”

“A lot of people don’t realize that the voters of California passed a constitutional amendment
in 1928 to ban wasteful water use and harmful diversions from streams,” said attorney Michael
Jackson, who represents both C-WIN and CSPA in this case. “Even the federal government must
adhere to state water law and the constitution, and we intend to show the court how they haven’t
time and again, and to persuade the court to end the lawlessness of water exports from the Delta.”

Wasteful water use harms the Delta, argues the suit, when water exported by the Central
Valley Project is used to irrigate western San Joaquin Valley lands that are naturally contaminated
with selenium, boron, arsenic, and even mercury in some areas. These lands then drain to the San
Joaquin River, the Delta, and Suisun Marsh. Settling in sediments where clams and other aquatic
organisms feed, the toxins concentrate through the food chain, resulting in embryonic deformities
and dead offspring for many fish, bird, and mammal species in the Valley.

“These two projects pump water from the Delta to irrigate impaired lands and recycle
contaminated drainage back via the San Joaquin River to an increasingly polluted estuary thereby
accelerating the decline of fisheries,” adds Jennings of CSPA. “Enough is enough!”

“We’re getting our slingshots ready,” said attorney Jackson with a smile. “And we know who
won the last meeting between David and Goliath.”

Phil Synhorst
12-01-2008, 08:17 PM
Excellent!!!!!!
Thanks Mike.