|
Printed in the Editorial Section of the L.A.
Times
Monday, March 19, 2001 |
|
Getting
Real About Water Supplies |
As if
the electricity crisis weren't enough for Californians to worry about,
water experts are warning about the consequences of the next drought. No
one knows when that water shortage will come, but it's a good bet it
will be within this decade. Statistically in California, the next
drought is always just around the corner. Even without drought, the
development of new water supplies is far more difficult and
time-consuming than building new electric power plants.
The obvious lesson is for California not
to act as if it has an endless supply of water. But that is exactly what
seems to be happening as local and state planning officials continue to
routinely approve massive new housing projects without any certainty
that they will have enough water.
The Legislature tried to end this reckless
practice in 1995 when it passed Senate Bill 901, authored by Sen. Jim
Costa (D-Fresno). The Costa measure provided that any project large
enough to require an environmental impact statement must meet five
criteria in demonstrating that it had enough water to satisfy its future
needs, in dry years as well as wet ones.
But SB 901 has been a failure. An analysis
by the Oakland-based East Bay Municipal Utility District shows that of
119 projects with a projected population of 582,000, only two fully
complied with the law in 1996-2000. Sixty percent of the projects
provided only the first and most basic requirement of SB 901,
identifying the source of projected water supply.
For several years, Randele Kanouse, the
lobbyist for East Bay, has fought to give California stronger
legislation to assure adequate water supplies for future development but
has been thwarted by development forces. In each of the last two years,
state Sen. Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica) authored bills that would have
required new subdivisions of 200 homes to provide evidence of adequate
water supplies before they could win construction approval. Both of the
bills were defeated.
Last summer, the Assn. of California Water
Agencies joined developers in opposing the Kuehl legislation, saying SB
901 was on the books and should be doing the job. The water agencies
acknowledged that SB 901 might have loopholes and suggested a study to
see whether it needed to be strengthened. This shameless action came
from the public water agencies that are supposed to be guaranteeing
Californians they will have enough water.
Now they have their study. And they also
have a new bill, Costa's SB 610, to plug the loopholes by being more
specific about the data that must be provided. And they have SB 221, by
Kuehl, to make sure the water requirements are met before subdivision
construction actually begins, just in case there are more loopholes.
There is much that Sacramento needs to do
to make sure California is not surprised by a water shortage the way it
was the electricity crisis. Lawmakers can begin by passing both SB 610
and SB 221. |
|