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California's Efforts to Combat Drought Hindered by Federal Government

With more than 70 percent of California now classified in a state of "exceptional" or "extreme" drought, Uncle Sam is floundering.

By Michael Doyle

The federal response to the Western drought has been hindered by high-level vacancies, bureaucratic caution and political calculations that have thrown sand in the gears.

Put another way: With more than 70 percent of California now classified in a state of "exceptional" or "extreme" drought, Uncle Sam is floundering.

"We need leadership from the federal government," pleaded Cannon Michael, a politically engaged farmer from Los Banos in California's acutely dry San Joaquin Valley.

But so far, dynamic federal leadership has been lacking. Some of that is inevitable. Western water use poses too many inherent conflicts to unify all factions. Some people refuse to be led, and the drought is, at bottom, a state matter. Certain federal shortcomings, though, seem like self-inflicted wounds. Consider:

_The Obama administration lacks confirmed leaders in key positions. Four top water-related jobs at the Interior Department, the Environmental Protection Agency and the White House Council on Environmental Quality have remained vacant for months, at least in part because of resistance from Senate Republicans.

_Lawmakers remain mired in partisanship and power plays. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives has passed three California water bills, each crafted by the GOP with minimal Democratic input. Republicans counter that Democrats won't support anything that provides real relief. _President Barack Obama has not used his bully pulpit to persistently drive a Western water agenda. He has visited California 28 times during his presidency, but his lone trip to the state's San Joaquin Valley, ground zero for the drought, occurred 18 months ago.

"I think the Obama administration is missing a golden opportunity to provide leadership," Dan Beard, a Democrat and former Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, said in an interview. "So far, we've had nothing but radio silence from them on the drought."

Some definite efforts are underway.

In Deputy Interior Secretary Michael L. Connor, a former Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, the administration deploys an expert who understands the issues. Regional and field-level civil servants also get high marks from Westerners who work with them closely.

"We're getting better," Connor said earlier this year. "We're making changes."

Connor himself has been spending more time in California, prompting state Secretary for Natural Resources John Laird to quip recently that the federal official had become a "de facto resident" of the state.

The Obama administration also has been rolling out aid. In June, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack joined Connor in announcing a $150 million package aimed in part at conserving California watersheds. Earlier, the White House announced a $110 million package targeting Western farmers, workers and rural communities.

"Interior has had a very robust and aggressive response to the drought with respect to California's Bay-Delta, the Colorado River, and the Pacific Northwest," Connor said in a statement this week. "We've modified operations to squeeze out more water while complying with environmental laws. We've facilitated a large number of transfers and water-sharing arrangements."

In Congress, Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California has enlisted colleagues to help craft a comprehensive California water bill. Her legislation introduced in late July won at least partial praise across the board.

But for all that, the federal effort seems fractured and, at times, inert.

Waiting for the Senate to act first, House Republicans didn't introduce their major California water bill until six months into the current Congress. It was a tactical decision that did not pan out. The House didn't hold committee hearings on the California water bill, which bred resentment that could have been avoided.

The White House's web page touting "An Administration Wide Response to the Drought" offers as its primary "fact sheet" a document dated Aug. 7, 2012. The White House drought page's most recent related blog post dates to Feb. 15, 2014, following Obama's sole visit to the San Joaquin Valley.

While Obama received a White House drought and wildfire briefing June 12, the focus seemed to be on counting the dollars the administration was sending west. Cabinet secretaries seem to deliver emergency aid more than they promote longer-term policies or confront competing ideas, save for discussions about climate change.

Job openings can linger. Nine months passed between Obama's selection of Estevan Lopez as Connor's replacement to head the Bureau of Reclamation and his Senate confirmation last December.

The administration's acting officeholders, meanwhile, lack the clout provided by Senate confirmation. Somewhere between the White House and Congress, key nominations bog down.

In aggressive hands, for instance, Council on Environmental Quality chiefs can forge compromises, ease intra-agency disputes and sustain focus. In the Clinton administration, CEQ chair Kathleen McGinty helped design Pacific Northwest forest policy.

But in the 18 months since Nancy Sutley's departure as chair of Obama's Council on Environmental Quality, the White House has not submitted a nomination to fill the seat left open in February 2014. Instead, two acting chairs have filled in.

The CEQ Blog, showcasing the office's priorities, has posted about 20 items since January, dealing with topics from wind power to National Bike to Work Day. None deal directly with the Western drought.

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