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Jerry Brown's Plan to Address California Drought Is Pretty Easy on Agriculture

The vast majority of the governor's plan is focused on urban water use--lawns, golf courses, parks and public medians--which constitute less than 25 percent of Californians' overall water use.

By Bettina Boxall

 

Gov. Jerry Brown's historic order to curb California's water use largely bypasses agriculture, the state's biggest water user, setting off debate about whether growers are getting a pass.

The vast majority of Brown's plan focused on urban water use _ such as lawns, golf courses, parks and public medians _ which makes up less than 25 percent of Californians' overall water use.

For critics of Brown's plan, it's ineffective policy to crack down on watering suburban yards while largely ignoring the vast, still-green expanses of the state's fruit and vegetable garden.

"The government's response to this growing crisis has been behind the curve," said Jonas Minton, water policy adviser for the Planning and Conservation League and a former state water official. He argued that state officials should clamp down on groundwater pumping and plantings of thirsty new crops.

Other water experts and growers say that agriculture has already suffered severe cutbacks as a result of the drawn-out drought, now in its fourth year. For the second year in a row, Central Valley farmers without senior water rights are expecting no deliveries from the valley's big federal irrigation project.

Growers who get supplies from the State Water Project will receive only 20 percent of requested deliveries this year. Farmers left more than 400,000 acres unplanted last year, dealing a $2 billion blow to the state's agricultural economy.

"I think much of California is all of a sudden waking up to the fact that the drought is not theoretical. It's going to manifest itself in ordinary Californians' lives for the first time. Well, our farmers have been feeling it for a while," said Chris Scheuring, a water attorney for the California Farm Bureau Federation.

Brown's seven-page executive order, issued Wednesday, outlined the first statewide mandatory water-use restrictions in California's history.

Among them: He ordered a 25 percent reduction in urban use statewide compared to 2013 levels. The directive also bans the use of drinking water to irrigate median strips in public roads, initiates the removal of 1,150 football fields worth of grass to be replaced with drought-tolerant plants; and orders golf courses, campuses and cemeteries to significantly cut their water consumption.

Agricultural mandates were fewer and milder. Irrigation districts were directed to develop drought-management plans that include supply and demand data. Agencies in basins where groundwater has been overpumped must immediately monitor groundwater levels. And the State Water Resources Control Board was told to crack down on illegal water diversions and "those engaging in the wasteful and unreasonable use of water."

Jeffrey Mount, a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California, said growers have been dealing with water cutbacks for years. As for regulating which crops growers plant, Mount said that could distort the market and have unintended economic consequences. "It's our view that government probably is not going to do a very good job of deciding what should and should not be grown."

Moreover, Mount said that while the state could ban certain plantings under its constitutional powers to stop the unreasonable use of water in a drought, growing high-value crops such as almonds would not be considered unreasonable.

The Legislature approved a statewide groundwater law last year intended to end decades of overpumping from aquifers in the Central Valley.

But it won't take full effect for more than two decades, a timetable that critics say is far too generous. The rules are expected to limit withdrawals in some basins, forcing farmers who have increasingly relied on pumping groundwater to permanently retire cropland. Experts say change that significant requires time.

"You do that overnight and there is extraordinary disruption," Mount said.

"In some basins, this is going to be very painful, economically and socially, and you have to be careful about forcing that pain too quickly."

Scheuring, noting that at least 40 percent of residential water use in the state is for landscaping, said that urban cuts don't have the same economic impact as slashing irrigation deliveries.

"Folks are still going to brush their teeth," he said. "They're still going to run their dishwashers ... flush their toilets. It's just that their lawn might be brown and they're going to have make some hard choices about landscaping.

"That's a different thing from telling a farmer goodbye to 25 percent of what little (water) you may have. That has direct economic consequences." While farmers are moving to more efficient irrigation practices, they still practice wasteful flood irrigation on about 40 percent of irrigated acreage, said Heather Cooley of the Pacific Institute, an Oakland, Calif., think tank. "We have a long way to go," she added.

Phil Isenberg, vice chairman of the Delta Stewardship Council, said the sections of Brown's order demanding more water use data from agriculture are "a very dramatic change."

Not only does the state lack information on all water diversions by farmers, groundwater pumping in the Central Valley has gone largely unmonitored for more than a century. "You gotta know who's using what," he said.

"Should it do more?" he said of the order. "Yes, but the seriousness of seven pages of executive order with specifics is quite unusual."

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times

 

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