In conjunction with the Delta Levees Standards Conference held today in Sacramento, Restore the Delta proposed that Delta levees be upgraded as part of any Bay-Delta water solution - and emphasized that they are a much better investment than building a peripheral canal or tunnel.
The conference, sponsored by the Delta Protection Commission and Water Education Foundation, took at Woodlake Hotel at 500 Leisure Lane, Sacramento.
"Fat, robust levees protect the Delta," said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta. "An emergency preparedness plan against the greatest threat – flood – is also needed. But floods can be managed."
“We are well-positioned to deal with sea level rise – we can raise levees one to two inches per year," she noted.
Barrigan-Parrilla said levee improvements will be needed, regardless whether or not the state decides to build a peripheral canal or tunnel.
“The $1-2 billion investment is necessary to protect $20 billion in infrastructure in the Delta and 4 million urban residents," she stated. "Fattening the levees would still have to be completed, even if a canal were built. A canal won’t protect state highways, natural gas pipelines, PG&E transmission lines, railroads, East Bay MUD pipes and other key infrastructure threatened by a flood."
She also said countered the argument, constantly brought up by canal proponents, that the conveyance needs to be built to counter the "catastrophic" threat of earthquakes.
“Earthquake threat to the Delta – with the Hayward Fault 45 miles away - is minimal, according to levee expert Dr. Bob Pyke, but the State Water Project and Central Valley Project cross right over some of the most dangerous faults in California from Coalinga south to LA. Large engineered projects are more vulnerable to earthquake then Delta levees," stated Barrigan-Parrilla.
Barrigan-Parrilla said funding exists for levee improvements in Prop 1E, and needs to be spent accordingly.
She also said the Department of Water Resources is proposing a lesser standard for levee protection than the higher safety standard developed by the Army Corps of Engineers (PL 84-99). "The Army Corps of Engineers’ levee standard is the same higher standard found in the Economic Sustainability Plan authored by the Delta Protection Commission earlier this year," noted Barrigan-Parrilla.
“It is problematic that the Department of Water Resources is actually proposing a weaker standard for Delta protection while promoting new conveyance," she concluded. "Today’s conference is an opportunity to highlight the differences between the two standards and to discuss the role that levees play in water exports, habitat for the ecosystem, and public safety for the people in the Delta and the urban periphery of the Delta."
Supporters of the conference include ATKINS, the Central Delta Water Agency, Contra Costa Water District, Kjeldsen, Sinnock & Neudeck, Inc., MBK Engineers, South Delta Water Agency, The Dutra Group, The Nature Conservancy, American Rivers, Natural Resources Defense Council and the Planning and Conservation League.
According to an announcement by the conference organizers, the conference featured "a lively discussion about Delta levee standards - the differences between the Hazard Mitigation Plan (HMP) Standard and the PL 84-99 Standard and what that means for Delta conveyance, habitat and public safety."
Perspectives on the standards related to these areas were presented by California Department of Water Resources officials, in-Delta residents and water agencies, and the Army Corps of Engineers. A seven-member panel then responded.
While the inclusion of Delta residents on the panels is a promising move by the conference sponsors, the absence of any representatives from California Indian Tribes or recreational and commercial fishing groups on the conference panels is in my opinion a glaring omission, since these communities are among those most directly impacted by plans to build a peripheral canal.
A coalition of Delta residents, Indian Tribes, fishermen, family farmers, grassroots environmentalists, Southern California ratepayers and elected officials is opposed to the construction of the peripheral canal because of its enormous cost and the grave threat it poses to the Delta ecosystem. Delta advocates believe the canal, by exporting more Delta water to corporate agribusiness and southern California, will hasten the extinction of Central Valley steelhead, Sacramento River chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, Sacramento splittail, green sturgeon and other fish species.
For the conference agenda, go to: http://www.watereducation.org/...
For information about Restore the Delta, go to http://www.restorethedelta.org.