When
you start your day attending two
meetings where the speakers apologize for being depressing,
the rest of your day can only improve. That was my day
today.
I
started with an early morning meeting of the Southwest
California Economic Development Corporation where we were
treated to remarks by John
Rossi, General Manager of Western
Municipal Water District. Apologizing for depressing us,
John presented a factual summary of where our state is waterwise and
how the water districts are dealing with our current situation. Having
toured the Northern end of our state water supply system last year from
Oroville Dam to LA, and having written about the issue on numerous
occasions, I believe that rather than being depressed we
should see this as a call to
action. As Rossi did when he encouraged us not only to use
our resources wisely but to engage our legislators in recognizing the
complexity of the issue and dealing with it comprehensively.
With
over 70% of SoCal water deriving from the north, another 25% from the
Colorado River and about 5% from ground water & desalinization,
it's clear where the
answer lies. Prayer. But in addition to prayer, the water
department is also working legislatively through the current 'special
session' to address both conservation and infrastructure issues. Until
and if those solutions ever bear fruit, they will also continue to squeeze their customers.
Oh, by the way, if those solutions do bear fruit, they will still
continue to squeeze their customers. Why? Because they can. And any fix
- even the inadequate Democrat proposals, will come with a big price
tag that somebody has to pay for.
Here's
a fun factoid. During the past year our primary wholesale supplier of
water, Metropolitan Water District, has instituted rate increases of nearly 40%.
These increases were designed to encourage
conservation - a very admirable goal and one that will
certainly help us deal with the problem. There's another 20% increase due in
a month or two. Why? Because our conservation efforts have been so
successful at reducing water consumption that Metropolitan has less
revenue coming in to service their bond debt and fixed expenses. So
they need to raise rates again because the first rate increases were so
successful at changing our consumption habits. Damned if you do, damned
if you don't. Is there a win-win in here anywhere?
Think
our bills will go down anytime soon? The you should have been to the EWDC
luncheon featuring Senator
John Benoit and Assemblymembers
Brian Nestande and Kevin Jeffries. The operative words
here were also 'depressing'
and/or 'frustrating' by turns, for the state's economic
outlook, any chance for real reform and for the water picture.
Assemblymember
Jeffries, who was appointed to the state special commission on water,
remains hopeful that some
compromise solution will be reached soon, possibly as
early as this coming week. He bemoaned the fact that water has become
so politicized that true progress remains elusive. While the party in
power in Sacramento thinks the problem can be solved by merely
conserving more and restoring the Delta, the minority view prefers
conservation coupled with additional infrastructure to provide
long-term solutions. Capturing and storing rainfall and snowpack for
future use, channeling current water resources without adversely
impacting the Delta Estuary, new dams, an alternative conveyance AND
continued conservation are all part of a comprehensive
solution.
Our
current drought is caused in equal
parts by nature and regulation. Our dams truly
are down by 1/2 to 2/3rds as a result of rainfall & snowpack
the past few years. It is regulatory by virtue of the fact that
judicial decree has determined the rights
of the Delta Smelt take precedence over 18 million water users, farmers
and food producers throughout the central and southern parts of the
state. There are also complex water rights issues with
people at the watershed source and with environmental groups concerned
about preservation of the Delta. It wouldn't be an easy fix even on a
level playing field - given the way our legislature operates it's a
wonder anything happens at all.
All
panelists agreed that jobs
are the answer for our state. "Not bigger government, not
more taxes, more jobs", according to Senator Benoit. "Taxes
up, jobs down, legislature ineffective", according to Jeffries.
'450,000 jobs lost this year at an average $68,000 per, 150,000 jobs
created at an average of $52,000 per - not good' according to
Nestande.
Jeffries
also pointed out that the party
in power, regardless of which party, has shown they will do darn near anything to perpetuate
that power. There was some disagreement as to whether term
limits have been effective at making our state more governable but all
agreed that term limits have resulted in shifting power from the people
who should be accountable, (our legislators), to people who are not
accountable, (staff and lobbyists). The people who make the decisions
aren't around long enough to have to deal with the consequences of
their actions so what's their motivation to work for the long-term
good? (Please keep in mind that all legislators are not altruistic by
nature. Some just love the power, some just love the perks, and some
just want to have a lobbyist mistress who wears a thong).
Agreeing
that reform must occur if California is to turn itself around in any
meaningful and sustainable way, they admit that if the legislature is not prepared to
reform itself then the public will have to do it for them.
When asked about the prospect of that occurring through Constitutional
Convention, Jeffries voiced some concern about what could result from
opening that can of worms while Nestande opined that any result
probably couldn't be much worse than the status quo.
Depressed
yet? You shouldn't be. This is California politics at its best. The
more you know, the better prepared you are to deal with it. If you're
not at the table, you'll surely be on the menu. Sometimes you might be
anyway. Of course that's just my opinion, I could be wrong.
We have been under drought restrictions here in our area of Texas. Two weeks ago it finally started to rain but will take allot of it to fill our lakes. We live at Canyon Lake and we are down about 14 feet. We do have many people moving here from California; sure hope we don't run out of water.