Categories: Politics

Southpaw Newsom is under fire from lawmakers over plans for a delta tunnel

(Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press)

Southpaw Newsom is under fire from lawmakers over plans for a delta tunnel

California politics

George Skelton

June 29, 2023

Gov. Gavin Newsom recently said he didn’t understand why sports stadiums could be built so quickly

,

But

not

other major projects

could not

. If he really didn’t know, he probably just learned.

Sports are popular. This does not apply to all public works projects. Some are hated.

The Democratic-dominated legislature gave the Democratic governor a real lesson

world politics and policies

make: Try not to punch above your weight.

the

I

The legislature, when unified, is equal to the executive in power.

Newsom tried to ram his proposal through the legislature at the last minute to expedite construction of a high-rise

controversial water tunnel in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

Environmental groups and delta people, including local farmers, strongly oppose the $16 billion, 45-mile

long project that would transfer the water from the Sacramento River to southbound aqueducts for irrigation and cities including Los Angeles.

Lawmakers rebelled against Newsom and adamantly refused to consider his tunnel acceleration plan, forcing him to back down and withdraw the proposal. It was a humiliating setback for the governor of California.

The Delta Plan was part of one

N

Legislative package of eleven bills that Newsom belatedly unveiled on May 19, thrusting it into budget deliberations. It had no real ties to the budget, but governors were allowed to move its package to avoid scrutiny from legislative policy committees. His goal was to reduce red tape and make it easier to set up transportation, clean energy and water projects.

past

I

Legislators and governors Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzenegger have provided regulatory shortcuts to facilitate construction of football stadiums and basketball arenas. The stadiums were not built for various reasons, but at least two posh basketball arenas for the Sacramento Kings and

the

San Francisco Golden State Warriors.

I like sports, said Newsom, a former Santa Clara University Broncos baseball pitcher. But I also like roads. I love transit. I like bridges. And I love clean energy projects like the one shown here.

Newsom revealed his infrastructure speed

He had a package for a future solar farm near Modesto in May. He was also thinking about building wind, battery storage and semiconductor plants. Add to the list regional rail, bridges and water storage facilities plus the delta tunnel.

It’s not just about stadiums, Newsom continued. And we have proven that we can do it for stadiums.

So why on earth can’t we translate that to all those other projects

?.

It’s a fair question. I’ve wondered about this in previous columns as well.

One answer is that stadiums and arenas are built by powerful billionaires who can handle tons of political weight. They can help politicians run for re-election. If nothing else, they can be called up for playoff tickets.

But the main answer is that professional football and basketball are extremely popular with voters. It’s twofold. There is only marginal opposition to helping team owners build local playing facilities.

Compare that to the proposed tunnel, a 39-foot

wide pipe that would carry fresh Sacramento River water from the north delta to aqueducts in the more saline south delta. The delta is California’s most important water hub, serving 27 million people and irritating 3 million acres.

The tunnel would run under the delta, depriving farmers and small communities of fresh water that now flows through the delta

W

Est

C

oast largest estuary. And it would reduce fresh water for struggling baby salmon, which is already an endangered species.

Newsom and state water officials countered that the tunnel would save the delta as a prime California plumbing facility. It would

ensure

Reliability of water supplies to farms in San Joaquin Valley and coastal cities. Otherwise, the prognosis for the delta is bleak due to sea level rise due to climate change and potential earthquakes that could flatten levees.

But delta opponents argue that sea level rise is another reason to maintain freshwater streams to repel the saltwater from San Francisco Bay. And they point out that no earthquake has ever seriously damaged a delta dike. In fact, there is no major error under the delta.

Bottom line: Delta people don’t trust state water officials to operate the tunnel in a way that would protect them and the estuary. They fear being drained, as the Owens Valley was at the Los Angeles Aqueduct a century ago.

Governors have been trying to build this project, in one form or another, for six decades. They have been defeated by voters or a coalition of delta people and environmentalists.

This time Newsom tried to play hardball. He threatened to veto the legislature’s pet budget projects unless they approved his proposal to speed up construction of the tunnel and other infrastructure projects.

Key to his plan is a questionable goal of reducing the time it takes to complete lawsuits under the California Environmental Quality Act. He wants a term of 270 days if a judge deems it feasible. That seems impractical.

Legislative leaders told the governor last week that the delta legislation was a nonstarter. He pushed them anyway, but finally gave up on Monday.

The rest of the infrastructure acceleration package was left to further negotiation.

Newsom can still finish with a few wins. But on the delta, the old left-handed pitcher was hammered and never should have taken the mound.

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