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The Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee on Tuesday asked
Assembly Member John Laird (D-Santa Cruz) to consider significant amendments to
AB 2175, a bill mandating agricultural and urban water conservation activities.
During committee discussion following testimony, Committee
Chairman Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) and Sen. Mike Machado (D-Linden)
raised questions about the “top down” approach undertaken by the bill as well
as secondary impacts generated by mandatory agricultural water conservation
measures.
Steinberg asked Laird initially to strike references in the
bill to a proposed target of 500,000 acre-feet of agricultural water
conservation and then later retracted his request and instead asked that the
number be left in as a “placeholder,” citing potential similarities with urban
industrial uses that could not be addressed during a short time period at the
committee meeting. Steinberg also asked
whether a “water management plan” approach to water conservation activities is
a better solution than mandated activities and thought it needed to “cook”
longer before being approved.
In his comments on the bill, Machado expressed serious
concern for the changes in crop mix that would likely result from the mandated
approach. Citing the loss of 14 of the
16 tomato processors once based in Stockton,
Machado blamed regulations and the inability of the City of Stockton to handle the processors’ wastewater
as a reason for the closure of the plants.
As a result, he said, jobs were lost and the farming community was
forced to change because of the loss of infrastructure.
Committee Vice-chair Dennis Hollingsworth (R-Temecula) also
raised questions about the secondary impacts the bill would have on the
Quantification Settlement Agreement between Imperial Irrigation District and San Diego. Increased water conservation pressure on IID
to conserve water could lead to more fallowing, jeopardizing the long term QSA.
On a motion that required the bill to return to the
committee for review before proceeding to the Senate Fiscal Committee and
Senate floor, the bill received four aye votes and was on-call pending an
additional vote to move it out of committee.
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