Assemblyman Roger Niello, R-Sacramento, and Sen. Lois Wolk, D-Davis, don’t agree on much. But both are against the water plan being negotiated between the Legislature and the governor — and neither thinks the package has the votes to pass."
Their opposition stems from one thing they do have
in common. Each represents a district within the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the water-rich region at the center of the water policy and bond
package.
“Absolutely there is bipartisan opposition,” Niello said. “Lois’ concerns are not the same as mine, but she is nonetheless
every bit as opposed as I am.”
“It is absurd to suggest there is unanimous opposition
to a package that will provide the Delta region with
billions of dollars for restoration, mitigation, and
economic development,” countered Alicia Trost, a spokeswoman for Senate Pro
Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, a key architect of the package forming
in the legislature.
Niello isn’t the only Northern California Republican speaking
out against aspects of the plan. While the package
does not explicitly contain a peripheral canal — a major project to divert water around much of the
Delta for use in Southern California — there is widespread feeling that the policy portion
of the plan would allow a canal to happen. Assemblyman
Bill Berryhill, R-Stockton, has spoken out against allowing a peripheral
canal. So have a prominent pair of announced Republican
Assembly candidates, San Ramon Mayor Abram Wilson and
former San Joaquin County Supervisor Jack Sieglock.
Both Wolk and Niello also agree that the package—not yet in print—will face its toughest challenge in the Assembly. Niello
said “I’m not sure there is a single Republican vote for the
deal, at least in the Assembly.”
Another thing these legislators have in common is a
feeling of being snubbed by Steinberg, also a Delta
legislator. Niello sent a letter to Steinberg on Sept.
4 raising concerns: “As members of the legislative delegation from the Sacramento
region, we are very concerned….As currently drafted, these bills will require the
region’s communities to effectively pay to have water taken
from them.” The letter was also signed by a trio of other Delta
Republicans: Sen. Dave Cox, R-Sacramento, and Assemblymen Ted Gaines, R-Roseville, and Dan Logue, R-Chico.
When the next draft of water language came out a week
later, Niello said, his concerns were ignored.
“It’s an interesting position for the Delta,” Niello said of Steinberg’s stance in ongoing negotiations. Obviously, he has
a perspective that is statewide and not just local,
and I wouldn’t expect him to be parochial. But certainly the opposition
of his constituents seems to be about as unanimous
as it could be.”
Trost said Steinberg is motivated by the pressing needs
of the Delta, which is already in serious decline.
“Who is protecting the Delta if we do nothing?” she said. “The fact is that the Delta stands no chance of survival
if we don’t start to fix it now. Naysayers of the current plan
favor a status quo approach, which the science indicates
only makes the Delta more susceptible to further degradation
or a possible catastrophic event that would bring economic
and environmental calamity to the Sacramento region’s residents and businesses.”
Wolk, meanwhile, said that she raised concerns back
in August that the water plan would ship a growing
percentage of the Delta’s water to the south. As chair of a select committee
on the Delta created back in March, she also held a
hearing looking at the potential cost of the water
package, a key point of contention for many skeptics.
In response, she said, Steinberg left her off the conference
committee that began putting together the legislation,
even though she is one of the most experienced sitting
legislators when it comes to water issues. She charged
that too many of the negotiations are happening behind
closed doors, and that too much of the process is being
driven by large water districts like Westlands and
the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.
“You only get let into the room if you agree with them,” Wolk said.
"She was left off because she was clear that she could not support a comprehensive package in a passable form," Trost noted.
Wolk said she is putting together a “Plan B” for water. This will leverage many decentralized projects,
she said, emphasizing groundwater cleanup, recycling,
desalinization, and increasing the flexibility in the
overall system to allow short-term emergency transfers between water districts. The
current water package, she also warned, is likely to
end up “in court for the next 25 or 30 years” even if it does pass.
“The interesting part is that the process has resulted
in the unity of northern California water interests
where there might not have been unity,” Wolk said.
She added: “Southern California has to do away with its dependence
on the Delta."

